154 SPORT IN ASIA AND AFRICA 



but saw nothing either of tiger or bison in this 

 expedition. The firing of the grass had not 

 commenced, and the bison were all in the 

 hills. 



I have walked for days in company with Indian 

 shikaris and trackers in jungles in which tigers 

 and panthers were numerous, and have hunted 

 before dawn and until dusk, but I have never 

 had the good fortune to meet a tiger or a panther 

 casually. With Kana I always hunted until 

 we could see no more, and he would find his way 

 back to the camp in the dark, through a 

 trackless forest, with the unerring instinct of 

 an animal. 



After shooting the buffaloes I went from the 

 Central Provinces to Kashmir, and at the end 

 of February I had a very successful shoot for 

 hangul (barasingh) in the Dachingam Reserve. 

 In three successive days, with the aid of Sultana, 

 a Kashmir shikari, I stalked and shot two good 

 stags and a serow. Both the stags had fine 

 heads, with horns 42 inches long. One of them 

 was a twelve-pointer with a very symmetrical 

 head, but one tine was broken. This has, how- 

 ever, been well repaired by the taxidermists, 

 Edward Gerrard and Sons. The other was a 

 ten-pointer, but the horns were very massive, 

 being 6| inches round the beam above the brow- 

 tine. The spread also was very fine, the width 

 from tip to tip outside being 42! inches. 



I was very anxious to shoot a red bear, and made 

 a second expedition to Dachigam in the month 

 of March for the purpose; but without success. 

 It was early in the season, and red bears are 



