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Old Indian hunting grounds
06 February 2005, 18:12
RHBOld Indian hunting grounds
.
06 February 2005, 18:30
RHB.
06 February 2005, 19:51
LynxRIP,
As you can see cattle do roam the cities.
Nitro X,
It gets cold on the early morning drives at the Ranthambore national park. Temperature is in single digits, during the day its around the
twenties.

twenties.
06 February 2005, 20:19
OldsargeI say, no trouble at all, sir! Pendleton wool, meet Indian mornings. Indian mornings, Pendleton. You're going to get along famously.
Sarge
Holland's .375: One Planet, One Rifle . . . for one hundred years!
06 February 2005, 21:22
RIPThanks, Lynx,
Holy Cow! I gotta see India.
06 February 2005, 23:05
jbderunzthanks
Absolutely wonderful. My wife is bitching cause I didn't make my mind about visiting India.
I think time has come.
Thanks.
Lynx and Mehulkamdar, more pics please
J B de Runz
Be careful when blindly following the masses ... generally the "m" is silent
06 February 2005, 23:09
jbderunzNitroX
I cannot imagine Christmas in Your Summertime?
Who is the nearer of India, You or me?
J B de Runz
Be careful when blindly following the masses ... generally the "m" is silent
06 February 2005, 23:55
HarrySuper photos, interesting post. Thanks for doing so.
You can borrow money but you can not borrow time. Go hunting with your family.
07 February 2005, 00:25
mehulkamdarFriends,
You wouldn't find a crazier country to visit and I mean this in the most comlpimentary sense. There are high tech labs and companies side by side with villages where there is no electricity. And you would see traffic dodging cattle and pedestrians (who are sometimes more unruly than the cattle) on the roads as well.
It is a crazy experience.

RIP,
As Rustam and Lynx pointed out, the boar hunts are open now to non Indians and hopefully the Nilgai would be in even bigger numbers for non Indian hunters. We'll definitely post the details here when the hunts open.
jbderunz,
You are closer to Rajasthan than NitroX - presuming that is the part of India that you want to visit. Some of the outer islands are very close to Indonesia and that would be closer to Australia, but the pics are from North Western India.
Please push Lynx for more pics especially old shikar ones.

I know that he ahs to get permission to post them here, but if we pusk him, he'll be able to take a print out of this and ask the owners for permission.
Good hunting!
Mehul Kamdar
"I ask, sir, what is the militia? It is the whole people. To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them."-- Patrick Henry
07 February 2005, 18:52
LynxPhotos by Derry Moore. For more b&w pics on India
www.derrymoore.comlake, Udaipur, Rajasthan
Interior, Jodhpur, Rajasthan
Hunter, desert near Bikaner.
palace, murshidabad
temple elephant
Nawab's son, Hyderabad
Column, La Martiniere College, Lucknow
Veranda, Faluknuma Palace, Hyderabad
Elephant
Entrance Hall, Marble Palace, Calcutta
07 February 2005, 19:14
NitroXquote:
Originally posted by jbderunz:
NitroX
I cannot imagine Christmas in Your Summertime?
Who is the nearer of India, You or me?
We'll split the difference, and meet halfway, eh?

05 March 2005, 08:11
NitroXquote:
Originally posted by Lynx:
Photos by Derry Moore. For more b&w pics on India
Entrance Hall, Marble Palace, Calcutta
Fantastic photos.
Does anyone know of whom or what the statue is in this photo? Lovely.
(If no one knows I will try the photographer, his website doesn't say any more.)
05 March 2005, 20:13
mehulkamdarNitroX,
The Marble Palace in Calcutta belongs to an old Jute trading family, the Mullicks. Some years ago there was a fear that parts of it would collapse and it prompted a frantic amount of work by the government as well as private bodies to try to conserve it. I have no idea what happened but since I haven't heard anything bad, they must have managed to make the neccessary structural repairs.
It is still a private property though the Mullicks still welcome visitors. If you go to India, you should visit them especially if you're in Calcutta. I'd like to go there sometime - the last I was there was in 1978 and I am sure the city has changed immensely since then.
Mehul Kamdar
"I ask, sir, what is the militia? It is the whole people. To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them."-- Patrick Henry
06 June 2005, 16:45
AbhijeetHi!
Have been reading this thread and a few of the others on this forum... Made interesting reading no doubt. I'd like to point all interested parties to the Indians4Guns eGroup at
Indians4GunsThe posts there have some great info in the legalities of owning & importing guns into India . Non-members can read the postings as well as post (non-member posts are subject to moderation)...
Cheers!
Abhijeet
Hello Abhijeet and welcome to AR.
Never seen that link before but it's just the sort of thing we need. Will definitely have a read later.
Regards.
Rustam
P.S.: How old is that site?
06 June 2005, 18:03
Abhijeetquote:
Originally posted by RHB:
P.S.: How old is that site?
We started it in in October last year and have been adding a few members every month. Currently there are 48 members. Most of the discussions focus on the dismal state of gun rights in the country and the loopholes available to gun enthusiasts in India.
Look forward to seeing you guys on the group

Cheers!
Abhijeet
quote:
Originally posted by Abhijeet:and the loopholes available to gun enthusiasts in India.
You just got yourself another member.

Rustam
07 June 2005, 01:43
George SemelNow that is what I call living well. I guess the time to Hunt India, would have been from about 1890 to just before World War II. Things change not aways for the better, I could get use to living in that palace.
07 June 2005, 13:01
Abhijeetquote:
Originally posted by George Semel:
Now that is what I call living well. I guess the time to Hunt India, would have been from about 1890 to just before World War II. Things change not aways for the better, I could get use to living in that palace.
Well, if you are referring to the fact that India has lost 2/3rd of its forest cover since independence and as a consequence much of its wildlife, then I would have to agree with your above observation.
However, if you are being nostalgic about the "Raj" and fuedal India, then things are certainly much much better now! Even though the fuedals & petty princely families lost much of their wealth post-independence, the living standard of the common man has certainly improved over the last 50 years. Admitedly not as much as it should have, but improved all the same.
The middle class, which was almost non-existent at the time of independence now in itself exceeds the population of several of the largest European nations.
I think what you would have liked was to have been back in India about 1890 and hunting along with the ruling elite... if you had been back here in 1890 as one of the commoners, you would not have enjoyed yourself very much - of that I can assure you!
Every coin has two sides to it...
Cheers!
Abhijeet
07 June 2005, 13:03
Abhijeetquote:
Originally posted by RHB:
You just got yourself another member.

Rustam
Excellent! Look forward to seeing you on the group then...
Cheers!
Abhijeet
07 June 2005, 20:36
KenscoA poaching article in The Times of India today. Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi, former Indian cricket captain, got caught with a blackbuck that had been shot. As always there is confusion and I would suspect the wealthy and famous will get off and some poor shmuck will go to jail.
Another article talked about how poaching in Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Punjab and the Himalayan foothills is common, and had he gotten caught in Uttar Pradesh nothing would have been said.
The article goes on to say that the state of Punjab "has recently made hunting of Neelgai and wild boar legal with several conditions and under a licence issued by district authorities".
Regarding poaching, there is some speculation that large farmhouses built around the edges of the Corbett National Park, Rajaji National Park and Binsar Sanctuary may be used for more than vacationing.
quote:
Another article talked about how poaching in Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Punjab and the Himalayan foothills is common, and had he gotten caught in Uttar Pradesh nothing would have been said.
The article goes on to say that the state of Punjab "has recently made hunting of Neelgai and wild boar legal with several conditions and under a licence issued by district authorities".
Hello Kensco, could you give me a link to this article or tell me what paper it feature in?
Thanks.
Rustam
quote:
Excellent! Look forward to seeing you on the group then...
Thanks Abhijeet but I am having a problem with something called cookies. Will wait until my computer literate friend gets back from Oz.
Rustam
07 June 2005, 23:10
mehulkamdarHello Abhijeet,
I just signed on as a member. Good effort, guys, there are other members from India both here and on other forums. I shall try and get them to join you.
Best wishes,
Mehul Kamdar
"I ask, sir, what is the militia? It is the whole people. To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them."-- Patrick Henry
08 June 2005, 05:48
KenscoRHB, The Times of India, Tuesday.
quote:
Originally posted by Kensco:
RHB, The Times of India, Tuesday.
That's strange. The Bangalore edition did not have anything about Neelgai and boar hunting opening up in Punjab.
Thanks all the same.
Rustam
08 June 2005, 08:21
mehulkamdarRustam,
Punjab has permitted boar hunting on crop protection permits for as long as I can remember. Maybe they have included Nilgai in the list of crop predators as well?
Mehul Kamdar
"I ask, sir, what is the militia? It is the whole people. To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them."-- Patrick Henry
Mehul,
Shooting boar on a crop protection permit is possible in quite a few states. However, what Kensco quoted, gave me the impression that they may have decided to open up boar shooting per se. On reflection, I think you are right though.
Rustam
08 June 2005, 19:09
KenscoThe only other strange event associated with the poaching was that an animal activist (Naresh Kadiyan) "forcibly exhumed the body of the black buck and ran away with it".
The article in today's The Times of India was basically a repeat of the one yesterday.
quote:
Originally posted by Kensco:
The only other strange event associated with the poaching was that an animal activist (Naresh Kadiyan) "forcibly exhumed the body of the black buck and ran away with it".
He took it to New Delhi as evidence. He's the head of the Haryana PFA chapter.
16 July 2005, 09:39
NitroXquote:
Originally posted by NitroX:
Lynx is very tempting with his photographs.
My plans to visit are becoming more definite. Even started talking about dates!

Maybe Christmas / New Years 2005 ????
What is the weather like then, I believe it is "Winter" and dry season?
Well my wife has been talking about going to China by herself seeing I am in the Territory hunting buffalo in August.
I am convincing her a couple weeks in India around December / January may cost the same and be more enjoyable than a 'package' tour. I would be along of course! Here's hoping.

16 July 2005, 16:02
NitroXquote:
Originally posted by Abhijeet:
However, if you are being nostalgic about the "Raj" and fuedal India, then things are certainly much much better now! Even though the fuedals & petty princely families lost much of their wealth post-independence, the living standard of the common man has certainly improved over the last 50 years. Admitedly not as much as it should have, but improved all the same.
The middle class, which was almost non-existent at the time of independence now in itself exceeds the population of several of the largest European nations.
I think what you would have liked was to have been back in India about 1890 and hunting along with the ruling elite... if you had been back here in 1890 as one of the commoners, you would not have enjoyed yourself very much - of that I can assure you!
Every coin has two sides to it...
Cheers!
Abhijeet
Abhijeet
Very true. We always look at the past with rose coloured glasses and not whether we would actually be one of the priviledged ones or not. Often not.
16 July 2005, 22:12
SevensI like the the room with all the tiger rugs and mounts. I also like the picture posted by Lynx of the tent at night. Sure wish I could have had the experience of hunting tiger and camping in one of those.