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Hunting >> Hunting in Asia

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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #253972 - 24/09/14 12:31 PM

russian cossacks with tiger







india






















--------------------
Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
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bringing civilisation to the barbarians

Edited by lancaster (24/09/14 12:32 PM)


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Igorrock
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #254005 - 25/09/14 02:28 AM

I add here some fotos from our finnish marshal Carl Gustav Emil Mannerheim´s (4.6.1867 – 27.1.1951) hunting trips to India.

Quote:

On his first trip to India (from 24 November, 1927, till 20 April, 1928), Mannerheim hunted in the neighbourhood of the Indian and Nepalese border, with Colonel Faunthorpe as his host. Elephants were used in the difficult terrain of the jungle. Mannerheim never managed to shoot a tiger. There was another hunting ground in Seon, about 700 kilometres south of Delhi. The chief of the district, Mr Bourne, acted as Mannerheim’s host this time. Eventually his hunting trips extended to Burma in Farther India, but the hunting of a rare species of deer was not successful.

On his second trip to India (from November 1936 till April 1937), Mannerheim’s hunting host was Colonel Bailey. A greater number of elephants were now available, and two tigers were surrounded. The next host was the Maharadja of Nepal, who had 200 elephants at his disposal. Mannerheim shot a tiger, 323 centimetres in length. After this event he once more managed to shoot a tiger, his fourth, in the company of Colonel Bailey.

Mannerheim’s Asian trips included mainly hunting of big game. In Finland Mannerheim occasionally participated in moose hunting, but mostly he hunted small game, such as hares, foxes or game birds














This last foto is taken from Mannerheim museum in Kaivopuisto, Helsinki. It´s one of those tigers in black-and-white fotos.



http://www.mannerheim.fi/tori_e/e_intro.htm

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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: Igorrock]
      #254085 - 26/09/14 04:38 AM

thanks igorrock

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Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
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Taylor416
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #254108 - 26/09/14 10:34 PM

Magnificent photos here men!
Thanking you.

cheers

Chris

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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: Taylor416]
      #257352 - 29/11/14 09:36 PM

vietnam but without tiger




At first they thought it was a VC, and their hearts started to beat faster, but then they were relieved
to see that it was actually a deer. Ray Mendez and Ray Tyndall, our intrepid infantrymen from the
"Dirty Third," the 3rd Platoon, B Co., 1st Battalion 6th Infantry, were pulling security duty
east of LZ Dottie for the dozers from the 39th Engineer Company (Land Clearing). The idea was
to get out in front of the "cut" to be sure that the Viet Cong were unable to emplace booby traps
for the unwary engineer troops. The Viet Cong could easily avoid the cumbersome vehicles while
they did their dirty work of planting mines near Hill 43, but they had to watch out for infantrymen
who were on the hunt.

Ray Tyndall took careful aim with his M16 rifle, and from about 150 yards, dropped the animal
with a single shot. And there were no pesky game wardens to enforce hunting season!

Ray Mendez and Ray Tyndall retrieve their kill. Now, what do you do with a deer out in the bush,
with no convenient meat locker? Why, you take it to your local butcher, and prepare for a feast.
http://www.a-1-6.org/1-6th%20site/1st%20bn%206th%20inf%20web%20site%20off%20line/cdDeer.html

vietnam sambar



vietnam female banteng


probably manufrance rival mauser


Burma snipe hunting



http://www.angloburmeselibrary.com/burmah-oil-company.html

hunting party mandalay 1885



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hunting_party_mandalay1885.jpg

india
hunting with his highness the Nizan 1892



http://www.quora.com/What-are-some-of-the-most-iconic-photographs-related-to-History-of-India

british india


http://www.liveindia.com/news/Hunting.html

india , skinning tiger 1880


http://britishmilitariaforums.yuku.com/topic/8553


american soldiers in burma


TIGER STORY. These GIs spent a night on an unsuccessful tiger hunt in the Burma jungle so they bought a skin from a native in order to have something to show for it.



BIG GAME. These proud GIs take up a hunter's pose and get their picture taken with the trophy, a 125-pound leopard. They bagged it on an overnight jungle expedition during off-duty time in Burma. L. to r.: Sgt. John F. Wiley, Cpl. Leonard Patrick and Sgt. Aubrey Claser.

http://cbi-theater-2.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-2/yankcbi/yank_cbi_3.html

Edited by lancaster (01/12/14 06:37 AM)


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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #257569 - 06/12/14 05:08 PM

large collection of indian pics, some coming from nitroexpress too
at least one pics is posted first time by me
http://gallimafry.blogspot.de/2012/03/hunt-hobby-british-during-colonial-rule.html





Maharajah of Bikaneer with his 200th tiger, 1939.


Rhino hunt in Nepal.


Rhino Hunt, possibly Maharajah Citarakhan of Nepal.

Lord and Lady Curzon with tiger shot in India, 1903.

Father and son native tiger hunt, India 1930s.

Indian hunter with a Himalayan black bear, 1930s.


Nepal, butchered rhinos

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Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #257570 - 06/12/14 05:13 PM




Lord and Lady Cuzon, governor of India in 1903 with tiger.




Prince of Wales, after his tiger hunt

Skinning a tiger.

Male Javan rhino shot on 31 January 1934 at Sindangkerta in West Java. Specimen is preserved in the Zoological Museum of Buitenzorg (Bogor, Indonesia).

European hunter with a dead Javan rhinoceros, 1895, Java Island.


Borneo, 1925 - Captain George L. Anderson with a Javan Rhinoceros in Sandakan region of Sarawak.

Cambodia, 1930 - William Duckworth with a Javan Rhino.


Sumatra, 1952. From T. Schilling, Tijgermensen van Anai with trophy Sumatran rhino and native guides.

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Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #257571 - 06/12/14 05:18 PM


The Man-Eater of Champawat.
The Champawat Tiger is a legendary female Bengal Tiger. She is allegedly responsible for more then 400 human deaths in Nepal and the Kumaon area of India in the early 20th century. This tiger was often seen roaming the streets outside populated villages and would even try to break into huts. She was shot the day after killing a 16-year-old girl. Even today there remains a “cement board” marking the place where the tiger fell in Champawat town. An autopsy revealed that the tiger had broken upper and lower canine teeth on the right side of her mouth, which is often the case with man-eating animals. As humans are easier forms of prey. Around the same time the Panar Leopard was terrorizing people in the Kumaon District of Northern India. This male leopard is also alleged to have killed around 400 citizens, striking utter fear in the parents and children of many small villages. Both of these animals were hunted down and killed by legendary big cat hunter and author Jim Corbett. Corbett was an Indian-born British conservationist who was extremely talented at stalking and killing man-eaters. These two animals are widely regarded as the most deadly of all time.


N.A. Baikov, a lifetime member of the Society of Study of the Manchurian territory, the author of the book "In mountains and woods of Manchuria", St.-Petersburg,1915. Posing with a Manchurian tiger trophy at home.


A man-eater hunted in India by John Stoddard with natives, 1890s. Published in "India - 13 volumes" by John L. Stoddard in 1901.

Jim Corbet and the man-eating leopard of Rudraprayag, India.

"The Mother Of Evil" , terror of the hills, the man eating tigreass of Tallades, shot by Jim Corbet.


King George V of Britain, mounted on elephant during a shikar in Nepal, 1911.

Bird shooting party in Mandalay, western Burma, 1885.

King George V, mounted on elephant, departing for a shikar.


A massive tiger hunt organized by Maharajah of Alwar in 1926 for his British guests: a dozen elephants and aproximately 300 people involved.
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip on tiger hunt in India, 1961.
s.


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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #257572 - 06/12/14 05:25 PM




Sher shikar, tiger hunt in Kerala, India.


Hunting party in India with five tigers and one rhinoceros, possibly late 1920s.




Kachar shikar


Maharajah's daughter with dead leopard.


Indian potentates with tigers and Rolls Royces, Narsingh, India


Pig Sticking Club, India

British sportsmen in India, 1880s
e





Another of Jim Corbett and the Bachelor of Powagarh.


Photograph taken in Alwar state, Maharaj Jay Singh of Alwar can be seen standing with sola topee or hat behind the tiger. My great grandfather is 2nd from the right with sola toppee in hand.


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Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
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bringing civilisation to the barbarians

Edited by lancaster (06/12/14 05:27 PM)


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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #257573 - 06/12/14 05:37 PM



Walter "Tiger" Smith, not an Indian photo but after an Indian hunting trip.





























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Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
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bringing civilisation to the barbarians

Edited by lancaster (06/12/14 08:34 PM)


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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #257578 - 06/12/14 08:41 PM


Hunters with slain rhinoceros. There were a total of 18 rhinoceroses killed during this hunt. George V sits in his howdah on the right, and the Maharaja of Nepal looks down from his howdah on the left.



Hunting party on elephants with slain tiger. The "ring" is a method of hunting peculiar to Nepal. The hunters mounted on elephants form a "ring" and move in on their quarry, which has previously been stalked and enclosed in the area surrounded by the ring. There were a total of 39 tigers killed during this hunt. The Maharaja of Nepal stands in his howdah on the left, and George V stands in his in the centre.




George V stands in his howdah. Other members of the hunting party watch from behind.
[King+George+V+Hunting+in+Nepal+(12).jpg]



ENGLISH FAMILY WITH TIGER SKIN TROPHY -INDIA 1880"S



HUNTING BEAR



1911--KING GEORGE 5 ON HUNT -39 TIGERS KILLED IN THIS HUNT !!



ENGLISH MAN HUNTING RHINOCEROS-INDIA-1900'S



KING GEORGE 5 OF ENGLAND HUNTING TIGERS AND RHINOCEROS ,BY RING METHOD -USING MANY ELEPHANTS TO FORM THE RING




TIGER HUNT 1930'S

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Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #259388 - 24/01/15 04:52 AM

pic of gentleman who had spend a lot of time in the himalaya.
its not common to find trophy's of the tibetan antilope on pics.



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"Korean Peninsula was ‘a land of leopards’

Dec 16, 2014

One may think of tigers as the fiercest animal that ever lived on the Korean Peninsula. There was, however, another species of large cat that was just as fierce as tigers, and even outnumbered them. They were leopards.

In Joseon times (1392-1910), the number of leopards was large enough to enable royal families to bestow leopard skins as gifts for their retainers.

According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN), the leopards in Korea belonged to a species subordinate to the leopards that inhabited the Russian Far East and parts of northeastern China.

Only 50 or so leopards are believed to exist belonging to this subspecies common to the Korean Peninsula, the Maritime Province in Russia and to Jilin Province in China.


As seen in the above image, Korean leopards are characterized by darker fur and bigger ring patterns in their hair with long, abundant fur on their tail. The body is 100 to 140 centimeters long while the tail can be 80 to 90 centimeters long.


The animal was the most feared creature in ancient Korea, at the top of the peninsula's natural food chain, but it is now on the verge of extinction.

There’s a special exhibition underway in Incheon that is shedding new light on this endangered large cat.

The “Forgotten Name, Korean Leopards” exhibition kicked off on December 10 at the National Institute of Biological Resources (NIBR). It features a wide range of records concerning the animals, stretching from merely a decade ago back into Joseon times. The exhibit runs until March 31 next year.

With a glimpse at the traces of this animal on display here, one may soon find that the Korean Peninsula -- even up until just a decade ago -- was a land of leopards.

According to statistics released by the colonial era Governor-General of Korea, the number of leopards that were captured in the 23 years following 1919 came to 624, six times higher than the number of tigers captured in the same span between 1919 and 1942.

Among the exhibits on display, there’s a newspaper clipping that reported on the capture of a mature male leopard on Yeohangsan Mountain in Haman, Gyeongsangnam-do (South Gyeongsang Province), on March 4, 1970.

There are 18 more documents that record leopards seized in the south of the peninsula after liberation in 1945 up until the 1970s. The records prove that the animals existed across the peninsula, even as recently as the 1940s. The last capture of a tiger was in 1921.









Exhibition-goers will get a glimpse at more newspaper clips and images related to the large cat dating back from liberation in 1945 onward, as well as records that spanned Joseon times and during Japanese occupation.

There are video clips on display showing vivid images of Korean leopards that were filmed in Russia's Maritime Province, as well as the animal's current conservation status in the region.

Visitors touch a virtual leopard using 3-D computer graphics at the “Forgotten Name, Korean Leopards” exhibition.


In addition, an original copy of a rare book about Korean leopards and tigers,“Jeonghoki" (征虎記), written in early Japanese colonial times, is on display.

The volume was written by Tadasaburo Yamamoto, a businessman. For a month in the winter in 1917, he formed a hunting group called the “Jeonghojun” to capture leopards and tigers. He recorded his month of hunting activities in the book.


The book 'Jeonghoki' (征虎記) from colonial times covers a month-long hunt for leopards and tigers across the Korean Peninsula, with images as seen above.


“By highlighting the image and value of Korean leopards, a species which has been little-known until now, this exhibition will help the public understand the natural ecosystem across the peninsula and to feel the need for conservation of biological resources,” said NIBR President Kim Sang-bae.

By Sohn JiAe
Korea.net Staff Writer
Photos: the National Institute of Biological Resources
[Email]jiae5853@korea.kr"[/Email]
[url=http://www.korea.net/NewsFocus/Culture/view?articleId=123878]http://www.korea.net/NewsFocus/Culture/view?articleId=123878[/url]

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"Tigers of Korea 100 Years Ago

SNU Scholar Says Tigers Caught on Remote Jindo Islet


Local Korean hunters pose in front of a tiger hunted by them and an English sportsman Ford G. Barclay on the island of Jindo in South Korea’s South Jeolla Province in 1903.

“Even on the southern remote islands of the Korean Peninsula were filled with lots of Siberian tigers a century or so ago”, argued Prof. Lee Hang of the Seoul National University in a press release on Feb. 19, 2012.

Prof. Lee heads the Fund for Korean Tigers Conservation.

He showed to the local Korean press two photos of Korean tigers (Siberian or Amur tigers) caught by the hunters as evidences.

The tiger photos were from the article “The Manchurian Tiger” authored by Ford G. Barclay, which were written in a book “The Big Game of Asia and North America: The Gun at Home and Abroad”.

The book was co-authored by Ford G. Barclay and was published in London in 1915.

“The Manchurian Tiger” shows the details on how the Siberian tigers were populated on the Korean Peninsula and on how they were hunted in early 20th century.

Prof. Lee said that the book showed that there were four tigers on Jindo Island some 500 meters off the south western tip of the Korean Peninsula.

Now, the island is connected to the mainland by the Jindo Bridge.



An English sportsman Ford G. Barclay poses with his local Korean hunters in front of a tiger hunted by them in Mokpo in South Korea’s South Jeolla Province.This undated fild photo was taken in 1903.

“This means that Korean tigers were populated in the peninsula and even on the corners of the isolated islands only a century ago”, Prof. Lee said. “Also this proves that tigers are good swimmers”

According to the book, an adult male and female tigers were hunted by the local hunters on Jindo Island.

Mr. Barclay and the local hunters chased the other two tigers on the island for about 10 days but failed to find them.

On the beach they only found the footsteps of the tigers which were printed toward the mainland.

They thought the tigers fled to the land by crossing the sea, but three weeks later they found the tigers’ footsteps again.

Mr. Barclay’s records also say that legends also depict the popular existence of the tigers on the island and other islands south of the Korean Peninsula some 100 years ago.

Another Seoul National University professor, Kim Dong-Jin, who is a member of the fund, said that tigers were common even in the coastal areas and many islands of Korea.

“History books records a number of cases in which people were attacked by the tigers in the past”, Prof. Kim said.

He said that many national farms had to be moved from the mainland to the island to avoid the danger of tiger attack, but even on the islands tigers appeared frequently.

He argued that the national troops were mobilized
for the tiger hunts on the islands.

In South Korea tigers are extinct. Heavily fortified walls of barbed wires in 4-km-wide demilitarized zone (DMZ) block all wild animals from travelling between South and North Korea.

It was 1922 that the last tiger was seen and hunted on Mt. Daedeuk in Gyeongju, South Korea’s North Gyeongsang Province.

Currently, there remain about 400 Siberian tigers (Koreans call them Korean tigers) mainly in Far Eastern parts of Russia. The Siberian tigers are also called Amur tigers.

Recently, a research team of the Seoul National University released a report saying that Korean tigers have the same DNA with the Siberian tigers.

The Fund for Korean Tigers Conservation (http://koreatiger.org/), established by civilians in 2004, supports Russia’s Phoenix Fund (http://www.phoenix.vl.ru/)

The following story is part of “The Manchurian Tiger” authored by Ford G. Barclay.

My own most successful hunts have been inthe island of Chindo, some thirty miles as the crow flies south-east of the open port of Mokpo, situated at the south-west corner of Korea. It is separated from the mainland by a channel between two and three miles wide, through which the current rushes at such a rate that it is only possible to cross in a large boat for thirty minutes or so at each turn of the tide, and yet tiger most readily face this fierce tide pretty frequently.

The island is about the size of The Isle of Wight, and there being very little cover on it when snow is on the villager that authentic news of fresh tiger tracks will be liberally rewarded. On one visit I was greeted with the intelligence that four tigers were there, a male and female of fair size, and two three-year-old females.

The first two I secured a day or two later, the other two broke back through the beaters in a drive some twelve miles from the nearest part of the channel. The next morning their tracks were reported in the tidal mud, heading across the straits for the mainland, but being still skeptical as to tiger facing such a swim in the depth of winter I continued my hunt for ten days, during which no freshtracks were seen.

Three weeks later news of another pair in the island led me back, but though we jumped one I never actually saw more than the footprints. A week later these two were also tracked over the mud towards the straits and mainland. Early this year (1914) the body of a tiger was washed up on.

[url=http://www.hancinema.net/korea-full-of-tigers-a-century-ago-39193.html#zFUVVIHJ43GPqAir.01"]http://www.hancinema.net/korea-full-of-tigers-a-century-ago-39193.html#zFUVVIHJ43GPqAir.01"[/url]



--------------------
Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
.
bringing civilisation to the barbarians

Edited by lancaster (24/01/15 05:24 AM)


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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #264567 - 05/05/15 04:24 AM

Sumatra


http://www.geheugenvannederland.nl/?/nl/items/VKM01:A131-10

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Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
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Ash
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #264955 - 14/05/15 06:20 PM

Lancaster, how do you find these pictures? Search "Vintage tiger hunting photos" or something similar?

Thanks for sharing, i drift off into dreams with these threads..

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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: Ash]
      #265039 - 16/05/15 02:42 PM

find such stuff when looking for pics of redheads

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Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #265049 - 17/05/15 02:39 AM

Now THIS is a nice rifle.

Quote:







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Daryl


"a gun without hammers is like a Spaniel without ears" King George V


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Ash
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #265073 - 17/05/15 03:47 PM

Quote:

find such stuff when looking for pics of redheads




My girlfriend is a redhead

Daryl - I agree entirely. What a beast.

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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: Ash]
      #265083 - 17/05/15 08:41 PM

you have a duck as girlfriend



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Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
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bringing civilisation to the barbarians


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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #265676 - 29/05/15 10:57 PM



She's much prettier and doesnt quack

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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: Ash]
      #265710 - 30/05/15 03:17 PM

Quote:


She doesnt quack




I hope this will never change

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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #265762 - 01/06/15 05:05 AM

Thanks a lot Lancaster

All those pictures have my heart pounding. I am amazed and pleased that your great grand father was an avid hunter in India

Those are the days gone away for ever. I would gladly accept to be a humble beater in these hunts

Shocking according to our criteria is the destruction of the rhinos for not much worthy horns. It was the past and we all lack it.

What strike me most is that the hunters look good. No wording in English for the French "avoir de l'allure". In German "Figur haben".

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"I don't want to create an encyclopedic atmosphere here when we might be having a beer instead" P H Capstick in "Safari the last adventure."

Edited by larcher (01/06/15 05:15 AM)


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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: larcher]
      #271810 - 17/10/15 05:46 PM

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/prince-philip-proudly-poses-tiger-6174056

" Prince Philip proudly poses with tiger he slaughtered 50 years before Cecil the Lion outrage

21:12, 31 Jul 2015
Updated 21:23, 31 Jul 2015
By Stephen White

The Duke of Edinburgh also killed a crocodile and six mountain sheep on the three-day hunt in 1961 despite protests from British and Indian politicians
Getty Prince Philip with Prince Jagat-Singh (with his foot on tiger's head), the Maharajah of Jaipur, Queen Elizabeth II and the Maharanee of Jaipur during a tiger hunt during the Royal Tour of India on 26th January 1961



Slaughter: Prince Philip (left) and the Queen (centre) following a tiger hunt in India in 1961

Dressed in a safari suit, the Duke of Edinburgh stands next to the 8ft tiger he shot on a three-day hunt.

The Queen looks rather less pleased with herself as she poses with the Maharajah of Jaipur, family and friends in Ranthambhore, India in 1961.

Prince Philip had gone ahead with the hunt, despite protests from British and Indian politicians.

The Duke also shot a crocodile and six mountain sheep on that trip.

Photoshot The Royal Tour of Nepal, hunting at Megauli. The Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip went on a tiger hunt and a rhino shoot at Megauli
Rifles ready: The Queen and Prince Philip also went on a tiger hunt and a rhino shoot at Megauli in Nepal

At the start of the 20th century India was home to 100,000 tigers, but numbers crashed in the years following independence in 1947.

Over the past 30 years Prince Philip has killed many kinds of animals.

Figures compiled from press reports by the anti-bloodsports lobby suggest that in Britain alone he has shot at least 30,000 pheasants.

He has also killed deer, rabbit, hare, wild duck, snipe, woodcock, teal, pigeon and partridge in the UK.

Prince Philip the animal hunter
Number of pheasants Prince Philip is estimated to have shot in the UK
A pheasant runs across the sixth fairway during the second round

30,000

Prince Philip used to shoot wild boar in Germany.

He and Prince Charles are said to have killed 50 in one day.

The Duke frequently invites sporting friends to the Royal Family’s 20,000-acre Norfolk estate at Sandringham.

In 1993, he hit his target of 10,000 pheasants during a seven-week stay when he was out shooting for up to four days a week"

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Queen's role: In a 1961 Royal Tour to Nepal Queen Elizabeth II attended a tiger hunt



King of the hunt: The Prince of Wales - future King Edward VIII - tiger shooting in Nepal, the Indian Tour, 1921




A woman's power: Queen Ratna Rajya Lakshmi Devi, wife of King Mahendra of Nepal, with a tiger she shot in 1960
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/cecil-lion-shocking-pictures-reveal-6158818



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Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
.
bringing civilisation to the barbarians

Edited by lancaster (17/10/15 05:50 PM)


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lancaster
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Reged: 06/05/08
Posts: 8728
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #277695 - 08/02/16 10:25 PM

gaur , indochine



http://www.cartacaro.fr/spip.php?article28

elephant



http://www.ebay.de/itm/INDOCHINE-Cochinc...e-/141795814432

1915


http://belleindochine.free.fr/chasseLangbian.htm




tiger, indochine or india? 1930s



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http://www.delcampe.net/page/item/id,327774662,var,CPA-INDOCHINE--LA-CHASSE-EN-INDOCHINE-CARNET-DE-10-CPA-M-DEFOSSE-PHOTOS-NADAL,language,E.html

vietnam


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vietnam


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annam







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laos









http://nguyentl.free.fr/autrefois/francais/di-san.jpg




vietnam, proably win 95 in 405



http://images-01.delcampe-static.net/img_large/auction/000/208/023/360_001.jpg?v=1



http://sfp.asso.fr/blog-collection/public/Blog_janv-avril2013/.FRSFP_0903im_001_m.jpg









http://belleindochine.free.fr/images/Vassal/107ChasseTigre.JPG




vietnam duck hunting




http://philippe.millour.free.fr/Indochine/Invites/images/Chasse.jpg


http://images-02.delcampe-static.net/img_large/auction/000/033/859/288_001.jpg?v=1

--------------------
Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
.
bringing civilisation to the barbarians


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NitroXAdministrator
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Reged: 25/12/02
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: lancaster]
      #277735 - 09/02/16 10:43 PM

When first visiting Thailand, I decided to research hunting opportunities in a "hunting encyclopaedia" I have. Just a large volume or two volumes set. It was really exciting to read the opportunities available. Then thought, "this can't be right." And checked the first publishing date. Sometime earlier in the 1960's, when the world was a different place and not so long ago. When many of these photos were being taken.

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John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"


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lancaster
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Re: Pics of the day - Asia [Re: NitroX]
      #279205 - 13/03/16 07:00 AM

http://avax.news/disgusting/Hunting_Fishing_2.html

http://avax.news/sad/Hunting_Fishing.html

http://avax.news/disgusting/Hunting_Fishing_3.html





The Prince of Wales, later Edward VIII (1894–1972) (centre), posing with the first tiger he ever shot on his tour of Nepal, India. (Photo by Central Press/Getty Images). 18th December 1921







George V (1865–1936) with the day's bag of three tigers, after a hunt during the Durbar celebrations. The hunters are mounted on elephants.






A dead tiger at the feet of Lord Reading, Viceroy of India, with the Maharaja of Gwalior, and beaters after a tiger shoot in Gwalior State. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images). Circa 1923





King George V with the day's kills on a tiger hunt, during his Indian Durbar Tour. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images). Circa 1912




Dead tigers from the “King Emperor's Indian Coronation Durbar” of 1911–1912. The King referred to is George V of Great Britain. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images). Circa 1911







An Inuit stands next to the carcass of a polar bear on Wrangle Island, 120 miles off the coast of Siberia, November 1923. (Photo by Topical Press Agency/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

--------------------
Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
.
bringing civilisation to the barbarians


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