Awesome brother!!!!!Cant wait till this evening when I’m in bed relaxing after a long hard day , settling down , reading my devotionals and enjoying this wholesome,clean ,historical reading !!!!Thank You!!!
Always an enjoyable experience listening to these thrilling jungle adventures in your voice. I like how Anderson takes the time to describe why and how the tiger turned to killing people.
I'm happy to hear that these recordings are proving valuable enough for a monthly premium membership. As a premium member myself, I think its money well spent considering the range and diversity of content on YT nowadays. Thank you for commenting.
AWESOME! Thank you so much for these audiobooks I absolutely love them You have made me be absolutely addicted to Jim Corbett and Kenneth Andersons stories (the ones you do) Your voice is very soothing to listen to Thank you again...
Thank you Mr. Singh! I'd been waiting for a new upload. I love how Kenneth Anderson seems fascinated with comparisons of human skulls cracking like egg shells when struck by a tiger's blow. He's used this analogy on multiple occasions. And he's probably not wrong about it either 😅
Thanks for another excellently read story. Mr Anderson must of be an extremely brave man to use him self as bait posing as a native. Always look forward to hearing your latest story thanks jim
Thanks once again. Waiting for evening when I shall listen to another lovely adventure in your fine rendering... keep them coming Mr Singh.. you have returned my childhood...
Wonderful narration. I wonder if the car shikaris realised that it was their cowardly hunting method cost more than 20 innocent lives. Anderson is indeed a very brave hunter.
Thank you for another well done audiostory. I respect Kenneth Anderson's skills as a hunter-naturalist and as a writer but at 13:15 he says the lone jackal is a definite indication of a presence of a tiger or panther. It could very well be but surely its not a definite indication.
Apparently it depends on the situation and type of calls they make, which the jungle wise person can differentiate. I take my hat off to those perceptive few.
SPLENDID JOB SON. AFTER A GAP GOT A KENNETH ANDERSON TALE. NICE OF YOU TO HAVE OBLIGED US WITH OUR REQUEST. BEAUTIFUL NARRATION. PLEASE DO THE REST OF KENNETH AND JIM' S WORKS. WILL APPRECIATE IF YOU DO JIM'S THAK MAN EATER. KINDLY DONT GIVE TOO MUCH TIME GAP FOR YOUR POSTINGS. GOD BLESS YOU WITH GOOD HEALTH AND LOT OF WEALTH.
Superior as usual Mr Singh. Thank you again. As a naturalist myself, I can very well imagine walking through these forests and up these hills - every sight would be an adventure to myself, but can you tell me; do any tigers still exist in these exact areas? I believe there are still a few in the Western Ghats. I also read this week that there is now a bounty on the head of a man-eating (actually, sadly, child-killing and eating) leopard in Kashmir. It's incredible to me, here in Britain that these things still occur...but rather adventure-inducing too. Thank you
Hello Ben! Thanks for an excellent comment again. I'm no expert in this area and do not live in India anymore but I do keep up with it from time to time. The lower sections of Western Ghats (especially in the states of Karnataka, kerala and Tamil Nadu) along with the Nilgiri hills are still remarkably covered with forests. Although human encroachment keeps getting worse (another reason why tigers and leopards still kill many people in India), this region harbors quite a few National Parks and Tiger preserves such as Nagerhole, bandipur, Periyar and Kabini. So, yes there are still many tigers left in this exact area and I'm sure a few of them take to killing humans every year. It's all dealt with by the forest department nowadays and those days where an individual or a lone hunter would take care of them are long gone.
@@selvalore Much appreciated, thank you. It's great to know there are still areas where these species exist, although yes, of course the human-wildlife confilct is a huge issue and a very sad one. I was surprised to hear of the leopard that is currently being trageted as a serial man-eater - terrible of course and yet nostalgic in the same breath. Please keep up the great work - you are unparralled. There is another content creator named Usman Ijaz who you may be aware of. I am thankful for their uploads, but it is a computer generated voice and almost un-listenable! However it demonstrates that there are many more Kenneth Anderson stories out there...dare I suggest..for you! Very best wishes, Ben
@@benwaddams Thank you for the response, Ben. Yes, I looked into that. There is indeed a bounty on a leopard's head in Kashmir. That is remarkably sad. Leopard's are rare in the Himalayas now and obviously this animal was driven to killing children due to some environmental pressure owing to human-wildlife conflict. The report said the wildlife department has deployed 50 men to hunt it down. A 100 years ago a certain Mr. Corbett dealt with a much more cunning animal all by himself and with limited resources.
@@selvalore Yes indeed he would have! And I expect his methods may well still be the most accurate, humane and effective. On a seperate note, I read somewhere that someone had fairly recently tracked down a person who, as a child, remebered Corbett and his efforts to rid them of a maneater. I suppose that person would be in their 80s at least now. If true, quite remarkable. Keep up the great work Sir. Ben
A tiger is no joke! I remember when I was a little boy watching nature documentaries and seeing tigers of India. The Sunderban tigers were legendary! A Bengal tiger can weigh six hundred pounds. Literally heavier than a pony but every ounce of its body is built to kill. I’d love to visit India some day and see the Tigers.
As always, thank you for reading these for us. I truly dread the day you run out of these accounts read. If you should need to change the reading material to something else (eg. african stories("Lions of Tsalvo' please) I would eagerly listen to these as well. Would like to see 'Lions of Tsalvo' on this channel someday (if you see fitting) Not a request... just an idea. Many thanks and wishes to your continued success. Sylvan.
I have certainly thought about doing it. That is an excellent book and I will probably end up reading it at some point in the future. Thank you for such a thoughtful comment!
@@selvalore I read all the Corbett books,but I was always curious what a cheetah hind and a sambur and the various monkeys sounded like. Good work,keep doing it.
Sure Preetji, I will get to it. It's not just you, others have made the same request as well. This summer's gonna be busy and I'm a little burnt out right now but maybe later this year i'll give a serious thought to it. Thank you for your patience.
Despicable human scum shooting blindly at game from a car! They should be jailed, if not mauled by a Tiger 🐅 or Leopard 🐆. Who could blame the Tiger for reigning hell down on this community which should have stopped the poachers.
The name of of the forest mean grim reaper in sansakrit, strange name or it was haunted, but the tigers are replaced by the Indian male rapist and corrupt politicians, which are more dangerous than the tiger
This descriptive and impersonal narrative sounds like it could have been plegerized straight from the writings of Jim Corbett. Oh, I almost forgot, there are no hyenas in India.
Thanks for commenting Richard! About that last point: many people mistakenly assume hynaes are not present in India but the striped hynae (which the author is referring to here) is native to the Indian subcontinent. KA has referred to hynaes in his stories on several occasions.
Thanks for Chapter 7 from the Nine Man Eaters and One Rogue. Khan in Pashto is a first or a surname like in Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan. When used as a reference in the subcontinent, could it mean a Title? Perhaps a profession? Thanks☺
Khan is just a common last name in South Asia. I'm pretty positive it has nothing to do with profession but I have seen it used as a first name in some cases as well.
@selvalore Khan is a title when you reach certain level of status,its origin is not South Asia but central Asia! Among Tartars, Qashqais of Iran,Pashtuns be it from Afghan,Pakistanis or India.Baluchis also.It is not an ancestral name! Just like Rais and Malik or Sheikh in Arabic or Shah,Agha,Jenaab,Khudavand or Sardar in Persian!
The animal sounds added a nice dimension to this wonderful story Mr. Singh...thank you again for your splendid presentation...🙏
This means a lot! Thanks for the comment.
Finally something to look forward to on this day. Kenneth Anderson is one of my favorite author and adventurist.
Thanks for the comment!
@selvalore Your voice is amazing as is your storytelling genius!
Excellent description Sir. Please continue. I am a sheer lover of Jungle stories since my adolescent till today. Thank you immensly Sir. 🕊️
Thank you for commenting, Abadhoot!
It's a good day, you uploaded a story 🙏
Thank you for commenting!
Waited a lot for Mr Anderson's tale. Thanks a lot.
My pleasure, Sunil. Thank you for commenting again!
Awesome brother!!!!!Cant wait till this evening when I’m in bed relaxing after a long hard day , settling down , reading my devotionals and enjoying this wholesome,clean ,historical reading !!!!Thank You!!!
My pleasure and thank you so much for saying that!
I do the same; I love listening to these tales when relaxing in a chair or bed. Very cathartic.
Made my evening that this has been uploaded! Thank you so much!
My pleasure and thanks for listening and commenting.
Thank you, your narration is second to none.
Thank you for listening!
👍 👍
Christmas came early today!!!! Thank You again for giving up your time to make such memorable stories available to us in audio!
Great to see your name again in the comments, Luke. Thank you!
Very interesting story. Anderson is unbelievably brave. Thanks a lot for the story, thoroughly enjoyed 😀🙏
Thank you for an excellent comment!
Thank you. Magnificently narrated audio story!
Cheers Naina!
Always an enjoyable experience listening to these thrilling jungle adventures in your voice. I like how Anderson takes the time to describe why and how the tiger turned to killing people.
Absolutely, and thank you for commenting, Jeffrey!
You bring these classics to life. Thank you Mr. Apretiem Singh
Thank you Mr. Lee. Say hi to Miss Robles for me.
I bought youtube premium specifically for this channel. your recordings are that good. thank you.
I'm happy to hear that these recordings are proving valuable enough for a monthly premium membership. As a premium member myself, I think its money well spent considering the range and diversity of content on YT nowadays.
Thank you for commenting.
Thank u so so so much for sharing these incredible stories.ur style of narration is THE BEST
Thank you Gautam!
AWESOME! Thank you so much for these audiobooks I absolutely love them You have made me be absolutely addicted to Jim Corbett and Kenneth Andersons stories (the ones you do) Your voice is very soothing to listen to Thank you again...
Cheers! That means so much to me. Thank you for taking the time to comment today.
I love all the narrators
Thank you Mr. Singh! I'd been waiting for a new upload.
I love how Kenneth Anderson seems fascinated with comparisons of human skulls cracking like egg shells when struck by a tiger's blow. He's used this analogy on multiple occasions. And he's probably not wrong about it either 😅
No doubt, even the smallest of tigers are more than capable of doing that to a human being. Mr. Anderson knew what he was writing about.
Thank you for another Kenneth Anderson audio narration. All your work is much appreciated.
Thanks for saying that.
Thanks for another excellently read story. Mr Anderson must of be an extremely brave man to use him self as bait posing as a native. Always look forward to hearing your latest story thanks jim
Thank you again, Jim. I appreciate each and every one of your comments.
Thanks once again. Waiting for evening when I shall listen to another lovely adventure in your fine rendering... keep them coming Mr Singh.. you have returned my childhood...
That's wonderful to hear Mr. Agarwal and thank you for commenting again!
My cat and I look forward to bedtime Mr Singh your reading of these tale's are absolutely fantastic thankyou thankyou thankyou 👍🐯
My pleasure and thank you. I assure you no tethered goats are harmed when i'm reading these tales!
Beautiful presentation & description of the story
Amazing narration, felt like I am there in the jungle. Thank you for your efforts.
My pleasure Mr. Trivedi and thank you for commenting yet again!
Man you can really put yourself into this story as if I'm there myself. Great job as always Guruji much respect my friend
So happy to hear this. Thank you for the comment!
Thank you.
God’s love never quits.
Bests one yet ! Thank you! Hope you have a hundred more.
Thanks for the comment, Jack. I hope I can continue doing these too.
The ending is superb. It reminded me of Jim Corbett's hunt for the Bachelor of Powalgarh in regards to the use of buffaloes.
Good point. Thanks for commenting, Roderick!
😅😅
Much appreciated and well read tale..
These villages had stone houses unlike the mud huts in most of the villages!
Looking👌 forward
Much appreciated, Joe!
Wow! I can’t believe that Alfie messed up with the torch and the car!
love the way you narrate.with so much passion. thank you bhai jee
I'm happy to hear this. Thank you Aamir!
Your doing a great work. I feel very good the here these great stories coming to life. Keep it up
Thank you Ashish!
There’s no doubt that Anderson was ingenious in the way he hunted these maneaters! He seemed to be able to read their minds!
I get excited over Kenneth
He's a great writer. Thanks again my friend.
Thank you Brother,
Another very enjoyable Story
Happy to see your name in the comments again. Thank you!
Wonderful narration. I wonder if the car shikaris realised that it was their cowardly hunting method cost more than 20 innocent lives. Anderson is indeed a very brave hunter.
Thank you for the comment!
Thank you for another well done audiostory. I respect Kenneth Anderson's skills as a hunter-naturalist and as a writer but at 13:15 he says the lone jackal is a definite indication of a presence of a tiger or panther. It could very well be but surely its not a definite indication.
I bet you hunt in jungles of India all the time.
And you speak from a position of experience?
I kinda liked getting Anderson’s confirmation of Tabaqui to Shere Khan 😄
Apparently it depends on the situation and type of calls they make, which the jungle wise person can differentiate. I take my hat off to those perceptive few.
Thank you again
My pleasure Charlie and thanks for commenting!
So glad to see a new upload from you. Perfect timing too 😊
You're welcome and thank you for the comment!
SPLENDID JOB SON. AFTER A GAP GOT A KENNETH ANDERSON TALE. NICE OF YOU TO HAVE OBLIGED US WITH OUR REQUEST. BEAUTIFUL NARRATION. PLEASE DO THE REST OF KENNETH AND JIM' S WORKS. WILL APPRECIATE IF YOU DO JIM'S THAK MAN EATER. KINDLY DONT GIVE TOO MUCH TIME GAP FOR YOUR POSTINGS. GOD BLESS YOU WITH GOOD HEALTH AND LOT OF WEALTH.
Thank you for all the words of encouragement, Sir! There's many more to come. I plan to read Thak man-eater this fall.
Oh wow a new vid
So happy !!!!
Thank you for listening, Edwin!
Thank you sir for another great tale!
My pleasure Ed, and thank you for commennting again.
@@selvalore I truly appreciate your work always looking forward to the next
Wonderful ,!!! 👏👏👏👏👍 !!!!
Superior as usual Mr Singh. Thank you again. As a naturalist myself, I can very well imagine walking through these forests and up these hills - every sight would be an adventure to myself, but can you tell me; do any tigers still exist in these exact areas? I believe there are still a few in the Western Ghats. I also read this week that there is now a bounty on the head of a man-eating (actually, sadly, child-killing and eating) leopard in Kashmir. It's incredible to me, here in Britain that these things still occur...but rather adventure-inducing too. Thank you
Hello Ben! Thanks for an excellent comment again. I'm no expert in this area and do not live in India anymore but I do keep up with it from time to time. The lower sections of Western Ghats (especially in the states of Karnataka, kerala and Tamil Nadu) along with the Nilgiri hills are still remarkably covered with forests. Although human encroachment keeps getting worse (another reason why tigers and leopards still kill many people in India), this region harbors quite a few National Parks and Tiger preserves such as Nagerhole, bandipur, Periyar and Kabini. So, yes there are still many tigers left in this exact area and I'm sure a few of them take to killing humans every year. It's all dealt with by the forest department nowadays and those days where an individual or a lone hunter would take care of them are long gone.
@@selvalore Much appreciated, thank you. It's great to know there are still areas where these species exist, although yes, of course the human-wildlife confilct is a huge issue and a very sad one. I was surprised to hear of the leopard that is currently being trageted as a serial man-eater - terrible of course and yet nostalgic in the same breath. Please keep up the great work - you are unparralled. There is another content creator named Usman Ijaz who you may be aware of. I am thankful for their uploads, but it is a computer generated voice and almost un-listenable! However it demonstrates that there are many more Kenneth Anderson stories out there...dare I suggest..for you! Very best wishes, Ben
@@benwaddams Thank you for the response, Ben. Yes, I looked into that. There is indeed a bounty on a leopard's head in Kashmir. That is remarkably sad. Leopard's are rare in the Himalayas now and obviously this animal was driven to killing children due to some environmental pressure owing to human-wildlife conflict. The report said the wildlife department has deployed 50 men to hunt it down. A 100 years ago a certain Mr. Corbett dealt with a much more cunning animal all by himself and with limited resources.
@@selvalore Yes indeed he would have! And I expect his methods may well still be the most accurate, humane and effective. On a seperate note, I read somewhere that someone had fairly recently tracked down a person who, as a child, remebered Corbett and his efforts to rid them of a maneater. I suppose that person would be in their 80s at least now. If true, quite remarkable. Keep up the great work Sir. Ben
I don’t know how Anderson could distinguish between a kill from a leopard or tiger?
Very interesting and exciting story.
Thanks for uploading
Thank you for commenting again, my friend!
wonderful story & narration
Thank you!
Well done. Really enjoyed 😬👍
Happy to hear that. Thanks Bill!
Wow Alfie messed up and just wounded the tiger!
Don't know how i missed this notification for 4 days! Cheers very much as always Mr.Singh and greetings from sunny Scotland!
You're very welcome Mr. O'Donnell and thank you for the comment again!
A tiger is no joke! I remember when I was a little boy watching nature documentaries and seeing tigers of India. The Sunderban tigers were legendary!
A Bengal tiger can weigh six hundred pounds. Literally heavier than a pony but every ounce of its body is built to kill.
I’d love to visit India some day and see the Tigers.
So true. Its one of nature's finest creations. Thank you for your comment!
As always, thank you for reading these for us. I truly dread the day you run out of these accounts read. If you should need to change the reading material to something else (eg. african stories("Lions of Tsalvo' please) I would eagerly listen to these as well. Would like to see 'Lions of Tsalvo' on this channel someday (if you see fitting) Not a request... just an idea. Many thanks and wishes to your continued success. Sylvan.
I have certainly thought about doing it. That is an excellent book and I will probably end up reading it at some point in the future. Thank you for such a thoughtful comment!
I love tsavo lions story
Thankyou saheb ❤️
Thank you as always for commenting, Danish!
The wounded tiger had a bad jaw so it couldn’t hunt its regular prey so then it became a maneater!
Good work mate
Much appreciated. Thanks for listening!
Wonderfully told story 👍👍💓
Thank you for commenting Mr. Portor!
A great hunter and man of the people
Very nice🙏👍
Thank you!
Sweet!
Thanks!
I really like the animal sounds you include.
Appreciate the comment!
@@selvalore I read all the Corbett books,but I was always curious what a cheetah hind and a sambur and the various monkeys sounded like. Good work,keep doing it.
@@selvalore Cheetal hind
But Anderson did kill the leopard that Alfie only wounded!
Long time Saheb... missed you.
Lovely to see your name in the comments again, Husayn saab. Thank you!
Can you please do the lions of tsavo brother 😂😂sorry I’ve been asking you for this but as a listener to your stories man I believe you’ll nail it 😂
Sure Preetji, I will get to it. It's not just you, others have made the same request as well. This summer's gonna be busy and I'm a little burnt out right now but maybe later this year i'll give a serious thought to it. Thank you for your patience.
In our childhood.
We read this book in Kannada written by Kenneth Anderson and translated ( much better) by Purna Chandra Tejaswi
Thank you for commenting!
Thank you
Thanks for watching!
Ty
👍
The difference between Anderson and Corbett is that the former gives way too much information and place names. It's confusing. Just focus on the topic
Car shikari were also brits and the one who helped was also a brit
Well once again Anderson killed the elusive tiger!
Despicable human scum shooting blindly at game from a car! They should be jailed, if not mauled by a Tiger 🐅 or Leopard 🐆. Who could blame the Tiger for reigning hell down on this community which should have stopped the poachers.
I wonder why Kenneth nor Jim carried a Pistol ????
The name of of the forest mean grim reaper in sansakrit, strange name or it was haunted, but the tigers are replaced by the Indian male rapist and corrupt politicians, which are more dangerous than the tiger
This descriptive and impersonal narrative sounds like it could have been plegerized straight from the writings of Jim Corbett. Oh, I almost forgot, there are no hyenas in India.
Thanks for commenting Richard! About that last point: many people mistakenly assume hynaes are not present in India but the striped hynae (which the author is referring to here) is native to the Indian subcontinent. KA has referred to hynaes in his stories on several occasions.
Funny how the tiger could think in Victorian English
Thanks for Chapter 7 from the Nine Man Eaters and One Rogue.
Khan in Pashto is a first or a surname like in Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan.
When used as a reference in the subcontinent, could it mean a Title? Perhaps a profession? Thanks☺
Khan is just a common last name in South Asia. I'm pretty positive it has nothing to do with profession but I have seen it used as a first name in some cases as well.
@@selvalore Thanks☺
@selvalore Khan is a title when you reach certain level of status,its origin is not South Asia but central Asia! Among Tartars, Qashqais of Iran,Pashtuns be it from Afghan,Pakistanis or India.Baluchis also.It is not an ancestral name! Just like Rais and Malik or Sheikh in Arabic or Shah,Agha,Jenaab,Khudavand or Sardar in Persian!
@@sivaratnamasabaratnam8946 Thanks for your research time, and reply!☺
36:43
No audio 😠
Its back🤗
@@ropeburnsrussell Thank you again for all your interest in these audio videos, Mr. Russell.
I enjoy these stories so much, I'd enjoy hearing anything you read.
This guy stole fuel????
Haha yes he did