Growing Up With Twin Tiger Cubs | Tigers About The House | BBC Earth



From their birth to the first time swimming in a pool, follow the journey of twin tiger cubs, Spot and Stripe.

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Taken From Tigers About The House

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40 thoughts on “Growing Up With Twin Tiger Cubs | Tigers About The House | BBC Earth”

  1. I got tears ! incredible birth of two tiger puppies and the whole team is beeing in front of the unique moment ! I would love to cuddle the little cubs, and the man does a great Job – he is a lucky one to be near Tigers – my fav. majestic and beautiful animals on Earth 😍🥰

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  2. Man I wish Australia's vast land could be used as national parks and conversation areas where they can be protected and run after prey and keep them wild but respectful with humans so if they loose the natural ones they still have almost exact same tigers at the original countries

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  3. tigers are supposed to be roaming the wild, why not take the conservation to the wild, instead of putting them in cages. they dont do well in cage, nobody like to be caged.

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  4. The Tiger (Uncia tigris) is large cat native only to Asia, it is the world's largest living cat species, there are twelve recognized subspecies of tiger: the †Caspian Tiger (Uncia tigris virgata), the Bengal Tiger (Uncia tigris tigris), the Siberian Tiger (Uncia tigris altaica), the †Wanhsien Tiger (Uncia tigris acutidens), the South China Tiger (Uncia tigris amoyensis), the Indochinese Tiger (Uncia tigris corbetti), the Malayan Tiger (Uncia tigris jacksoni), the †Ngandong Tiger (Uncia tigris soloensis), the Sumatran Tiger (Uncia tigris sumatrae), the †Javan Tiger (Uncia tigris sondaica), the †Trinil Tiger (Uncia tigris trinilensis), and the †Bali Tiger (Uncia tigris balica), out of the twelve recognized tiger subspecies, the caspian tiger evolved first, then followed by the bengal tiger, with the most recent split being between two clades, the north asian tigers, which comprise the Uncia tigris altaica group and contains the siberian tiger, the wanhsien tiger, and the south china tiger and the southeast asian tigers, which comprise the Uncia tigris sondaica group and contains all the other seven subspecies native to Southeast Asia, which are the indochinese tiger, the malayan tiger, the ngandong tiger, the sumatran tiger, the javan tiger, the trinil tiger, and the bali tiger, the Siberian Tiger (Uncia tigris altaica) is known for being the only big cat that is also found in the arctic, where it competes with other polar carnivorans like the White Wolf (Canis albus), the Arctic Fox (Alopex lagopus), the Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus), the Siberian Weasel (Kolonocus sibiricus), the Stoat (Mustela erminea), the Least Weasel (Mustela nivalis), the Wolverine (Gulo gulo), the Sable or Siberian Marten (Martes zibellina), and the Eurasian Lynx (Lynx lynx), as well as preying on polar ungulates like the Caribou (Rangifer tarandus) and the Muskox (Ovibos moschatus), it can also prey on pinnipeds like arctic seals, the northern fur seal, the steller's sea lion, and the walrus.

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  5. I know that it’s sad for you to have raised him and for him to be sick and losing his left eye. But the big picture is that he’s in your care for his life and he will have the best life ever. If he was in the wild he would have surely died. There’s always a bright side to every tragedy.❤️

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  6. Okay! Those keepers should be as far in the background as possible!!!! This is good for them to live out their fantasy games- but it does nothing good for the tigers. Step off!! What the hell is going on here! Idiotic!!

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  7. Can Humans be Tamed?

    We need to develop ourselves as human beings beyond our animate level of existence, and it is possible with a certain kind of education.

    Developing ourselves as human beings means learning and balancing ourselves with the integral laws of nature operating on our lives. If we learn how to positively connect among each other in human society, with altruistic attitudes replacing our current egoistic attitudes, we then develop ourselves beyond the animate level of existence and become human beings in the fullest sense of the term.

    First, we need to provide for our animate lives, giving our physical bodies the food, sex and family that they require, then after taking care of those essentials, we can begin our human development. We then need to learn who and what we are, where we are from, why we exist, how we can develop ourselves, how we can control our human development, what our attitude to our surrounding society should be, what society’s attitude should be toward us, and how we can develop together harmoniously, i.e. us in relation to society, and society in relation to us.

    We need to supply ourselves with this development that will make us human beings. Unfortunately, I see nobody understanding what it means to develop a human being, and we thus fail to realize such a process. One of the outcomes of our lack of development into human beings is our inability to understand the younger generation. We become increasingly detached from them, and do not know what will happen with them or how to guide them in a beneficial direction. We thus let life unfold as it does, into a proliferation of problems and crise.

    Very simply, we need to learn what nature wants from us, and to develop in order to balance with nature’s demands toward us. If we meet those demands, we can then build a harmonious and peaceful world, one that is in balance with nature.

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