My early morning safari at Bandhavgarh National Park's Tala Zone was quite a success. This was my first visit to the park. The rocky terrain did add a lot of bumps but accompanied by trained naturalist, our rough ride was soon forgotten after we spotted our first fresh pugmark. At the time, unsure about the gender of the tiger, we followed the pug marks and proceeded towards the interior of the park. Bandhavgarh is one of the smaller parks in India but with a good number of tigers, so the rate of spotting is always high. On that positive note and a sudden warning call of langurs, in a matter of few minutes, whole jungle came to life. Someone announced about a cub seen near a watering hole. And just like that every safari jeep in that area made a beeline for that spot. After an agonising hour of chase and wait, as we all waited patiently for the mahout and his elephant to track the cub, a in a very dramatic way, I spotted the cub under a beam of sunlight, in a thicket. The moment I informed others, the cub moved deeper into the shade, showing off just its tail before disappearing. I could hardly keep a chuckle at others' attempt to spot, but what a lucky sighting that was. Just then the wireless came to life again about more calls at a different site. The chase continued.