11 Verbs to Use for the Word jaguar

An interesting incident occurred on the day we killed our first jaguar.

He carried a sharp spear, not a rifle, for in Matto Grosso it is the custom in hunting the jaguar for riflemen and spearmen to go in at him together when he turns at bay, the spearman holding him off if the first shot fails to stop him, so that another shot can be put in.

Hercules would be strong enough to crush two jaguars at once, one in each hand!"

But the turtle started to crawl off, got going strong, and dragged the jaguar into the sea and drowned him.

The dead carcasses of others showed that on their wanderings they had encountered jaguars or human foes.

These include the jaguar, the great ant-eater, and the armadillo.

The drawings represented jaguars, birds, men, and dachshund-like dogs.

When, some six years previously, he had spoken to me in the White House about taking this South American trip, I had answered that I could not, as I intended to go to Africa, but added that I hoped some day to go to South America and that if I did so I should try to shoot both a jaguar and a tapir, as they were the characteristic big-game animals of the country.

One night a few weeks later they were obliged to leave a camping-place, where they had intended to spend the night, because the baby was fretful, and its cries attracted a jaguar, which prowled nearer and nearer in the twilight until they thought it safest once more to put out into the open river and seek a new resting-place.

In the excellent zoological gardens at Buenos Aires the curator, Doctor Onelli, a naturalist of note, showed us a big male jaguar which had been trapped in the Chaco, where it had already begun a career as a man-eater, having killed three persons.

If in timber, however, the jaguar must kill it at once, for the squat, thick-skinned, wedge- shaped tapir has no respect for timber, as Colonel Rondon phrased it, and rushes with such blind, headlong speed through and among branches and trunks that if not immediately killed it brushes the jaguar off, the claws leaving long raking scars in the tough hide.

11 Verbs to Use for the Word  jaguar