Even in the peak of summer, Ranthambore National Park remains a hub of wildlife activity, as tourists, lenses, and whispers hoping for a glimpse of its majestic big cats. But this week, the forest grew a little quieter. On June 19, Tigress T-84, better known as Arrowhead, died after a prolonged battle with bone cancer, near the age of 14 years. She wasn’t just another tiger, she was one of Ranthambore’s legends.
Arrowhead’s final days were marked by visible struggle. Wildlife photographer Sachin Rai saw her by Padam Talab just two days before her death. “She tried to get up, took a few steps, then collapsed near a tree,” he wrote on Instagram, alongside a video of the once-mighty tigress, now frail, moving with effort. “I knew it was close to the end.”
Rai’s journey with Arrowhead began when she was a cub. He followed her life closely, through early setbacks, lost litters, and battles to hold onto her territory. Her story wasn’t one of constant triumph. She was displaced from her home range by her own daughter, Riddhi. Yet, despite declining health, Arrowhead raised another litter just last year, a final act of defiance from a tigress who never stopped fighting.
The (unverified) official Instagram page of Ranthambore National Park shared a photo of her lifeless body and wrote, “She was the pride of our forest.” In a strange coincidence, it noted that Arrowhead’s daughter was relocated to the Mukundra reserve just hours before her mother passed.
Who Was Arrowhead?
Arrowhead came from royalty. Daughter of Krishna and granddaughter of the iconic Machli, she inherited a legacy of strength and resilience. Yet, she carved her own place in Ranthambore’s lore, not always in the spotlight, but unforgettable to those who crossed her path.
Two years ago, photographer Jayanth Sharma captured her in action, hunting a shot shell turtle, a reminder of the wildness and grace she embodied. Today, social media is flooded with tributes in her remembrance.