The Siberian Tiger Park has over 1,300 purebred Siberian tigers with 100 visible to visitors. In addition there are white tigers, lions, lynx, leopards, and black pumas as well as Bengali tigers.
The park is divided into ten areas to include the young tiger area, the mature tiger area, the king tiger area, a walking area and a platform for viewing the tigers. Except in the walking area and the platform for viewing the tigers the tigers are seen by taking a bus encircled by a steel fence to the areas where the tigers roam freely in the fields.
The mature tiger area has 30 Siberian tigers wandering free. The tigers in this area are all about 7 or 8 years old. And in the young tiger area, there are over 40 young active tigers about 2 years old. The Siberian Tiger Park also houses some lions which coexist peacefully with the tigers.
The Siberian Tiger Introduction Project being carried out at the Tiger Park involves re-establishing
populations of the Siberian tiger, also known as the Amur tiger, in their former habitat. Also it is hoped to expanding their habitat by introducing them as replacements of their genetically similar relative, the extinct Caspian tiger, into Central and Western Asia. Currently, the Siberian tiger inhabits the cold mountains of the Russian Far East and northern China. Genetic studies have revealed that the Siberian and Caspian tigers are descended from the tiger population that colonized Central Asia about 10,000 years ago
.
Siberian tigers used to be common on either side of the Amur River in Russia and China, as well as in northeastern Mongolia and South Korea. Caspian tigers lived around the Caspian Sea in Azerbaijan, Iran and Turkmenistan, and also further away in Armenia, Georgia, Turkey and Kazakhstan all the way to the Altai Mountains in the East. Caspian tigers reportedly became extinct in the 1970’s after many years of hunting, poaching and habitat loss. Siberian tigers lost most of their ranges in Siberia and China and became extinct in the wild of Korea and Mongolia.
On leaving Harbin for Seoul (South Korea) I was told at the airport that I did not have a visa in my passport for South Korea. It took a while to convince the airline people that I was entitled to a 'visa on arrival'.