Wat Pa Luangta Bua is a monastery of meditation, situated far away from any civilization, about 200 kilometres west of Bangkok, and here, silence, peace and harmony reign. Every afternoon, a daily ritual is observed - nonchalant Buddhist monks take their ten 3-5 year old tigers out on a leash for a walk through the bordering region of Burma. They dote upon their tigers, feed them and celebrate them as their most sacred animal. There are a few monks living in the monastery of Wat Pa. Each takes care of one tiger and the number of tigers increased to ten since two orphaned tiger cubs took refuge in this isolated temple in 1998. The monks in the forest of Sai Yok was declared a tiger reserve area by the Thai government. This doc portrays the harmonious relationship between predators and humans without disregarding the monk's maxim that "a tiger will always be a tiger, even if it feeds from the hand. It will always be a wild animal."