Chiselled by the winds stand the sand dunes of Sam. They are an overwhelming sight. All those sandy yellow waves and nothing thereafter for miles. It is a sight that can make you feel like a speck in an ocean of sand. Once in a while, a row of camels can be spotted, swaying their lazy behinds and walking off into the horizon with human loads on their humps.
I have sat on a camel twice now. Two occasions when I somehow clung on to the camel as it decided to make rude noises and threaten to throw me off its back. I would not blame it on hindsight. We humans are rather annoying in our attempt to get onto the back of every four-legged creature we can get our hands on.
I have made my peace with it. No more camel rides for this human is in the offing any time soon, unless I am thrown into the deserts of Arabia with no option but to get on to the back of one or perish. We all have keen survival instincts at the end of the day.
Now, the deserts always remind me of my wee days when my father drove my mother and me through the deserts of Salalah. When once I laid my eyes upon the strange sight of an upturned camel. I have never stopped wondering since if that is how camels pass on to nothingness or onto the next realm, if there is one that is. If you do know the answer to this, I would be grateful for the assuaging of this strange and stupid query that has always been a part of my growing up years.
On another note, have you ever seen the branding of a camel? It is not a pretty affair. Those poor mammals have no option but be branded. They are held down by the heavily moustachioed Rajasthani men, their feet often bare, their bright turbans always snagging the eye with vivacious colours that contrast sharply with the white of their kurta-and-dhoti attire, and how can one miss those significantly sized gold earrings dangling off their ear lobes – they were certainly bigger than mine. The poker glows red hot, held upon a rough fire pit made on the sand, and then when it looks decidedly hot enough, bam it is stamped onto the body of the protesting camel.
To say that it is merely disturbing is not doing your feelings justice. I remember the intense vehemence that swept over me and with it the violent urge to inflict that very branding exercise upon those men who were busy with their regular activity. But you realise then that you are but just an onlooker with no power. So you turn your eyes away with immense sadness in your heart and the thought running in your head that it is just the way it is. After all, not everything in life is the way it should be, is it?
Yet there is something mystical about the desert. The golden beauty of your surroundings, the spectacular sunset and the massive white disc of the moon that rises after. It reminds you of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s words in The Little Prince: “One sits down on a desert sand dune, sees nothing, hears nothing. Yet through the silence something throbs, and gleams…”
I love the desert but I can’t help you with your query! The second to last photo of the man with the horrible branding instrument is an intriguing one that really tells the story.
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I would be surprised if you could. I wonder if anyone else has seen a dead camel lie upside down. On the last bit, the pain that we humans inflict on animals!
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I’ve been on a camel, and I found it quite comfortable and relaxing. Wouldn’t be very happy to see a dead one though.
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You were good with it then. The only thing I could think of was when I would get off my high perch! 🙂 I have not seen another upturned camel since. So safe to say I am not complaining.
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Beautiful pictures. The desert is a beautiful and terrifying thing at the same time. I too have often times felt extreme anger and sadness at the way humans choose to treat animals that are helpless to overcome our power. Hopefully one day we will find new and better ways!
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Touché. Well put. Thank you! 🙂
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Excellent. You write well ?
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Why thank you 🙂
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Branding techniques are pretty universal i guess. Never did like it either, but i guess we can micro-chip animals now for ID.
Ive only seen kids posing like dead bugs, all four extremities up!
My ride to sam was on a rental motorbike… theres a couple jaisalmer story on thinkinkadia? Thanks for the follow!
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You are welcome. Branding techniques might be universal but watching it is quite painful I assure you. The animal however would not however complain much with spray paints, tagging and microchips. I would rather that than primeval techniques such as branding.
Motorbiking down the deserts of Sam would be quite an experience.
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I guess i would feel the same if i was witnessing the process.
Sam was an adventure at multiple levels, gender being only one surprise for the locals?
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Hmm I take it that you are a woman 🙂 If it is so, teamed with a bike, you must have set tongues wagging. But nothing like it to gladden your heart, eh?
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? how about traffic escort at slowing speed. Here it is: https://thinkinkadia.wordpress.com/2017/02/25/motorbiking-dream/
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