Shepherd and his troops in the mountains above Hamana & Falougha |
While
in France this summer, I ended up in a region with a lot of cows. And one of
the main attractions there in August was the annual transhumance; the seasonal
movement of people with their livestock between the summer and winter
pastures. The local tourist agency made a big deal out of it, and hordes of
people came to observe an event that was totally staged. A cattle truck stopped
at the beginning of town, got the cows out, herded them through town and then
back in the truck they went. I felt rather screwed. The actual moving of the cattle doesn’t happen
until much later, and it is done by truck these days.
They graze the herd on top of the plateau (up there) |
We got mixed up with the goats |
As
it happened, it was sunset, and the shepherds came down the mountains
to the pens where they gather the goats at night (there are plenty of jackals in
the mountains) while I was walking down the path. I tried to avoid them - I had
just given my dog an anti-flea treatment that week - but that didn’t work. The goats were really
eager to get home, and so we sort of got mixed up.
Plenty of water basins |
And
then from a little house nearby, some women with children came out and joined
us. They did not look like nomads, but rather like regular town people. And it
turned out they were. They don’t actually live there, but because it was the
summer holiday, and the children do not have school, they move up in summertime
with the husbands and stay in the summer pastures where the goats graze. It is
nice and quiet, the kids have a ball out in the fields, and whenever they need
certain things, they take the car down into the valley.
The
moment the schools start again, they go down into the valley where they have
houses, and eventually when it gets colder, snow will cover these mountains,
and the men will bring the goats down to the coastal regions, where they will
graze during the winter.
No match for the dogs that guard the goats. |
Sometimes we take the beautiful things for granted, and we always think that 'outside' it is better. But there
are so many things this country has to offer, so many untapped resources, that
it is a pity we’re stuck in the situation that we are stuck in.
4 comments:
Amen Sister
Amen Sister !!
Welcome back, fantastic post.
My family has been doing this for generations between the Laqlouq (around 2,000 m) in summer and then Byblos in the winter.
looks like you won 20 dollars.
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