Kenjebay Mamyrov and Perizat Nadyrbekova, Kyrgyzstan
International Year of Camelids 2024

21/10/2024
For centuries, camels were indispensable for the people of Kyrgyzstan, a mountainous and landlocked country in Central Asia, where they once carried yurts and belongings for nomadic families traversing the highlands. They also gave them milk, meat, and wool. “The camel can lift the heaviest load” is still a popular saying here, even though most Kyrgyz are sedentary today, with other sources of income. And even the few who still move their livestock to highland pastures in summer, use pickup trucks to get around. As a result, only 260 camels are left today – of some 12 000 that dwelled the Kyrgyz plains around the 1950s.