Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

FWD: Price on their heads

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

This message was forwarded to you by yitzeling.

 

Comment from sender:

 

 

This article is from The Star Online

URL:

http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2003/6/24/features/antlers & sec=f\

eatures

 

________________________

 

Tuesday, June 24, 2003

Price on their heads

By MARIA GOLOVNINA

 

Antler trade forms the economy of the Russian region of Gorny Altai, where

Siberian herdsmen engage in a gory ritual of blood drinking when dehorning

stags, writes MARIA GOLOVNINA.

 

WITH its eyes bandaged and legs bound, the stag groaned in pain as its huge

curved antlers were severed with a hand-saw. The powerful beast surged forward

to break away as blood spurted from the stumps, but Siberian herdsmen in Gorny

Altai pinned it down until their work was finished.

 

The gory dehorning of the Maral deer is an annual ritual in this isolated part

of Siberia and dates from the 17th century. It is essential for the export of

antler horn & #8211; a prized commodity on Asian markets and money-spinner for

the under-developed region.

 

Tourists, who have travelled thousands of kilometres across Russia to witness

the spectacle in the misty mountains of Gorny Altai bordering Mongolia, China

and Kazakhstan, look on in bewilderment, some aghast.

 

 

 

Some deer die from shock during the dehorning but in this case the stag & #8217;s

stumps were treated with salt and the animal was released back into the lush

mountains to grow new antlers & #8211; which one day will be culled again.

 

The big markets for Maral horn, said by aficionados to have rare curative

properties, are in China and South Korea where it is sold in pieces or ground

into powder for adding to medicines.

 

The antlers fetch around US$300/kg (RM1,140/kg). With some mature stag growing

antlers that weigh about 20kg, that means they have a price on their heads

& #8211; quite literally & #8211; of around US$6,000 (RM22,800). Some locals

testify to the benefits of drinking and bathing in blood which is drained from

the deer & #8217;s neck. They say it boosts stamina, soothes stress and helps

wounds to heal.

 

When Alexander, who has worked on the vast deer farm in the quaint Altai

village of Chendek for more than a decade, grabbed a freshly severed antler and

squeezed some blood into his mouth, some of the tourists froze in shock. One of

the tourists later followed suit, but the majority preferred to abstain.

 

New Russians

 

For much of the year, Chendek, populated by ethnic Russians and descendants of

Turkish nomads, is a scattering of wooden houses about 4,000km from Moscow and a

day & #8217;s drive along the turbulent Katun river from the regional airport.

 

 

 

But the deer cull, held in the early days of Siberia & #8217;s short summer,

changes the scene spectacularly as Russia & #8217;s new rich, thirsty for

extravagant ways to spend their wealth, flock to the area and zip around in

sports utility vehicles, manoeuvring amid herds of cows, pigs and bemused

locals.

 

“I & #8217;ve travelled all the way down from Moscow to take a blood bath,” said

66-year-old Anatoly Gensiorovsky, the head of a Moscow-based engineering company

who came to the farm to soak in an ascetic Soviet-style tub overflowing with

fresh deer blood.

 

“I & #8217;ve consulted many doctors about my back pain, but this bath is the

only thing that helps. It & #8217;s not easy to come here and the service is very

primitive. But yes, it & #8217;s worth it.”

 

Animal rights groups denounce the practice though they say it does not endanger

the deer.

 

“Our only concern is that the brutality of this disgusting procedure could

leave psychological scars on the deer & #8217;s psyche,” said Alexei Vaisman of

the World Wide Fund for Nature in Russia.

 

Local producers, managing tens of thousands of deer in farms scattered around

Siberia & #8217;s secluded Oimon valley, offer a range of goods made from the

antlers such as pantocrin, an extract which they say boosts the immune system.

 

 

 

Some Russians drink deer blood mixed with vodka but the pharmacological

benefits have yet to be scientifically determined.

 

New Siberians

 

Once the horns are removed, the herders dip them in boiling water and store

them to reduce the moisture content before they go for export. Most are used in

traditional medicines in Asia.

 

Siberians have been making thousands of dollars from antler exports since

communist times, selling up to 40 tonnes every year & #8211; second only to New

Zealand.

 

In the old days, Russian settlers traded the antlers for gold and fur with

Mongolian nomads. Today, this is the driving force of Gorny Altai & #8217;s

economy which has been struggling since the fall of communism in 1991. In Soviet

times, the state subsidised production along with other areas of Russian

agriculture.

 

“If not for this business, our economy would have collapsed a long time ago.

But we & #8217;ve had a tough time since 1991,” said Vadim Mesheryakov who

coordinates Altai & #8217;s antler exports.

 

“In Soviet times, the government paid a guaranteed US$1,200 (RM4,560) for 1kg

of the deer & #8217;s antlers, while today we sell our products at an average

price of only US$300 (RM1,140).”

 

Nevertheless, the business, facing growing demand from South Korea and

Russia & #8217;s burgeoning middle class, has opened a new market niche for

Siberian businessmen who want to cash in on the splendour of Altai & #8217;s

untamed wilderness.

 

Some hope the flow of tourists will pick up when a deserted Soviet-era airport

in a nearby town reopens in coming months.

 

Vladimir Weinberger, who runs the region & #8217;s leading Chorny Klyuch deer

farm, plans to build a luxurious guest house, with Western-style health

facilities, on his vast yet under-developed estate.

 

“In Russia, the number of rich people is growing and, just like in the West,

they want to look after their health,” he said. “In a few years, there will be

hotels and houses on the banks of the Katun comparable to those in Western

Europe.” & #8211; Reuters<p>

 

________________________

Your one-stop information portal:

The Star Online

http://thestar.com.my

http://biz.thestar.com.my

http://classifieds.thestar.com.my

http://cards.thestar.com.my

http://search.thestar.com.my

http://star-motoring.com

http://star-space.com

http://star-jobs.com

http://star-ecentral.com

http://star-techcentral.com

 

1995-2003 Star Publications (Malaysia) Bhd. All rights reserved.

Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written

permission of Star Publications is prohibited.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...