Kuwait Times

Bird-riding loses luster in S Africa’s ostrich capital

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Clambering onto an ostrich for a ride used to be popular among tourists in a South African town known as the “ostrich capital of the world”. Not so much anymore. Two major ostrich farms in the Oudtshoorn area have stopped offering ostrich rides to tourists, responding to concerns from European clients and others about the birds’ welfare. A third farm is sticking with the feature, saying its regulation­s include tourist weight restrictio­ns and that an ostrich does not experience discomfort while trotting with someone on its back for 10 seconds or so.

The debate is part of a wider discussion in Africa and beyond about the ethics of human interactio­n with certain animals for entertainm­ent or other purposes. Ostrich farmers stress that riding an ostrich is different from riding an elephant, which would need to be trained. Nor, they say, can it be compared with the petting of lion cubs, whose time in captivity prevents them from learning how to survive in the wild.

But ostrich rides, which used to be “something that really captured the imaginatio­n,” are now viewed with distaste by many clients, said Douglas Bester, owner of Cango ostrich farm in Oudtshoorn. The farm scrapped rides at the end of February. “It’s a market demand,” Bester said, adding: “It’s more ethical to teach kids to love the birds than to sit on them and have fun laughing when someone falls off.”

Oudtshoorn is in South Africa’s arid Karoo region and ostriches were first farmed there for their feathers in the 19th century. Feathers ranked fourth behind gold, wool and diamonds in the value of South African exports before World War I, whose economic fallout devastated the ostrich industry, according to the website of the Safari Ostrich Show Farm. Besides feathers, there is also a market for ostrich eggs, meat and leather.

The Safari farm started regulating ostrich rides about 15 years ago, eventually lowering the weight restrictio­n for tourists to 60 kg, and dropped the practice altogether on May 5, said marketing manager Billy Engelbrech­t. “We saw that a lot of our local and internatio­nal tourists weren’t that keen on riding ostriches anymore, like they would have been 40 or 50 years ago,” Engelbrech­t said.

 ?? — AP ?? OUDTSHOORN, South Africa: In this June 27, 2010 file photo, two men compete in an ostrich race at Highgate ostrich farm.
— AP OUDTSHOORN, South Africa: In this June 27, 2010 file photo, two men compete in an ostrich race at Highgate ostrich farm.

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