The Borneo Post

South African town sees gold in ostrich plumes

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OUDTSHOORN, South Africa: At a South African farm, hundreds of ostriches stretch their slender necks and shake their black feathers under the se ing sun.

The birds’ lanky legs raise a cloud of ochre dust in their enclosure, one of dozens do ing the rugged landscape surroundin­g the southern town of Oudtshoorn.

“May the feathers be with you,” reads an inscriptio­n welcoming visitors to what is known as the ostrich capital of the world.

From dusters to boa scarves, about 70 per cent of ostrich products globally originate from South Africa.

Most come from Oudtshoorn, in the li le Karoo, a valley nestled between two mountain ranges running along south Africa’s southern coast, with a semi-arid climate ideal for big bird farming.

Since the town’s early days, fashion has been the main market for local farmers, the lush plumes used to decorate luxury hats and eccentric dresses.

“If you want to see a good exposure of our products, it will be, like, the Met Gala, in New York,” says Peter Liebenberg, who heads the feather division of Cape Karoo Internatio­nal.

The star-studded Metropolit­an Museum of Art’s annual fundraisin­g ball is renowned for its over-the-top outfits.

I became an ostrich feather auctioneer at the age of 22 or 23. So that is how I then landed in the ostrich industry, and I never looked back.

Saag Jonker

Hats and dusters

Yet, local producers say it’s the ostrich’s versatilit­y that has allowed them to survive the whims of fashion.

Just like for pigs, all parts are put to use and nothing is wasted, they say.

A quick stroll into town reveals what they mean.

Restaurant­s serve ostrich steak. Store windows display ostrich leather bags as well as lamps and other ornaments shaped out of the birds’ giant eggs.

The flue of the feather can be worked and curled to make brooches, says Saag Jonker, an 82-year-old farmer.

“At the moment it’s really in fashion,” he says.

A mischievou­s-looking ostrich adorns the logo of the local tourism office.

As demand for extravagan­t clothing to show off at fancy parties tanked when the world was forced indoors by the coronaviru­s pandemic, it was feather dusters that kept the industry afloat.

“People were in lockdown, restricted to their homes, and everyone wanted to clean!” says Liebenberg.

Oudtshoorn had been there before.

In the early 1900s, ostrich feathers were a prized designer item and South Africa’s fourth biggest export.

Their price by weight rivalled that of gold and the Oudtshoorn farmers’ associatio­n once gi ed Britain’s Queen Mary a dazzling fan made of white plumes in a sign of prosperity.

But the market crashed soon a er as World War I disrupted maritime trade and cars became a popular means of transport.

“You can’t get into a car with a hat with an ostrich feather. So that was a big thing,” says Liebenberg.

But demand “always comes back”, he adds.

Big birds, big gains

Today about 200 workers sort, cut, wash and dye plumes in several hundred colours at his processing facility in Oudtshoorn.

Seamstress­es in pink uniforms sew feather boas in a room adorned by images of Paco Rabanne, Jean Paul Gaultier and Balmain fashion shows.

Cape Karoo Internatio­nal sells around a hundred tonnes of feathers each year, including more than a million dusters and 130,000 metres of trim, he says.

Not far away in Jonker’s hatchery, the squawking of hundreds of newborns drowns out the so crackle of hatching eggs.

With an expert hand, a worker opens a temperatur­e-controlled drawer and removes a few pieces of shell from one of the large eggs, revealing a small beak and a pair of dozing eyes.

“I became an ostrich feather auctioneer at the age of 22 or 23. So that is how I then landed in the ostrich industry, and I never looked back,” Jonker recalls.

His firm is now the largest private ostrich breeding, processing and marketing company in the world, with nearly 45,000 birds slaughtere­d every season.

A er being sterilised and sorted, the black and white plumes of the wings – the most prized ones – are sold via haute couture houses throughout the world.

Clients range from Moulin Rouge performers in Paris to the carnival revellers in Rio de Janeiro.

“It’s really an excellent product,” he says. — AFP

 ?? Julie Bourdin ?? Jonker checks on ostrich eggs at the hatchery of Saag Jonker Holdings.
Julie Bourdin Jonker checks on ostrich eggs at the hatchery of Saag Jonker Holdings.
 ?? ?? A worker from Cape Karoo internatio­nal works on ostrich feathers on the production line.
A worker from Cape Karoo internatio­nal works on ostrich feathers on the production line.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? An ostrich themed board from the Tourism Bureau is seen on one of the main streets in Oudtshoorn, South Africa.
— AFP photos An ostrich themed board from the Tourism Bureau is seen on one of the main streets in Oudtshoorn, South Africa.
 ?? ?? A worker from Cape Karoo internatio­nal works on ostrich feathers on the production line.
A worker from Cape Karoo internatio­nal works on ostrich feathers on the production line.
 ?? ?? Weeks old Ostrich roam in a fenced field on one of Saag Jonker Holdings farms.
Weeks old Ostrich roam in a fenced field on one of Saag Jonker Holdings farms.
 ?? ?? A worker from Cape Karoo internatio­nal works on ostrich feathers.
A worker from Cape Karoo internatio­nal works on ostrich feathers.

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