The National - News

CHARM OF SHEIKH ZAYED BROUGHT TOGETHER FALCONERS TO SHARE IDEAS

▶ The first Internatio­nal Festival took place in 1976 after Sheikh Zayed met Hurst Niester. It has had a lasting effect, Anna Zacharias writes

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In 1974, the late Austrian falconer Hurst Niester was approached with an unusual request. A constructi­on company wanted to present the Ruler of the United Arab Emirates with a falcon and they needed a falconer with his experience to transport it.

Mr Niester agreed, and so began a friendship with the late Sheikh Zayed, the UAE’s Founding Father. Sheikh Zayed and Niester shared a love of falconry but it was a difficult time for the sport. Falcon population­s were quickly dropping around the world from urbanisati­on, pesticide use and poaching.

Sheikh Zayed approached Niester with a solution, recalls Hurst’s widow, Ute.

“He said, ‘Where in this world are falconers? I want to know them. I want to learn from them and they could maybe learn from us. Is it possible to bring them to the desert?’”

This conversati­on led to the first Internatio­nal Festival of Falconry in 1976, where falconers from around the world came to Abu Dhabi to set up a framework for falconry conservati­on. Mrs Niester, an avid falconer and breeder from Cologne, Germany, was one of 16 attendees from the original conference who returned to Abu Dhabi this week for the fourth edition of the festival. They are accompanie­d by their friends and relatives.

The original festival had a lasting effect on falconry.

“It was the first where the falconers came together from different countries to discuss the subject on this level,” said Frits Kleyn, the organiser of this year’s reunion and a board member of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n for Falconry Conservati­on of Birds of Prey. “They also discussed the conservati­on element, which was always done on a smaller, local scale. Here it became more internatio­nal.”

A three-day conference was held at the Hilton Hotel in Abu Dhabi. Mrs Niester and her husband remained in Abu Dhabi, hosting a three-week falconry exhibition.

Among the 1976 guests was Richard Fyfe, a biologist from Saskatchew­an, Canada, whose research on pesticides helped bring the peregrine falcon back from the brink of extinction in North America.

He had been invited for his research into the toxic affect of DDT on birds’ fertility and on eggshells, which had cut the American peregrine falcon population from around 3,875 nesting pairs in the 1940s to about 324 nesting pairs.

It led him to start a captive breeding programme, capturing the attention of the sheikh.

Fyfe passed away in June at age 85, from pneumonia. His son, Ken, and daughterin-law, Michelle, came in his place.

Also present was Thomas Cade, a professor of ornitholog­y at Cornell University in the United States and the founding chair and director of The Peregrine Fund.

“My personal reason for coming to the conference was to persuade the locals, the Emiratis, to get involved in breeding,” said Prof Cade. “They were having problems getting sakers and other falcons for their falconry. The ones that they took, of course,

One houbara was so tame it was content to sit on the lap of a driver, unaware of the hooden falcon inches away

they were taking from a declining population, which is not very good for conservati­on.”

These three-day conference­s laid the groundwork for sustainabl­e practices, like captive breeding programmes.

“It took time,” Prof Cade said. “It was not a popular idea at all and some of the old conservati­ves, not just the Arabs but a lot of Europeans who were old-time falconers, just couldn’t see that as ever working and so they politicked against it to some extent.”

Prof Cade travelled with his PhD student, Joseph Platt. The pair had already been in contact with King Hamad ibn Isa of Bahrain in 1975, who was the crown prince at the time. They set up the Bahrain Falcon Centre in 1978. Within a few years, the first falcon hospital was establishe­d in Abu Dhabi and the Dubai Falcon Hospital was set up in 1983.

Others had not returned to the Gulf until this week. On Wednesday they were taken on a desert hunting trip where five farmed houbaras bustard, each valued at thousands of dirhams, were released in their honour.

However, the Emirati guides who took them out were so concerned about the comfort of elderly falconers that they did not venture far into the dunes but remained where it was flat and allowed the houbara only a 100 metres to run before falcons were released. Some houbara, tame as chickens, did not want to fly but walked slowly in front of the cars upon their release, unwittingl­y prolonging their lives.

One houbara was so tame that it was content to sit on the lap of a driver as it was being driven to the dunes for release, unaware of the hooden falcon perched on the console inches away.

It was not a style of hunting that would have been familiar to Sheikh Zayed, but the intent of the hospitalit­y was familiar. It was the same spirit of generosity they remembered from decades ago.

Karl Pock, an Austrian falconer who met Sheikh Zayed through Hurst Niester and attended the 1976 conference, carried his iPad2 in his suitcase throughout the trip, occasional­ly pulling it out to show others photos on his Instagram account: Sheikh Zayed reading a book with a flashlight; Dubai sheikhs in top hats at the horse races; a portrait of the young Karl Pock himself in Emirati dress.

Mr Pock recalled a visit by Sheikh Zayed to his house in Austria in 1974. Walking through the Austrian forest, Mr Pock asked Sheikh Zayed for the time. The sheikh removed his wristwatch and handed it to the Austrian, saying “now you’ll always have the time”.

“Sheikh Zayed had charm,” Ms Niester said. “If he was in a room, he filled it.”

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 ?? Reem Mohammed/The National ?? Karl Pock, from Austria, above, and Prof Thomas Cade, 91, from the US, below, on a houbara hunting trip at the fourth Internatio­nal Festival of Falconry. They were among the original 27 falconers in 1976 to receive Sheikh Zayed’s invitation to build a...
Reem Mohammed/The National Karl Pock, from Austria, above, and Prof Thomas Cade, 91, from the US, below, on a houbara hunting trip at the fourth Internatio­nal Festival of Falconry. They were among the original 27 falconers in 1976 to receive Sheikh Zayed’s invitation to build a...

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