Page 191 - UAE Truncal States_Neat
P. 191

Chap tar Five

                 largo group such as a whole subtribe or even a tribe can use one and
                 the same mark or wasm, which is branded onto the flank or chest of
                 the camel.
                   Some tribes specialise in certain breeds of animals, and some of the
                 hardiest though not the most beautiful camels of Eastern Arabia
                 were bred by the Rashid.2 The camels of the Iladhramaut-bascd fully
                 beduin families are among those which can endure the longest
                 journeys consuming very little water. On a journey such as crossing
                 stretches of waterless desert the beduin of Eastern Arabia travelled
                 as lightly as possible, carrying a rifle, and a dagger, a cooking-pot, a
                 coffee kettle, and as much water in goal-skins and as many dried
                 dates in rush bags as could be carried by the animals. The well-being
                 of the camels is always considered first; when arriving at a well they
                 were all watered before the people could lake their first sip. Camels
                 were allowed to stray and forage for small pieces of vegetation even if
                 the rider was in a great hurry; camels would be hand-fed on dates
                 when there was no other food for them. They would be given the last
                 drop of water from the skins, because the safe arrival of its rider
                 depended entirely on the strength of his mount. There is no hard and
                 fast rule as to how long a camel from south-eastern Arabia can go
                 without water, as this depends on many factors; the type of plant it
                 grazes on, the load it is required to carry, the speed of travelling, the
                 ground it walks on, and above all the time of year. A long and
                 arduous journey such as crossing the Rub' al Khali can only be
                 undertaken during the winter.
                   During the summer, beduin such as the Rashid went to wells
                 which were within relatively easy reach of sufficient grazing. They
                 split up into very small groups so that the vegetation would not be
                 depleted too quickly. The camel-herders would prefer the gravel
                 wadis to the sands because the occasional acacia tree gives shade to
                 animals and humans;3 but often these coveted areas were not safe for
                 beduin who might be at feud with another tribe, and therefore they
                 often decided to stay near a well in the sands. Sometimes the wells are
                 too bitter for human consumption, and although the camels, reluct-
                 an tly and with their nostrils closed by the owner’s hand, drink the
                 water, the people have to mix it with camel milk for their own  con-
                 sumption. In the desert and the borderlands there are no ponds or
                 artesian wells, and the animals cannot be left to drink by themselves.4
                 The water in a well is usually found several feet down and has to be
                 drawn by skins attached to a rope and tied at the four corners to form

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