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CITIES
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While the Spanish
have bullfights, the Italians cockfights, and the English go hunting
with hounds, the Turks have camel wrestling. Camel wrestling is now
mostly restricted to the Aegean region, although it was once more widespread
in Anatolia. In the winter you will see elaborately saddled camels being
paraded through the villages with the owner extolling just how his camel
is going to make mince-meat of anyone rash enough to challenge his beast.
The camels are all fully grown bulls specially fed to increase their
bulk further, and the sight of them wrestling one another would seem
to promise some spectacular action. In reality it doesn't happen and
camel wrestling is more akin to comedy than to blood-sport. Bull camels
normally wrestle and butt one another in a knock- out contest for precedence
in a herd, and more importantly, precedence in mating. In the arena
two bulls are led out and then a young cow is paraded around to get
them excited. It's very easy to know when a bull is excited as streams
of viscous milky saliva issue from his mouth and nostrils. Mostly the
two bulls will half-heartedly butt each other and lean on the other
until one of them gives in and runs away. This is the really exciting
bit as the bull will often charge off towards the crowd, with the conquering
bull in pursuit, and the spactaters must scramble hurriedly out of the
way. The antics of spectators trying to avoid a thousand kilograms (nearly
a ton) of camel running towards them can lead to pure comedy and is
the best part of camel wrestling. Miraculausly there are few accidents.
Occasionally two bulls will get down to it and actually try to wrestle
one another, feinting in here and there, eventually locking a fore-leg
inside the leg of the opposition and leaning on him to topple him over
in a dromedary's version of a wrestling fall and pin.
The sport is a declining one as the cost of keeping, feeding and training
a camel solely for competition doesn't come cheaply, and only a rich
man can afford to do it. Large bets are wagered by owners and spectators
alike, though how you tell just which camel won can be difficult to
determine. What happens when they both run away? - it happens. It's
worth going once just to see and it's quite nice to know that there
isn't a lot of blood and gore involved in the sport, it's really quite
gentle.
Today there is a camel wrestling league in the Aegean region. You can
watch the show around Mugla and in Selcuk, nearby Ephesus.
Selcuk
Mugla
Ephesus
Izmir
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