Woody Packard

Words + Pictures

Eagle Hunters


Agalai and his Eagle
Once practiced much more widely than it is now, there are, by our guide Nurbolat's estimate, fourteen Kazakh eagle hunting families left in western Mongolia. For centuries it's been a practice that was useful for catching animals that were used for their skins and sometimes for food. Hunting with eagles continues to provide food and clothing, but in a less direct way—it now brings in money that comes from satisfying tourists's fascination with this ancient tradition.

Much of the recent interest in eagle hunters has been sparked by photographs made by Asher Svidensky that went viral several years ago, as well as The Eagle Huntress, a more recent documentary film by Otto Bell, that got lots of attention at the Sundance Film Festival. The subject of both the photographs and the film is a young woman named Aisholpan, whose father Argalai began teaching her to handle eagles when she was thirteen years old, at a time when her older brother was too busy with other commitments to learn the craft. It was a radical decision, for handling eagles has always been men's work. It was also a very fortunate decision. Something about a young woman wading into a man's ancient tradition has struck a chord for many people around the world. It doesn't hurt that for such a young woman, Aisholpan has a fearless and direct presence—not just around eagles, but before a camera.

Several years older now, Aisholpan is still a celebrity in Mongolia. When she made an appearance at the Ulaanbaatar Eagle Festival that I wrote about two months ago she was swarmed by admirers, who abandonded their hard-won positions at the roped exhibition area to have their photos taken with her. With her parents, she has traveled to the United States, both to Park City, Utah, for the film festival and to New York City.

So I was taken back, two days before our trip, when Nurbolat mentioned casually on the phone, in a clarification of our itinerary, that we would be spending the night at Aisholpan's house. He had promised an eagle hunter, but not the eagle hunter.

As it happened, Aisholpan was not home for our visit, but staying in Ulgii. Famous or not, students her age in the Mongolian countryside must travel to the largest closest city to attend a school, where they board for the week. Although she has received the promise of a scholarship to a university in New York, she still needs to finish high school here.

Agalai, Saigulik, Alma
At her home, we spent time with her parents and her younger brother and sister, sitting around their low round table for several meals. We did what we could do to help with the herding of a large flock of sheep and goats, animals that Agalai is taking care of for his neighbors. Late in the afternoon, like clockwork, Agalai and his older son rounded up fur coats and traditional hats and embroidered pants, along with their eagle, and hopped on a motorcycle. We followed in our Land Cruiser, bringing with us Aisholpan's younger sister, who now, dressed in the white fox clothing that was given to Aisholpan by the government of Kazakhstan, looks exactly like her older sister did when she was first photographed by Svidensky. We follow a well-worn path across a stretch of desert and up to a rocky bluff, climbing to a predetermined spot near the top. At this time of year and at this time of day the light can be perfect, though today it is only perfect for a few minutes before low distant clouds block the sun. At this point it is clear that their goal is to get us to take the same photographs that you have seen so many times already. Of course it is tempting, because they are beautiful photographs, but that is not the real story. It is very windy, but we try anyway.

When tourists come so far to get to this part of Mongolia, there's an understandable desire to bring home pictures of a culture that is unique, or perhaps one that is still somehow untouched by time, but that is not the real story either. In the afternoon Argalai watches a horse race on his solar powered television, makes an appointment to have a tooth pulled with his mobile phone. He has skills that have taken generations to perfect but will take only one or two to lose in a world where the need for animal skins is replaced by the need for money. Tourism is the bargain he makes to keep one foot in each world, and it is not an easy bargain. The next afternoon as we are leaving for the Ulgii, an hour away, Agalai asked for a ride to go see his dentist. Although the film his daughter is featured in, and in which he participated behind the scenes, made its filmmaker nearly two million dollars, he does not own a vehicle to drive to town. He will spend the night with friends and take a taxi home the next day.

At the airport two days later I chatted with two Australian tourists, comparing notes on our travels. We all agreed that we just had a remarkable trip. "What did you do?" asked one of the women.

I told her that we had seen eagle hunters. "Which eagle hunters?" she asked.

"Agalai and his family."

"That's where we stayed too!" she told me.

Close Story—Back to Pictures

Eagle Hunters


Alma

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A favorite souvenir from New York, proudly shown by this Muslim woman.