Nyanyana Crocodile Farm is home to
over 50,000 Nile crocodiles.
CROCODILES are some of the most feared predators in Africa,
ruthless reptiles renowned for tearing their prey to pieces before swallowing
hunks of meat raw.
But in the baking sun at Nyanyana crocodile farm on the
shores of Zimbabwe's Lake Kariba, feeding time has a surreal edge as the beasts
nibble lazily at bowls of vegetarian pellets.
Besides being cheaper than meat, the diet of protein
concentrate, minerals, vitamins, maize meal and water is said to enhance
crocodile skin destined to become handbags or shoes on the catwalks of New
York, Paris, London or Milan.
"We don't feed them meat any more," said Oliver
Kamundimu, financial director of farm owner Padenga Holdings.
"It actually improves the quality because we now
measure all the nutrients that we are putting in there, which the crocodile may
not get from meat only," he told Reuters in an interview.
Four hundred kilometres (250 miles) northwest of Harare,
Nyanyana is home to 50,000 Nile crocodiles and is one of three Padenga farms
around Kariba, Africa's largest man-made lake.
The company has 164,000 crocodiles in all and started
feeding pellets in 2006 at the height of an economic crisis in Zimbabwe that
made meat scarce and very expensive.
Initially, the pellets contained 50 percent meat but that
has gradually been phased out to an entirely vegetarian diet.
"We have moved gradually to a point where we reduced
the meat to about 15 percent then to seven percent and where we are now there
is zero meat, zero fish," he said.
"It's a much cleaner operation and the crocs are
getting all the nutrients they want from that pellet."
Fed every second day, the crocodiles are largely docile and
lie asleep in their enclosures as workers walk around casually cleaning up
leftovers.
Hermes, Gucci
The crocodilies are slaughtered at 30 months, when they are
about 1.5 metres long and their skin is soft and supple.
Last year Harare-listed Padenga sold 42,000 skins to
tanneries in Europe, especially France, where the average skin fetches $550.
Ninety percent of the leather becomes high-end handbags,
Kamundimu said, while the remainder makes belts, shoes and watch straps for
some of the biggest names in world fashion.
"When you hear names like Hermes, Louis Vuitton and
Gucci - those are the brand names we are talking about," he said with a
satisfied smile.
Having survived economic collapse and hyperinflation of 500
billion percent in Zimbabwe, Padenga then had to deal with fallout from the
2008 global financial crisis, and economic contraction in the euro zone, its
main market.
However, while appetite for crocodile meat cooled in Europe
and Asia, super-wealthy European shoppers shrugged off recession and continued
to snap up crocodile-skin items, Kamundimu said.
"When you look at people who buy handbags for their
wives or daughters that cost $40,000 a piece, even when the euro zone problems
came, they could still afford to buy," he said. We didn't feel a
decline."
No comments:
Post a Comment