Unpopped Collar

  • Lifestream
  • Travel
  • All Photos
  • Mobile Photos
  • Favorite Photos
  • Social Entrepreneurship
  • Thesis
  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Ask Away
banner
I learned a lot during my visit to the “National Research Centre on Camel” — that Gujarati camels have curly hair, that their milk is salty, and that they can carry nearly 1000 pounds on their back.  But, most importantly, I learned that when I grow up, I do not want to be a camel artificial inseminator.Though I wasn’t really sure what to expect, it ended up being a really fun place to visit.  We hung out with some baby camels, saw a ton of camels chilling in their corral, and saw first-hand how good the life of a “Camel Stud” is.  I also got to taste my first Camel ice-cream which was strangely salty, and slightly orange (which I’m hoping was from a spice like saffron, not naturally occurring), and, after our guide described the artificial insemination process of camels, I was quite glad to be in grad school in a field that will never lead me to that career.  But, after enjoying some freshly-made camel dairy goodness, here’s to the few, the proud: the camel artificial inseminators.
Pop-upView Separately

I learned a lot during my visit to the “National Research Centre on Camel” — that Gujarati camels have curly hair, that their milk is salty, and that they can carry nearly 1000 pounds on their back.  But, most importantly, I learned that when I grow up, I do not want to be a camel artificial inseminator.

Though I wasn’t really sure what to expect, it ended up being a really fun place to visit.  We hung out with some baby camels, saw a ton of camels chilling in their corral, and saw first-hand how good the life of a “Camel Stud” is.  I also got to taste my first Camel ice-cream which was strangely salty, and slightly orange (which I’m hoping was from a spice like saffron, not naturally occurring), and, after our guide described the artificial insemination process of camels, I was quite glad to be in grad school in a field that will never lead me to that career. 

But, after enjoying some freshly-made camel dairy goodness, here’s to the few, the proud: the camel artificial inseminators.

    • #Travel
    • #India
  • 2 years ago
  • 5
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet

5 Notes/ Hide

  1. grass-tea-mom liked this
  2. spidermash liked this
  3. emperorsnewclothes reblogged this from abudak and added:
    inseminator. word yo
  4. shoulder-blade liked this
  5. meganpotentially liked this
  6. abudak posted this

Recent comments

Blog comments powered by Disqus
← Previous • Next →

About

Avatar I'm a social entrepreneur, travel writer, and picture taker. I've been swimming with baby penguins in the Galapagos, visited rat temples in India, survived an overnight train in Moscow, jumped out of a plane strapped to a guy in a leather helmet, penned a thesis on new media and elections, competed in a POGs tournament, discussed social entrepreneurship at the White House, traveled on everything from a ferry to a camel in search of adventure, and, most importantly, attended every home basketball game while a student at UCLA. (read more)

Say hello: Email

Friend +1

  • @abudak on Twitter
  • Facebook Profile
  • budak on Vimeo
  • Linkedin Profile

Sponsored Links

Barcelona Hotels

The Travel Section


Most Recent Travel Posts
All Travel Writing

Travel Stories by Country:

The Photo Section


Most Recent Photos
iPhone Photos
Favorites Gallery

Hi, I'm @abudak

loading tweets…

Popular Topics

  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Ask Away
  • Mobile
  • Travel
  • Social Good
  • Social Good
  • My Photos

Budak's Tumblr: Travel. Social Entrepreneurship and adventures along the way.
Effector Theme by Carlo Franco.

Powered by Tumblr