Skip to main content
Bactrian camelBactrian camelBactrian camel

What's the big deal with camels?

What's the big deal with camels?
Story8 October 2024

This year, you can make a groundbreaking gift - a camel for a family in need! New to the Concern Gift Shop, these amazing animals can provide up to eight litres of nutrient-packed, antioxidant-rich milk each day. With a camel, families can stay healthy while also having a source of income, an incredible gift that keeps giving!

Camels are more than just 'The Ship of the Desert.' For many of the communities we support, they’re unsung heroes of resilience. Discover how these long-lashed legends can transform lives and be a gift like no other!

Not just cartoon characters

With their big goofy heads and their cantankerous reputation, camels project a vaguely comedic air. Let’s face it, they are GIF gold. But there’s a lot more to these bifurcal behemoths than just their meme value or their TikTok cachet. camels are truly amazing, so we’ve set aside some time to create a humble tribute to these be-humped, even-toed, ungulates who stride with ease and grace across some of the world’s harshest environments.

Camel cartoon
Camel cartoon

Camels come fully loaded:

🐪 Long eyelashes to help keep sand out of their eyes.

🐪 Closable nostrils to stop sand from going up their schnozzle.

🐪 Small ears covered in hair to prevent sand and dust from getting in.

🐪 Wide feet and thick leathery pads to help them walk on hot sand without sinking.

🐪 A split upper lip, with each part separately mobile.

🐪 A three-chambered stomach.

🐪 A “hump” (or two) on their back containing reserves of fat for use in lean times.

Lashes to die for, noseflaps, and a bifurcated upper lip. What a beauty! Photo: Kieran McConville
Lashes to die for, noseflaps, and a bifurcated upper lip. What a beauty! Photo: Kieran McConville

How we intersect

In many of the places we operate, camels play a key role in the lives of entire communities. In fact, Concern works in seven of the top 10 camel countries in the world, so we definitely have some collective insight to share. In the words of one of our Chad-based colleagues, "camels are not just animals, they are our patrimony, our heritage".

Top 10 camel countries
Top 10 camel countries
A camel stands on the outskirts of Elgade, North Horr sub-county, Marsabit. Photo: Ed Ram/Concern Worldwide
A camel stands on the outskirts of Elgade, North Horr sub-county, Marsabit. Photo: Ed Ram/Concern Worldwide

FUN FACT camels actually originated in North America about 40 to 50 million years ago. The original of the species, called Protylopus, wasn’t much bigger than a Jack Russell and roamed the area now known as the Dakotas. Over time they evolved and made their way to Eurasia, back when when the continents were still connected.

A big year

According to the UN, 2024 is International Year of Camelids, a genus of mammal that also includes Alpaca and Llamas. At the launch event in January, FAO Director-General QU Dongyu underscored the cultural and environmental importance of camelids.

“Even in the most extreme climatic conditions, they produce milk, meat, fiber and organic fertilizer, and provide transport, boosting food security, nutrition, and livelihoods while helping to conserve fragile ecosystems,” he said.

That’s quite a big reputation to uphold, but we think our lanky split-lipped friends not only deliver the goods, but they do so with an elegance and grace that effortlessly reflects their “Ship Of The Desert” sobriquet.

A Bactrian Camel in the Mongolian Steppe. Photo: Mikko/MotionArray
A Bactrian Camel in the Mongolian Steppe. Photo: Mikko/MotionArray

One hump or two?

While the dual-humper, officially known as the Bactrian Camel, has widely featured in popular culture through the years, it’s prevalence today is limited mostly to Mongolia and the steppes of Central Asia. The Dromedary, with it’s single hump, rules the camel world. 30-plus million of this species stride across the sands of Africa, Asia, and Australia every day.

To mark this special year, we embarked on a quick virtual listening tour of four Concern countries to hear from some colleagues on their thoughts and experiences of these magnificent long-legged lopers.

Camels drink water in Tana River County. Photo: Lisa Murray/Concern Worldwide
Camels drink water in Tana River County. Photo: Lisa Murray/Concern Worldwide

FUN FACT The Australian camel fraternity is mostly feral, and numbers about 500,000. According to Shafqat Ullah in Pakistan, his country is their ancestral home. Unfortunately, these outback outlaws have caused quite a bit of environmental destruction and as such are perhaps the one blemish on the camel’s otherwise spotless reputation.

A four-legged banking system

Hassan Olow, our Programme Director in Kenya, has a deep family connection to camels going back at least four generations. His people are Pastoralists, grazing their caravans (the appropriate term for a group of camels) across large areas of pasture, sometimes referred to as rangelands. Although most of his time these days is spent behind a desk in Nairobi, Hassan still owns camels and spends time looking after them whenever possible.

Hassan Olow, Programme Director for Concern Worldwide in Kenya. Photo: Kieran McConville/Concern Worldwide
Hassan Olow, Programme Director for Concern Worldwide in Kenya. Photo: Kieran McConville/Concern Worldwide

“Camels are to Pastoralists what land is to farmers,” he says. “They’re a store of value. Pastoralists rarely sell camels unless it’s extremely necessary or for strategic reasons. In Kenya, the majority of Concern’s work is in ASAL settings and there the camel is considered the most important livestock.”

Wait, what’s an ASAL? Well, it stands for Arid and Semi Arid Lands, which actually comprise about 16% of the world’s land mass. It’s prime camel country — exactly what these babies were designed for.

Kenya is around 80% ASAL, with about 50% of that almost entirely arid — essentially desert with some scrub. Camels, with their ability to go for long periods without water and eat pretty much anything that grows, can both survive and thrive in these conditions.

Aerial shot taken from Moruongor village in Kapua, Turkana County, Northern Kenya. Photo: Lisa Murray/Concern Worldwide
Aerial shot taken from Moruongor village in Kapua, Turkana County, Northern Kenya. Photo: Lisa Murray/Concern Worldwide

FUN FACT The Gabbra community in Northern Kenya strengthens its social ties through a camel insurance system that ensures one family’s camels are distributed in 10 or more other family camel caravans. So if one herd is raided, almost everyone is affected but most of the owners would have only lost a few of their animals. It is a traditional risk reduction mechanism.


 

A food security powerhouse

The Thar desert in Pakistan spans an area of more than 100,000 square miles and occupies a large part of Sindh Province, where Concern has extensive humanitarian and development operations. Dr. Mazhar Alam is our Health and Nutrition Advisor and he says that camels play a big role in the food security of communities served by Concern. “A well-fed camel can yield from two to four gallons of milk per day, which is nutritionally super rich compared to cow’s milk, and well tolerated by humans. Camel milk can also be used for making yoghurt, butter, and ghee. And, of course, the meat is also a valuable source of nutrition, low in fat and cholesterol.”

But camels contribute to the food chain in many other important ways too. People use them for drawing water from wells, cultivating and levelling land, working mini-mills for oil extraction, grinding wheat, corn, and other grains, crushing sugarcane, and pulling carts for transportation of goods to market. Their poop also makes fine fertiliser. These guys are superstars of the food production ecosystem.

Pakistani camels quench their thirst near Umerkot in Sindh District. Photo: Black Box Sounds/Concern Worldwide
Pakistani camels quench their thirst near Umerkot in Sindh District. Photo: Black Box Sounds/Concern Worldwide

A mysterious mate

Believe it or not, Chad is the world’s number one camel country (depending on who you ask!) and is home to nearly 10 million of these oversized quadropeds. This vast country spans that brown/green line you see on satellite images dividing North and Central Africa at around the 15th parallel. Classic camel territory, and also source of some of the best camel quotes from Concern colleagues:

Nadji Tosmadengar says, “The camel is an animal full of mystery. When we were little, we searched in the traces left in his path to hope for silver coins and grains of millet. They mate lying down like humans and in the dark. They don't do it in public. If you catch them mating they may attack you.”

Mahamat Moucktar declares: “For me the camel represents resistance and resilience, and its milk is therapeutic.”

And this beauty from Dounia Clemence: “In my neighborhood as they pass by the children sing ‘Djamal, Djamal, Djamal kachouma Affine, So moula Halou’ (The camel has a stinky mouth but its sauce is succulent!)”

A couple of curious Camels in Chad. Photo: Kieran McConville
A couple of curious Camels in Chad. Photo: Kieran McConville

FUN FACT Paris, France will this year host a Dromedary Parade, to mark International Year of Camelids. Organisers say that each dromedary will represent a country, a tribe, or an ethnic group, and will be accompanied by representatives in traditional dress.

Fueling a region

Clinging to the Horn of Africa, Somalia has a human population of 18 million and a camel population of about 7 million. Legend has it that dromedaries were first domesticated in these parts, and they’ve become something of a cultural icon. In a country beset by poverty, camels are a source of wealth. Speaking to AFP, one livestock trader in the northern city of Hargeisa said, “We don't have crude oil in this country. Camels are our crude oil."

Abdirizak Haji Aden oversees logistics for Concern Worldwide in Somalia, including the management of a fleet of diesel and petrol-powered trucks and cars. But his heart is with the camels. He and his family have been involved with them for generations. "They are truly remarkable creatures that deserve our respect and appreciation." Haji enjoys nothing more than a deep draught of camel milk, with the added bonus that it's a powerful booster for the immune system.

Camels gather for an important in-person meeting at a water point in Somaliland. Photo: Ed Ram/Concern Worldwide
Camels gather for an important in-person meeting at a water point in Somaliland. Photo: Ed Ram/Concern Worldwide

FUN FACT The camel has played a role in the history of most major religions, serving as everything from the mode of conveyance for the Ark of the Covenant to transport-method-of-choice for the Maji, Lord Hanuman, and the Prophet Muhammad.


 

Spa day. Camels find relief at a water hole in Northern Kenya. Photo: Lisa Murray/Concern Worldwide
Spa day. Camels find relief at a water hole in Northern Kenya. Photo: Lisa Murray/Concern Worldwide

FUN FACT camel racing has been a thing for many centuries, especially in the Middle East and the Bedouin culture. Today, it is a high-value spectator sport, with some events televised for a global audience of millions. Camel owners and trainers use advanced techniques such as DNA profiling, advanced training equipment, and even drones to train camels and improve their performance. High-end racing camels can be worth up to $10 million.

Gift a camel today

You can gift a camel this Christmas by purchasing a Concern Christmas Camel Gift by clicking the button below. Your kind gift will not only bring a smile to your loved ones' face but can support people with their livelihoods. 

In Marsabit County, Kenya, Qabale has been able to set up a thriving business with the support of Concern. By selling camel milk at her local kiosk, she has raised enough money to send her children to school and buy even more camels! So check out our Concern Gifts today and wrap up a little Concern magic this Christmas.

Qabale Wario (40) is from Walda, Marsabit and is married with eight children. Before the drought of 2020 Qabale had 20 camels but 12 died and 8 survived. Now four of her camels are pregnant and are due around April. Qabale sells camel milk at a kiosk. Qabale revived cash assistance during the drought period of 2020 - 2023. This money went mostly towards purchasing food. Without this money Qabale believes all 20 camels would have died. Photo: Shaloam Strooper/Concern Worldwide
Qabale Wario (40) is from Walda, Marsabit and is married with eight children. Before the drought of 2020 Qabale had 20 camels but 12 died and 8 survived. Now four of her camels are pregnant and are due around April. Qabale sells camel milk at a kiosk. Qabale revived cash assistance during the drought period of 2020 - 2023. This money went mostly towards purchasing food. Without this money Qabale believes all 20 camels would have died. Photo: Shaloam Strooper/Concern Worldwide

Long live the Camels and all who ride, herd, farm, and care for them.

Molu Elema with his Camels near North Horr in Marsabit. Photo: Ed Ram/Concern Worldwide
Molu Elema with his Camels near North Horr in Marsabit. Photo: Ed Ram/Concern Worldwide
Share your concern
Share