Reindeer
herding in Russia's remote Arctic
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[December 14, 2016]
By Sergei Karpukhin
KRASNOYE, Russia (Reuters)
- In Russia's remote Arctic regions, reindeer herding
has been a way of life for centuries.
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Each winter, herders in Russia's sparsely populated Nenets
Autonomous District corral their reindeer into open-air pens
before selecting weak animals to be culled.
The cull helps preserve the region's fragile tundra by keeping
herd sizes down, and local people sell reindeer meat, hide and
antlers to make a living.
Igor Ledkov, who works at the Harp agricultural cooperative in
the village of Krasnoye, said herders try to maintain the local
reindeer population at around 15,000-17,000 animals.
"The size of the cull each year varies, this year we plan to
cull more than 3,000 reindeer," Ledkov said.
"We wait until there's enough snow on the ground so the reindeer
don't trample the best grazing land when we corral them into the
pens."
Krasnoye is the only settlement in the Nenets region connected
by road to the regional capital, Naryan-Mar, which is over 2,000
kilometers north of Moscow.
Temperatures can sink below minus 40 degrees Celsius in winter.
At the Harp cooperative, the reindeer have their antlers removed
before the weaker specimens are taken to the slaughter house.
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Herders saw off antlers from even the stronger animals as
they are valuable and fall off by themselves if left to grow.
Reindeer hides are salted to preserve them before being sold for
export to countries including Finland.
Herders receive a subsidy of 130 rubles ($2.08) for each
kilogram of reindeer meat they send to be processed, according
to the local government, as well as monthly social support
payments.
The meat subsidy is to be cut by around 40 percent next year as
weak oil prices have hurt the Nenets region budget, which
depends on oil for 98 percent of revenues.
(Writing by Alexander Winning, editing by Ed Osmond)
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