Land of the blonde bovine beauties


A herd of white yaks grazing at a snowy pasture 3,000m high in the remote Kyrgyz mountains. — AFP

DOZENS of white yaks frolicked in the pris­tine snow of the vast Kyrgyz mountains, butting heads and locking horns as their herders watched on from their ­horses.

The Akmatov family has been breeding their variety of the cattle – which normally have dark-brown hair – for the past 15 years, and see their growing flock as a symbol of the white yak’s revival in a country plagued by climate woes.

Peeking curiously from under their milky manes as they bellowed guttural sounds, the 300 or so yaks stood bemused at the sight of rare human visitors to their pasture, 3,000m up in the remote mountains of Central Asia.

Amantur riding a horse while looking after a herd of white yaks grazing at a snowy pasture in the remote Kyrgyz mountains. — AFP (From left) Amantur, Baatyrbek and Tashtanbek of the Akmatov family sitting by a table in their house in the mountainous Kyrgyz village of Kara-Saz. — AFP
Amantur riding a horse while looking after a herd of white yaks grazing at a snowy pasture in the remote Kyrgyz mountains. — AFP (From left) Amantur, Baatyrbek and Tashtanbek of the Akmatov family sitting by a table in their house in the mountainous Kyrgyz village of Kara-Saz. — AFP

“The cold drops to -40°C at night... but the yaks can graze freely. They love the mountains and the cold,” said shepherd Amantur Akmatov, 30.

Amantur is the youngest of the three- generation family of breeders – alongside his grandfather Tashtanbek, 88, who developed the herd, and father Baatyrbek, 52.

The herd has been growing slowly, with each female giving birth to a calf roughly every other year.

Yaks hold deep cultural and symbolic importance in the traditionally nomadic country, but their numbers plummeted after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Government support has helped double the population since the late 1990s to more than 60,000.

Amantur, 30, Baatyrbek, 52, and Tashtanbek, 88, of the Akmatov family of white yaks breeders, sit by a table in their house in the mountainous Kyrgyz village of Kara-Saz on February 3, 2026. (Photo by Vyacheslav OSELEDKO / AFP)
Amantur, 30, Baatyrbek, 52, and Tashtanbek, 88, of the Akmatov family of white yaks breeders, sit by a table in their house in the mountainous Kyrgyz village of Kara-Saz on February 3, 2026. (Photo by Vyacheslav OSELEDKO / AFP)

As the sun set over the mountains, the yaks’ distinctive black silhouettes dotted the horizon.

Despite the high altitudes, the yaks still face predators.

Around 20 have fallen prey to wolves in recent months.

Armed with a hunting rifle and clad in all-white overalls, a thick hat and balaclava to protect him from the cold, Amantur climbs onto his horse for a two-hour wolf patrol every day at 6am.

“The wolves torment them. We fight them, defend ourselves and sometimes shoot them,” he said.

The walls of his living room – adorned with an array of wolf furs – are testament to his marksmanship.

Bishkek is promoting yaks as a sustainable option in a rural, landlocked country that is heavily exposed to adverse effects of the changing climate.

“Yak farming is a promising sector, espe­cially in the face of climate change and pasture degradation,” the agriculture ministry said.

Grazing on isolated high-altitude pastures, they reduce pressure on rural land and the animals are “resistant to cold, drought, poor pastures and therefore perfectly adapted to regions affected by climate change... and soil degradation,” the ministry added.

The Akmatovs value the yak’s organic milk and meat, and say their white wool is strong and easy to dye.

“The costs of raising yaks are low. Good pastures are sufficient,” Baatyrbek said.

“But to increase the number of yaks, the state must allocate pastures, that’s the biggest problem,” he added, calling for a rotation system to be introduced.

The UN’s Food and Agriculture Orga­ni­sation has warned that the state of Kyrgyzstan’s pastures “is worse than at the beginning of the century due to unsustai­nable management practices, aggravated by climate change”.

The herd’s milky colour is a product of 10 years of careful selection, the vision of family patriarch Tashtanbek.

A successful farmer in the Soviet-era, he climbed through the communist system to become chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet in Kyrgyzstan in the late 1980s.

Pinned to his jacket are three medals – two Soviet “Hero of Socialist Labour” awards alongside a “Hero of Kyrgyzstan”.

There is even a statue of him in his mountain village of Kara-Saz in honour of his contribution to Kyrgyz agriculture, which employs around a quarter of the country’s workforce.

Steadied by his son and grandson on either side, Tashtanbek trod carefully out into the crisp snow wearing a traditional fur Ushanka hat to inspect the herd.

Scientists are studying whether the fur of the white yaks “reflects ultraviolet rays and prevents heat from reaching the body”, he said.

The family has already patented a breed of mountain merino sheep and applied to have their yaks officially recognised by the agriculture ministry as part of Kyrgyz­stan’s national heritage.

The goal, said Baatyrbek, is to “register this Kyrgyz breed, then export it”. — AFP

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