My first sighting of the horses is thru the transparency of a bus window. Lined up in regimental order as vacationers cluster round, taking images and feeding them snatches of hay from the mounds on the bottom.
I arrive in Saintes Marie De La Mer within the gloaming of the day, too. It is a sleepy city in mid-March, however usually within the Summer months it bustles with the excitement of tourism. It offers the gateway to the Camargue, a 72,000 hectare weltand, and a regional French nationwide park, located about 100km from Marseille in Southern France, and it’s the place these well-known white horses discover their residence.
It feels as if I’m the one international footstep to the touch this historic city, however the affect of the horses is all over the place. A statue right here, a Western-style clothes store there, knick-knacks of picket horse heads even line the cabinets subsequent to the French cheese within the grocery retailer.
It is these horses which have introduced me right here. Inside this historic wetland, their tradition is what has formed each the individuals of the Camargue, and the prosperous tourism trade which thrives, and brings much-needed economic system into the world.
Just a few days later, I discovered myself face-to-face with Tony, one of many historic Guardians of the Camargue. We arrive on his “Manade” to a few white horses mowing his garden.
Tony stands, leaning in opposition to one in all his horses as we step out to fulfill him. Faint whispers of his morning on the farm strewn throughout his smile. We begin by speaking concerning the historical past of the horses, and why he has such a deep connection to them, and the land round him.
“These horses are very old, and you can tell because their shape looks the same as the ones in the cave paintings, but they have only been recognized as their own breed since 1978,” says Tony.
“Their size was much smaller then. Now, they have evolved to become unique to this land.”
As Tony and I sit, the warmth of the day brings the primary wave of mosquitoes to relaxation on our arms.
Tony continues to inform me a Guardian is primarily a “keeper of the bulls”.
While he does take care of the horses, he’s additionally answerable for elevating the bulls for the well-known Arles Fair, and Sea Fair, simply two of the lots of of bull-fighting festivals which occur from April to October.
“Being a Guardian is something that you have in the genes, it’s more like a passion than a job.”
“As Guardians, we form strong connections to our horses, which help us look after the land and breed the bulls. We aim to keep the bulls as wild as possible for the festival.”
The bull races are occasions which happen each summer time throughout the area. Local razers (bull fighters) face these bulls, aiming to take away ribbons from their horns with a The Hook. These festivals first started within the nineteenth Century as a technique to showcase provincial custom.
Just a few hours later, we meet a real-life razatorFred, whose pathway into changing into a Guardian is fairly completely different.
“My family moved here when I was very young, from Lyon. We used to go to a special event called a Ferrad. This is the time when you mark the bulls. My Father brought me to see it, and help if I could. During one visit, some of the older Guardians asked, do you want to ride the horse? I started to ride like this, and from then my passion was born, which has yet to die.”
Despite not being born into this custom, Fred nonetheless developed a ardour for the horses and panorama, changing into a Guardian by means of studying from others, reminiscent of Tony.
“When I was 14, there was no internet, no phone, so the only way to have fun was to go to the Manade and try to help. Now it’s totally different. Kids are more on phones.”
The festivals which occur every year additionally convey a thriving vacationer economic system to the Camargue. And it’s these vacationers who’ve saved traditions reminiscent of Fred’s bullfighting and Tony’s household farm alive on this method for therefore lengthy.
“We need more now, you know, life has changed. You need to have the internet, and we need more money. Tourism has been a great thing, especially here in the Camargue, because it is a very beautiful place. It helps us deal with the increasing price of everyday life.”
“We try to have a good relationship with the tourists, because the Camargue so well known now, we have to defend this traditional place, and our traditions.”
As with something, nonetheless, this habits has been one in all evolution. Just because the horses needed to mildew to the panorama, its individuals have needed to change their attitudes to comply with the calls for of our instances.
Although it is met with resistance, youthful figures reminiscent of Tony and Fred who’ve labored laborious to alter the older generations, serving to the neighborhood to know and settle for the prosperity guests can convey.
Back in Saintes-Maries, as we lunch on goat’s cheese salad and glowing water, Patrice, our keen information and bridge into this world, says, “Before the arrival of tourism, the Camargue cowboys have been a type of shepherd who tended their herds of bulls. Their lives have been quite simple, however they have been obsessed with what they did.
“With the arrival of tourism, they were able to earn a better living, but their passion for the Camargue and its traditions remained intact.”
Patrice was one of many first photographers within the space, drawn down right here in 1998 by the horses and the highly effective material they offered for a younger photographer. After connecting with the tourism workplace, he began to go to and {photograph} Manades.
Since then he has cast robust connections with the Guardians, witnessing how tourism has modified the lives of the Camarguian individuals.
But forces are working in opposition to the Camargue. Rising sea ranges and vital adjustments to the water desk have elevated flooding, in addition to adjustments to the focus of salt within the water, which might have knock-on results on wildlife.
Preservation, for the Guardians, is about discovering a steadiness. Using what instruments they’ve already developed to mitigate the rising sea ranges.
“The main problem in the Camargue would be the water. The first thing is the sea level is just going up, and the Camaruge is very flat, if nothing is done, the Camargue will just be flooded in the future.”
In 1858, the primary river Dike was constructed within the Camargue, and immediately these Dikes are a necessary a part of controlling water ranges.
“For the next century, the idea will be just to build some more Dikes. When the waves are broken before the land, they just arrive on the shore very smoothly, so it means it’s slower to get into the Camargue, and man can manage the water level more efficiently.”
As the dialog continues, Fred reveals one other hardship, one which not solely the Guardians face, however one which has positioned the Camarguian tradition on the whole in jeopardy.
“The festivals have gotten more durable to keep up due to security guidelines. Our festivals want insurance coverage as a result of generally they launch bulls within the streets, and if an onlooker will get harm by one in all these bulls, it may be an issue.
“Many of the insurance companies won’t take the risk, meaning there are fewer events, and if there is less events, we see fewer tourists.”
Unlike in Spain, the place the onlookers are accountable for their very own well-being, in France the laws means, if somebody is harm, somebody needs to be accountable.
As Fred tells us, every year it turns into more durable to search out insurance coverage firms keen to cowl the danger.
Whilst to many, this might not be problematic, as Tony explains, for Guardians reminiscent of himself, those who personal land, tourism is central to aiding in his look after the animals and land round him.
“If there are no more tourists, then the Guardian’s, and the Camarguian culture, is placed in danger”
Although they got here at this way of life from completely different locations, on the coronary heart of being a guardian is ardour. Both work to maintain their way of life, to gasoline their need to maintain engaged on this land.
Tourism doesn’t change its custom. It solely permits them to proceed dwelling, working and defending their passions. It offers these European Cowboys the power to uphold their archaic traditions, while virtually permitting them to reside in an ever-modernizing and costly world.
As the day progresses, early morning warmth turns to the late afternoon shadows, Tony demonstrates to us a few of his traditions and day-to-day practices. Mounted upon his stallion ‘Avenger’, he races out to herd the bulls. His small daughter dutifully assisted in all of the areas her small arms permit her to, and Tony assures us that she, too, will develop into a Guardian when her time comes, and the custom will proceed.
Neither Tony nor Fred is only a Guardian. Like so many others who tackle this function, they reside one thing of a double life.
Tony is a nurse, and Fred is a water surveyor. Being a Guardian shouldn’t be, for them, one thing they should monetize. It is, as they stated, a ardour. In a time when the neighborhood is teetering on the sting, and social media is pushing individuals additional and additional into isolation, there’s a lesson to be realized concerning the significance of neighborhood down right here within the Camargue.
“Culture in the Camargue is not in danger. Because most of the people here want to keep things as they are now, all the traditional things like the costumes, the horses, the bulls.”
Aside from the Guardians, the horses, and the bulls, the Camargue is a neighborhood of individuals, many similar to Patrice. People who’ve lived listed here are drawn by the tradition and the life-style. Simply pleased with the quiet winter and booming summer time.
Despite the hardships, the altering seasons and the more and more technified world, this small nook maintains a way of neighborhood. Everyone pertains to everybody else not directly
A logo that, now I do know it, appears to silently seem all over the place.
Because in a world that strikes sooner every year, extra linked, extra transient, extra alone, the Camargue lives on by means of individuals who nonetheless select to belong. To the land, to one another, and to the traditions that form them.
And right here, on this fragile assembly level between previous and future, the horses, the individuals and the tradition stay. Not untouched by the trendy world, however unwilling to let it outline them.
About the Contributor
Iona is a contract author and audio producer primarily based in London.
Photos, movies and audio have been offered by Patrice Aguilarwho additionally runs photograph periods within the Camargue, Jemima Lowe and Iona Lowe.
Thank you to Tony and Fred for displaying me inside this world.
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