Balancing on a bamboo platform
suspended dozens of meters up in the Madai cave in Malaysian Borneo, a man
vigorously tears cup-shaped protrusions off the rock wall. They’re Swallow
Birds Nests and will soon fetch hundreds of dollars in the market.
“Madai is God’s gift to Idahan
people,” says Jafaar bin Abdullah, a local harvester. For centuries, the Idahan
tribe has subsisted from this lucrative, if death-defying, trade. This should
be their time to cash in, since a booming Chinese middle class has shot demand
for the nests through the roof. Yet, the Idahans’ way of life may be about to
die out.
Edible
Swallow Birds Nests are coveted across the Chinese world for their supposedly
medicinal and rejuvenating powers.
Built out of a protein-rich
secretion produced by the swallow-like swiftlet, the nests are served in soups,
desserts or drunk pure, as a gelatinous tonic. Because of the laborious picking
and cleaning process, Swallow Birds Nests have become one of the world’s most
expensive food products. With the approach of Chinese New Year, when the nests
are traditionally savored at lavish banquets, demand and prices rocket.
Yet profits are also being squeezed.
As the industry has mushroomed to an estimated value of $5 billion, prices have
also plummeted, owing to new farming techniques. Neighborhoods across Southeast
Asia are being taken over by windowless structures emulating cave environments
and attracting swiftlets with birdsong blasted through loudspeakers. It’s
apparently an effective trick, because swiftlets are being domesticated at a scale
never witnessed with another wild species.
As night falls, swarms of swiftlets
thousands-strong form in the outskirts of Johor Bahru, a sprawling city in
southern peninsular Malaysia that sits opposite affluent Singapore. The birds
dart into holes in the roofs with exquisite precision, as if hoovered in by a
gigantic vacuum. Inside one of the stripped-down former office spaces, Yang
Dequan uses a mirror attached to a cane to check on his avian tenants, nesting
on the beams along the ceiling. At the switch of a knob on his stereo
equipment, the recorded birdsong grows more intense, setting the room aflutter.
“This is their warning call and will
make them return home to check on their chicks,” he says. “I’ve studied the
variety of bird calls, air ventilation, sanitation and pest control. You need
to have love for the birds in order to succeed.”
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak
has highlighted the industry for its growth potential and his government is
promoting loans to give it a further boost. In Malaysia alone, the number of
farms have surged from an estimated 1,000 a decade ago to over 60,000 today,
and in Vietnam and Cambodia the business is only just about to take off. Cheap
nests have swamped the main retail market in Hong Kong.
“Before we used to sell nests by the
tael [37.8 g],” says a salesman surnamed Luk on Wing Lok Street, nicknamed Swallow
Birds Nest Street. “Now we sell by the kilogram.”
How the Ancient Practice of Harvesting Swallow Birds Nest Is Facing Some Very Modern Challenges |
Farms
have many advantages:
Nests here are easier to pick and
they are also easier to clean, since owners only attract “white-nest
swiftlets,” a variety that doesn’t build nests riddled with feathers. Once a
farm is up and running it takes very little maintenance, and the initial
investment of about $15,000 can be made back in a couple of years. It is a
world away from where the trade started.
In the weeks leading up to harvest
in Madai, the cave is buzzing with activities. Bamboo ladders and platforms are
constructed, ropes inspected and goats sacrificed.
“If we don’t give a sacrifice as
compensation for the nests we take, the penunggu [guardian spirit] will take
the life of one of us,” says Jafaar.
Like every Idahan, Jafaar has
inherited a portion of the cave to harvest from his grandmother. Every 10 years
the lots are swapped within the tribe, in order to share the more prolific
patches.
“We’re the caves’ heirs and it’s
brought us a lot of development,” says village elder Sabtria binti Haji
Kaharuddin. “Now we have cars and a road, when I was little there was only
jungle.”
But to live off the cave is becoming
increasingly difficult. On top of decreasing prices the inherited lots are
becoming smaller. New laws have also pushed the Idahan out of their lands in
favor of commercial plantations of oil palm and cocoa. Now they take jobs in
town and hire Filipinos and Indonesians to do the dirty work in the cave.
Traditions are slowly dying out. The cave mouth is littered with graffiti and
only a handful of the ancestral stone tombs along the pathway remain intact. In
the neighboring province of Sarawak nest theft has become so rampant that
swiftlet populations have been severely depleted. In the great cave of Niah, a
major tourist attraction, colonies that once comprised about 4 million birds
have all but vanished.
The vast majority of edible Swallow
Birds Nests today are farmed. Yet, challenges abound here too. A scandal of
nitrate-contaminated nests prompted a Chinese import ban in 2011. Smuggling
through Hong Kong is believed to have kept demand on the mainland satisfied,
but the prohibition still led to a shake-up of the previously unregulated
industry. Exporters now need to run their products through laboratory tests to
receive China’s approval. Tan Boon Siong, the former head of the Swallow Birds
Nest Farmers Association in Johor Bahru, swears by the “miraculous” powers of Swallow
Birds Nests. However, he concedes that there’s been widespread manipulation and
lack of hygienic knowledge.
“Nitrate is only one of the
problems,” Tan says. “There is also lead, cadmium, arsenic. Some farmers
believe that the more droppings there are, the more birds will be attracted.
They spray the nests with insecticides to get rid of ticks and add salt water
and preservatives to make them appear more plump and last longer.”
Consumers
are perhaps not the only ones that need to be concerned.
Neighbors of bird farms have long
complained of the noise the birds make, the smell they produce and the bugs that
come along with them. Lord Gathorne Cranbrook, a zoologist with over 40 years
experience studying swiftlets and the author of Swiftlets of Borneo, warns of
the unknown.
“I’ve always been anxious of
diseases, avian malaria and so on, going around,” he says. “It’s extraordinary
to have an industry with birds in domestication, but we haven’t assessed the
veterinary risks, haven’t researched the harvest cycle. How does this affect
the wild population? We’re very unknowledgeable, to an extent you wouldn’t see
in any other industry.”
In Gomantong Cave, some 250 km west
of Madai, the yells in Bahasa Malaysia that reverberate across the
cathedral-like expanse betray little of such concerns.
“Left! Further left! Hold!”
A team of workers is systematically
picking clean the up to 60-m-high walls, on behalf of a Chinese businessman who
has bought the rights to this harvest. In 11 days they will empty the cave of a
ton of nests. Zakaria bin Rugi stands on one of the guano hills, holding a rope
connected to the steel ladder the pickers are balancing on. A few more days,
then his career is over.
“I promised my children to quit,
they think it’s too dangerous,” he says. “But in my 59 years as a harvester
I’ve only seen one man die, and he was very unlucky.”
Zakaria considers himself very
lucky. His work has put his children through school. He is respected within his
trade. The question is for how long his kind of expertise will hold any value.
Or if farms will soon monopolize the industry, leaving the remaining wild swiftlets
alone in their nests high up on Southeast Asia’s cave walls.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét