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Herders play cards inside a
hundred-year-old yurt at Tarhana.
Not surprisingly, horses feature prominently in the material
culture of the Yakuts. Table legs often have a horse leg
design, and the horse motif is found on a wide variety of
utensils, tables, and boxes. The tethering posts found
outside many Yakut homes are considered sacred, and the
happiness of the household is often attributed to them.
Often, families moving from one home to another dig up these
posts and take them along.
The horse also
features prominently in Yakut fairy tales, songs, and art.
It is usually characterized as being clever, noble, and
modest and frequently defends its master. In art, horses are
portrayed with blazing eyes, head held high, mane proudly
streaming and one foot raised ready to stamp the ground.
Horses also feature in the Yakut calendar. For example,
March, which is called kulun tutar, is known as the month of
"holding the foals."
Today there are around 200,000 horses in Yakutia. They are
looked after by about three thousand herders and their
families, though the number of people dependent on horse
breeding is much greater. City dwellers usually own horses
that are looked after by relatives in rural areas. The Yakut
horse is an efficient meat producer, and horsemeat is still
the most popular meat available in Yakutia. The Yakut people
have numerous ways of preparing it. Sometimes it is even
served raw, thinly sliced and frozen. The liver is
particularly popular this way, with a little salt sprinkled
on. The meat is often eaten boiled, though some cuts (like
ribs) are usually preferred fried. The Yakuts also make a
blood sausage with the intestines and, perhaps the most
exotic culinary item of all, "horse foot jelly."
Horse breeding, like most other agricultural activities, was
collectivized into a system of state farms under Russia's
former communist regime. Since the collapse of the Soviet
Union, many of these collectives have become privatized.
Herds vary in size from about thirty to several hundred
horses. Herding doesn't involve a constant watch over the
animals, but herds have to be checked regularly. Herders
ensure that none of the animals have strayed, that they are
in good condition, and that they have sufficient food. If
necessary, herders will drive the horses to new pastures.
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