American journalist Erik Nilsson herds sheep with a slingshot while living with nomads in Yushu Tibetan autonomous prefecture in Qinghai province. [Photo by Erik Nilsson and Tseringbum/China Daily] |
American journalist Erik Nilsson milks yaks, collects dung and herds sheep with slingshots to discover firsthand what it's like to survive on the frosty Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.
Erik Nilsson Yaks buck. I learned this when I mounted one year ago while camping with a nomad beneath a glacier in Yushu Tibetan autonomous prefecture's Qumarleb county.
I clutched the creature's wool and held on for dear life.
Yaks also buck when you try to milk them.
I learned this when I returned to the region in Qinghai province this summer to not only live with but also like the herders who survive by grazing livestock on the frosty plateau.
I also learned I'm not good at milking yaks.
Steaming streams hissed into the bucket when my 46-year-old host Gyayang Tsomao massaged their udders.
When I tried, a few drops dripped into the container.
"Plunk. Plunk. Plunk."
It was like the sluggish staccato of a clock's tick-tock.
And that was only after several minutes of nothing.
Then, the yak tried to kick the pail over.