An ostrich can run up to 60kms per hour. As two-toed birds, they are very fast runners. Also, they are silent animals: they make no sound, except for some squeaks when they are babies, and during mating season. They are not the brightest bulbs in town: their eyes are bigger than their brains.
Our guide rattled off these facts and information as we stared at the ostrich standing in front of us, its neck bobbing up and down like a snake, knowing that in a few minutes we were going to ride the fastest, dumbest and most silent bird in the world.
“Do you realise,” I whispered to Julien, “that we are about to ride the fastest, dumbest, and most silent bird in the world?”
“If that thing comes towards us from behind,” he whispered back, “we won’t hear a thing. We’ll be knocked over, trampled underfoot and that will be the end of us. It’ll be like being run over by poltegeists with feathers and beaks.”
We turned our attention back to the guide, who was cheerfully trying to muster some enthusiasm from the group. “All right! First, we’re going to stand on the ostrich’s egg. These are hard, thick shells, and you’ll be surprised that they can carry anyone’s weight.” A rather rotund man in our group drew in a sharp breath. We were now standing in front of a fence. In the middle of the field squatted an ostrich inside something that resembled a teepee,
“Now,” said our guide. “Let’s stay close together, shall we? I’ll lead the way with my poking stick…” She reached for a long branch with thorns sticking out on all sides, “… and if an ostrich comes running towards us in anger, I’ll use this to poke its eyes and we can run to safety.”
“Maybe we should just leave its eggs alone; that way we don’t need to poke its eyes?” I whispered to nobody in particular.
The ostrich, calm and not at all angry, moved away as our group approched her eggs. She looked bored, as if she were used to encounters with weird human beings whose sole intent was to take each other’s photos while standing on her unborn babies’ shells. The group pushed me towards the direction of the ostrich eggs when the guide asked for the first volunteer. “You’re the smallest and the lightest one of us; you go first,” they reasoned. Then they hedged behind the safety of our guide’s poking stick.
The egg didn’t break, and we had a merry time documenting the experience while the ostrich looked on lazily.
***
The ostrich we were going to ride had a sack over its head, which had a comical but disturbingly sad effect on the huge bird. It felt silly to be sorry for it, but I couldn’t help it.
“Just sit on its hump,” instructed the sunburnt man holding the ostrich steady as I climbed over and perched on the bird’s back. “Now lean back and relax.” The most unhelpful advise I’ve ever heard. The man then lay the ostrich’s feathers on my bare thighs. “All you have to do is hold on tight, yeah?”
“But won’t it hurt them to— ” I started to say, when the man whipped off the sack from the ostrich’s head and slapped its ass, and suddenly the fastest, dumbest, most silent bird awoke and ran straight towards ten of his ostrich friends as I held on to its feathers for dear life, screaming in fear and bobbing up and down awkwardly as the man hooted and shouted “Faster! Faster!” to agitate the ostrich into a frenzy.
Three loops later, legs trembling, I slid unceremoniously off the ostrich and the sack was placed over its head. It stood still.
“How was it?” Julien asked.
“You’ll see,” I told him. “Your turn.”
Currently listening to:
Death Cab for Cutie
Narrow Stairs

8 comments
jessi says:
Nov 12, 2008
*lol*
this was so amusing to read, kala! I hope julien took a picture
Hanim says:
Nov 13, 2008
Sounds very interesting ride you had out there…can’t wait for more!
Makis says:
Nov 13, 2008
Sooo cool! I think you should try to ride an ostrich once in your lifetime!
Sinta says:
Nov 19, 2008
Very entertaining! Have to say, this made me smile and I haven’t even had my tea yet! I really should go find a place to watch tourists ride ostriches and stand on their eggs.
joanne says:
Nov 19, 2008
Lucky you, the lightest of the bunch!
You may not have appreciated the experience right then and there but someday, when your grandchildren are reading it and they double over with laughter, you will
Incidentally, I wonder how they came up with stand-on-egg and ride-a-frenzied-ostrich as part of a tourist attraction. Score one for South African humor, I guess.
analyse says:
Nov 26, 2008
whoa! that must be so cool.. i need to add that on my to-do-list-before-i-die, lol.
Yen says:
Nov 29, 2008
hahahah naiimagine kita girl sakay ng ostrich. malamang kng ako yan eh nalaglag na ko hahaha.
maya says:
Dec 6, 2008
i’ve ran to your blog some time ago. i was laughing & find sad for you. But the way you tell your story just knocks me out.
i do understand how sorry you are with the poor bird. But visualizing you in it. That makes me laugh & worry.
Anyway, it’s nice to read here.