This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. Learn more

Koochi Nomads documentary by UNDP GEF SGP

x

Koochi Nomads documentary by UNDP GEF SGP

x

Uch Sharif - Saving the City of Saints Documentary by UNDP-GEF SGP Pakistan

Based on the book Green Pioneers of UNDP-GEF SGP Pakistan.
This documentary has been funded by UNDP-GEF SGP Pakistan.
x

Migration with Bakhtiari Nomads | Kooch | Nomadic lifestyle

Do you know anything about the seasonal migration of nomads?

Persian Bakhtiari nomads are a group of remaining nomad tribes who live in the Zagros Mountains. They are descendants of ancient Bakhtiari nomads. They migrate twice a year to provide their flocks with fresh grass. Once in spring, when they move to their summer pastures, and then in fall when they move to lower altitudes.
In recent years, the number of these authentic people has declined dramatically. Now, we’re trying to help them in preserving their authentic culture, and we hope to save them from their imminent extinction. We believe their unique lifestyle & authentic culture need to be preserved.
The first-hand experience of migrating with Bakhtiari Nomads is far beyond watching any videos or photos.

Documentary filmmaker : (Instagram ID: @davood_foroughi)
This video is edited by Serial Hikers:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Follow us:



For emails: info@nomad.tours
Our website:

#nomadiclifestyle #nomad #irantour #iran #exploreiran #nomadic_village #bakhtiari #bakhtiaripeople #nomadland #nomadlife #mountainvillage #nomadicadventure
#nomadsofiran #irannomads
x

Desert Arabs, 1948

An educational film about nomads in the 1940s.To purchase a clean DVD of this film for personal home use or educational use contact us at: questions@archivefarms.com. To license footage from this film for commercial use visit:
x

The Legend Of The Issyk Kul Lake's Lost Treasures

There are many legends surrounding this extraordinary lake in Kyrgyzstan – the sunken city of “Lyesh”, the “tears of the snow leopard” that lend the water its salinity, and finally about the name of the lake itself: Issyk Kul. The name means “hot lake”, because despite being at an altitude of over 1,600 meters it never freezes, not even in the coldest of winters; a remarkable natural phenomenon.

In this episode of Lakes on the Roof of the World we climb on treacherous paths to the mountain villages of the Terskey-Alatau range and discover the traditional way of life of the Kyrgyz shepherds, but above all, we learn about the life of the people living with and by Lake Issyk Kul.

From the series Lakes on the Roof of the World. Untouched Kyrgyzstan

TRACKS publishes unique, unexpected and untold stories from across the world every week.

Facebook:

Content licensed from Sky Vision. Any queries, please contact us at: owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com
owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com

Living 24 Hours with a Berbers Tribe (North Africa)

The Berbers are nomads, wandering through the dunes of the Sahara, all over North Africa. Common in Morocco, these nomadic people have a unique way of life. I join Eva Zubeck and we join a berber family for 24 hours.

This is my first encounter with Berbers, and I learned a lot... like how a goatskin is a great place to keep milk cool, and you can cook bread in sand. Yum, crunchy.

This is the second video in the Mauritania series. Let me know what was the most ineresting moment about our stay with the Berbers of North Africa, and make sure to watch the first episode. Iron Ore train Hopping!


Join the Adventure Newsletter


EXPERIENCES OVER POSSESSIONS SHIRTS


#Mauritania #Berbers #Africa

-------------------------­­­--------------------------------------­-­-­---------------

♥ Friends ♥

Check out Eva's Channel. She was the girl behind the camera!


----------------------------------------­­­--------------------------------------­-­-­---------------

♫ Music ♫

The BEST place for music. For real though. Musicbed is the place.

Free 30 day trial here:


Distant - Vesky
An Island - Soular Order
I Know - Red Licorice
Steady - Roary
----------------------------------------­­­--------------------------------------­-­-­---------------

☎ Say Hi Here ☎

✧ Instagram:

✧ Tweetz:

✧ Facebook Fanpage:

----------------------------------------­­­--------------------------------------­-­-­---------------

Chase Your Fears ????

Kyrgyz living in the Pamirs of Afghanistan||Kyrgyz Nomads On 'The Roof Of The World||Kyrgyz wedding

Kyrgyz living in the Pamirs of Afghanistan In the Wakhan Corridor
Pamir Kyrgyz Nomads On 'The Roof Of The World
#kyrgyz #kyrgyzpamir #kyrgyzwedding
Ооганстандын Памиринде жашаган кыргыздар Вахан коридорунда
Памирлик Кыргыз Көчмөндөр 'Дүйнөнүн Чатырында
#кыргыз #кыргызпамир #кыргызуй
this video was recorded by Sayeed Ahmad Khan

for more videos
please stay tuned

SUBSCRIBE: TV,
LIKE OUR PAGE:
AND ON TWITTER/ INSTAGRAM/CHIPURSON TV

Trek Afghanistan

The Pamir Mountain range of Afghanistan's Wakhan Corridor is a peaceful and extremely hard-to-reach part of the world where few have travelled and little has changed in a thousand years. It's home to the Wakhi and Kyrgyz nomads who live a traditional way of life on the outer limits of human habitation. They survive the lengthy and brutal winter thanks to their herds of yaks and sheep that provide them with milk and cheese, wool for warmth and dung to fuel their fires. In summer, they welcome traders into their yurt homes and -- more recently -- intrepid tourists who hire pack animals to explore the region.

Raute (Nomadic people)

This video clips or Raute girls (Nomadic womans) was taken at Tunibagar, Dailekh when we were on the way to Kalikot from Pokhara. to conduct a surgical eye camp in Kalikot and Jumla. When we asked to tell her name to the one of the girl of Raute community, she said there is no name of raute woman in Raute community.(आइमाइको नाम हुदैन).

JB Chand

Migration of nomads Winter tours Mongolia - Kazakh tour

Mongolian Nomad Kazakhs are the only people in the world, who still keep their unique nomadic style of life, which has strong connection with hunting with golden eagle. Immerse yourself in the unique landscape, culture and traditions of Western Mongolia and gain an intimate insight into the lives of local nomad herders. Accompany these fascinating mountain nomads on their migration from their Winter camps to Spring camp, hunts and explore the breathtaking countryside with kazakh tour team.
x

Shiraz Qasghai/Kaşkay ili Turkish People/Iran Part 56

Welcome to my travelchannel.On my channel you can find almost 1000 films of more than 70 countries. See the playlist on my youtube channel.Enjoy!


Qashqai Oghuz Turkish People in Iran.Total population:1.800.000
Qashqai (Qeshqayı, Ghashghai, Ghashghay, Gashgai, Gashgay, Kashkai, Qashqay, Qashqa'i and Qashqai: قشقایی) are a conglomeration of clans of different ethnic origins, mostly nomadic Turkic, After assimilation politics since Pahlavi, almost all of them are bilingual, speaking the Qashqai language - which is a member of the Turkic family of languages and which they call Turki - as well as (in formal use) the Persian language. Majority of Qashqai people were originally nomadic pastoralists and some remain so today. The traditional nomadic Qashqai travelled with their flocks each year from the summer highland pastures north of Shiraz roughly 480 km or 300 miles south to the winter pastures on lower (and warmer) lands near the Persian Gulf, to the southwest of Shiraz. The majority, however, have now become partially or wholly sedentary. The trend towards settlement has been increasing markedly since the 1960s.
Historically, the Turkic languages are believed to have arrived in Iran from Central Asia from the 11th or 12th centuries onwards. The Turks, forsaking the regions where they had dwelt for centuries, started moving down through the Altai Mountains and Caspian depressions, establishing themselves eventually on the frontiers of the Iranian Empire and in Asia Minor.
We are of Turkish language and race; some say that we are descendants of the Turkish Oghuz Tribe, known for its cruelty and fierceness, and that our name is derived from the Turkish Kashka meaning a horse with a white star on its forehead. Others think this name indicates that we came from Kashgar in the wake of Hulagu. Others still that it means fugitive.
Though these versions differ, we believe that the arrival of our Tribes in Iran coincided with the conquests of Jengis Khan, in the thirteenth century. Soon after, our ancestors established themselves on the slopes of the Caucasus. We are descendants of the Tribe of the Ak Koyunlu the Tribe of the White Sheep famed for being the only tribe in history capable of inflicting a defeat on Tamerlane. For centuries we dwelt on the lands surrounding Ardebil, but, in the first half of the sixteenth century we settled in southern Persia, Shah Ismail having asked our warriors to defend this part of the country against the intrusions of the Portuguese. Thus, our Tribes came to the Province of Fars, near the Persian Gulf, and are still only separated from it by a ridge of mountains, the Makran.
The yearly migrations of the Kashkai, seeking fresh pastures, drive them from the south to the north, where they move to their summer quarters Yailaq in the high mountains; and from the north to the south, to their winter quarters, Qishlaq.
The Qashqai are made up of a number of tribes and sub-tribes including the Amele, Derre-Shuri/Dere-Shorlu, Kashkyoli, ShishBaluki/Shishbeyli, Farsimadan/Eymur, Qaracha, Rahimli and Safi -Khanli.
Kashkuli: During World War I, the Kashkuli khans supported the British in their struggle against Ṣowlat-al-Dowla (Iyl-khan) and the German agent, Wilhelm Wassmuss. After the war, Ṣowlat-al-Dowla punished the Kashkuli. He dismissed the Kaškuli leaders who had opposed him and “deliberately set out to break up and impoverish the Kashkuli tribe”. Two sections of the tribe, which consisted of elements which had been loyal to Ṣowlat-al-Dowla, were then separated from the main body of the tribe and given the status of independent tribes, becoming the Kashkuli Kuchak (“Little Kashkuli”) and Qarachahi tribes. The remaining tribe became known as the Kashkuli Bozorg (“Big Kashkuli”) tribe.The Kashkuli Bozorg tribe comprised 4,862 households in 1963. As Oliver Garrod observed, the Kashkuli Bozorg are “especially noted for their Jajims, or tartan woolen blankets, and for the fine quality of their rugs and trappings”.

how 1.2 million nomadic people live in Iran?

there are still 1.2 million people live in IRAN
There are over 500 nomadic tribes in Iran.
If you are interested in nomadic life style a good travel agency which have expert guides to experience the extraordinary nomadic lifestyle
you can go to moonlighttrip.com and ask operator for further that.
Contact Us :

We Might Be Nomads - England 1

The first video of our travels through Europe and Asia. Our first stop, and backdrop for our first video is the ever amazing UK.

Bakhtiari Tribe Migration 22

Kazakhstan Kazakh Nomads

Kazakh 2008, a life less ordinary

Please subscribe and look out for new great videos v.soon !

An award winning documentary, made by a small crew, wishing to visit and live the nomadic way of life.

On June 13th 2008, four individuals of four nationalities left Amsterdam in a 4x4 ex-Dutch military vehicle, heading for Siberia and Mongolia on an adventure to raise awareness of the situation faced by Nomadic tribes such as the Saami and Dukkah people.
x

Afghanistan

Tashakkor to my Afghan and Expatriate friends who made this trip possible

Frontiere Indo-Pakistan

Show de larmee

Thirsty Nomads: 93 Days in Europe

8 countries, 34 hotels, 9 rental cars. 2 wine & beer geeks on the trip of a lifetime.

Syria Haba - marmarita 's gypsies

part 15 the beautiful gypsies of Syria 1988, near Marmarita

Rajastan, la terra dei marajà (India)

Il subcontinente indiano, qui nella sua massima varietà di colori, odori, persone, cibi ed animali da soli in giro nel traffico cittadino. Con le città monocrome di Jodpur, Jaipur, la militare Bikaner, al confine con il Pakistan, la moderna New Dheli ed Agra, con uno dei monumenti più belli e sconcertanti del mondo, il Taj Mahal, soffuso di una storia di amore e morte

Shares

x

Check Also

x

Menu