 What brought on the need to see that animals might be a good animal to adopt and adapt here within the Zambodur community is that even families with a lot of livestock during the drought periods and the dry seasons, the cattle, the goats, they were very, very far away. When there were no animals, there was rampant hunger, there was malnutrition. A lot of dependence on relief food was happening. We have seen in Zambodur, there is high gamrates of malnutrition and the only solution is to diversify our pastoral lives. They can be able to feed on tall trees, that is Acacia, so it's an advantage that during times of droughts because the camel can still be within with the people and can still produce the normal milk it was producing when it was raining. We train women, we train a lot of women that bear the weight of the restriction and actually it's all about working with women. Women are really not excited in working with us. We have a lot of children. I think it's because we have a lot of children. We have a lot of families, we have a lot of kids, we have a lot of kids, we have a lot of children, we are very well-off, we have a lot of children. We have a lot of children who are not born yet. My family would sign a contract that this camel is the woman's camel and that also made a huge difference within how they could use it, where they went, who they gave it to, how much they used for sale, and then how they could use that money. She bought me the school uniform from the camel and that's when I joined the school because of the help of the camel. I did electrical engineering, so up to where I am, the effort of that camel. And now that it's decided that next year will be the year of the camels, it's a good thing. We really appreciate because for the people that have camels, their life has really changed. People can be able to survive and be able to have reliable food because of the camels, because camels give a lot of milk in this area.