When Pests Become Premium and Donkeys Turn to Gold
How Australia Sends Camels Back to the Desert and India Sells Liquid White Gold to Paris If you had told someone in 1950 that by 2026, Australia would be shipping camels back to Saudi Arabia while India would be exporting donkey milk to French skincare laboratories at prices that rival champagne, they would have assumed you'd been sampling questionable substances in the outback. Yet here we are, living in a world where logistics have become so sophisticated that geographical irony is now a business model. Australia, surrounded by desert, exports sand. Saudi Arabia, home to millions of camels, imports them. And somewhere in rural Gujarat, a farmer is probably pinching himself as he watches his donkey's milk sell for more per liter than most people's monthly salary. This isn't fiction; it's the bizarre, fascinating, and surprisingly lucrative world of unconventional livestock trade in 2026, where cultural perception, economic necessity, and a healthy dose of irony h...