Turns out, riding an ostrich is not as easy as it looks. And
it doesn’t actually look all that easy.
Win thoroughly enjoys taking the giant birds for a spin, and
in the time we have lived in Chiang Rai he has taken two visiting friends for
this “Once Time in Your Life” experience. Seeing as our departure is rapidly
approaching, I figured this weekend was the time to put on my big girl pants
and just ride an ostrich, dammit.
Ostriches apparently each have a unique personality, and, as
we discovered, drastically differing reactions to having a foreigner perched on
their backs. Becca (another visiting New Mexican), for instance, rode the
smaller of the two ostriches. It trotted around politely, sometimes just
standing still, allowing her the comfort of only moderate awkwardness, as well
as normal facial expressions in all the pictures.
I was on the bigger of the two birds, and I think Becca and
I had completely opposite experiences. My ostrich liked to run full-tilt, make
quick turns, come to short halts and try to buck me off its back, all while
making terrifying hissing noises. Not that I blame it; I wouldn’t like it if
someone were clinging to my body, holding onto my useless wings and treating me
as if I were a horse.
Becca was able to gracefully slide off the tail-end of her
ostrich. I was not so fortunate. Mr. Ostrich did manage to successfully hurl me
off his back. I went down sideways, but somehow managed to stick the landing, inciting a burst of applause from a group of tourists who had been watching my entire
ostrich debacle.
On a related note, during this visit Wanna Farms had a
cluster of new hatchlings and toddler ostriches. If you have never seen a baby
ostrich (as we hadn’t before yesterday), they are possibly one of the most bizarrely
adorable creatures I’ve ever seen. If they didn’t grow into the mildly creep
monsters that those of us in Chiang Rai like to treat like horses, I would make Win
promise that we could get a bunch and let them run around our backyard.