Goats are of the smartest animals; they must be. Think that in the driest land, they can find food and they can drink water from the sea.
And smart as they are, they don't trust easily.
At first, they emerge from shadows and trees, or use the light to hide their characteristics...
And gaining their trust is a ritual of inestimable joy to the anthropological eyes, as it makes you think of movements, signals and meanings (I am guiltily hiding the word 'symbols' here!). I had a professor at the first year of my undergrad studies in Anthropology, who said that Anthropology is to know what it means to wink in each culture. Perhaps in the overpupolated and uncompromising society of Samothracian goats, the wink of the head of the 'delegation' means approval.
Or, I have taken it completely wrong. Either way, see a depiction of the ritual below!
Nonetheless, after the 'wink', goats started showing up and even posing for photographs - a joy to the photographer's eye (and the more amateur you are, the better).
Portraits, postures, intentionally 'unaware' poses and even staged fights; goats are my models!
And, well, eating. If someone (human or non-human) lets you take pictures of themselves eating, you have done something right (anthropologist - photographer knowledge accumulated)!
But there is also always the dancer in me looking for choreographies in everything - goats included! How beautifully they cross the place from side to side, their movements perfectly orchestrated with the landscape; a perpetual passage in time and space.
A passage through life...
... and existence.
Now that I am thinking about it, perhaps goat gazing is an activity during which WE are being gazed by goats!
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