Thank you for the information with the camel riders. Underlined with pic how not and who to ride on a camel. Two surprises are that the good old Arifix do it right, at first. Great idea to compare. And the second thing is as a modeller who build technical things like me (right now a Gazelle ), will oversee this miss easily.
Thanks. So I think many collectors will ignore that, and will buy the sets. No problem at all. But, in my opinion, it's interesting to know that there is a different riding style.
I like your figure-reviews. It´s really a pity that Strelets has produced wrong camel-riders. Hope they will learn to do the next figures better.... Please continue your reports
I appreciate much your reports like I mentioned already above. Your arguments on the theme of camel-riding seemed to be very convincing, but you could find also other historical photos of camel riding. It looks that both forms of riding are possible - with legs in front and splitted legs only a little bit in front like most of Strelets camel riders, but It seems that legs in front are still more often to find:
a detailed look shows that beduins! prefer my described riding style. Troops on duty for european armies adapted the standard riding style. The traditional way to ride a camel is the style I described in my article.