Bhopal’s best-kept Eid secret: Superstar goats worth lakhs being unveiled in style
BHOPAL: Fifteen days before Eid-ul-Azha, Bhopal doesn’t launch cars or debut singers. It unveils goats worth lakhs... in events that look like Super Bowl in scale and razzle-dazzle.
They arrive like grooms. Decorated in garlands, mounted on hydraulic platforms once reserved for wedding varmalas, or lowered by crane onto spotlit stages.
Hundreds gather, phones raised, to catch a glimpse of goats they’ve never seen before — reared in secrecy for months, revealed at grand events. These are Bhopal’s secret superstars. And over the last few years, the city has become the go-to market for India’s richie rich to source big, burly, showpiece bucks for qurbani.
The process begins quietly. At goat farms across the city, owners who trade year-round set aside a select few kids. The chosen ones are picked early — for the colour and sheen of their coat, the length of their ears, the promise in their frame. Kota and Jamnapari breeds dominate.
“They can grow to 110 cm tall and weigh between 140 and 180 kg if fed well,” says Mohd Sarwar, who runs SF Ali Goat Farm and has been in the trade for 12 years.
From there, it’s VIP treatment. Temperature-controlled sheds. Tailored diets of grams, leaves, and dry fruits. Daily walks, massages, and zero public appearances. The goats live like athletes in training, their growth tracked like stock prices.
Bollywood still remains key inspiration for naming the goats. Sikandar, Baba, Raees, Pathan and King are a few examples.
Soon after Eid-ul-Fitr, their photos and videos are sent to prospective buyers in Mumbai, Pune, Delhi, Hyderabad and Lucknow. Bidding wars follow. The highest bidder wins, but the goat stays in Bhopal — fed, guarded, groomed — until 10 to 15 days before Eid-ul-Azha.
Then comes the spectacle. Buyers fly in for delivery day. The goats are unveiled before crowds, blessed, garlanded, and handed over. From there, they travel home in air-conditioned vans.
On May 8, Owais Kagzi flew in from Mumbai to take delivery of ‘King’, a 170-kg Kota goat. “I’ve loved tall goats since childhood,” he said. “Bhopal’s breeders know how to unlock their full potential. That’s why I come here every year.”
Another buyer from Nagpur, who paid Rs 3.75 lakh for a 160-kg buck, spoke on condition of anonymity: “People here understand goats. They love them. Where else do hundreds turn up just to watch a goat being unveiled? That love brings me back.” For these farms, Eid isn’t just a festival. It’s the Super Bowl. Months of care culminate in one grand entry — and for a few hours, Bhopal’s goats are bigger than any film stars.
Hundreds gather, phones raised, to catch a glimpse of goats they’ve never seen before — reared in secrecy for months, revealed at grand events. These are Bhopal’s secret superstars. And over the last few years, the city has become the go-to market for India’s richie rich to source big, burly, showpiece bucks for qurbani.
The process begins quietly. At goat farms across the city, owners who trade year-round set aside a select few kids. The chosen ones are picked early — for the colour and sheen of their coat, the length of their ears, the promise in their frame. Kota and Jamnapari breeds dominate.
“They can grow to 110 cm tall and weigh between 140 and 180 kg if fed well,” says Mohd Sarwar, who runs SF Ali Goat Farm and has been in the trade for 12 years.
From there, it’s VIP treatment. Temperature-controlled sheds. Tailored diets of grams, leaves, and dry fruits. Daily walks, massages, and zero public appearances. The goats live like athletes in training, their growth tracked like stock prices.
Bollywood still remains key inspiration for naming the goats. Sikandar, Baba, Raees, Pathan and King are a few examples.
Then comes the spectacle. Buyers fly in for delivery day. The goats are unveiled before crowds, blessed, garlanded, and handed over. From there, they travel home in air-conditioned vans.
On May 8, Owais Kagzi flew in from Mumbai to take delivery of ‘King’, a 170-kg Kota goat. “I’ve loved tall goats since childhood,” he said. “Bhopal’s breeders know how to unlock their full potential. That’s why I come here every year.”
Another buyer from Nagpur, who paid Rs 3.75 lakh for a 160-kg buck, spoke on condition of anonymity: “People here understand goats. They love them. Where else do hundreds turn up just to watch a goat being unveiled? That love brings me back.” For these farms, Eid isn’t just a festival. It’s the Super Bowl. Months of care culminate in one grand entry — and for a few hours, Bhopal’s goats are bigger than any film stars.
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