Arugungu is am important Nigerian cultural event, to which thousands of fishermen take part.
Arugungu takes place in the North-Western Nigerian state of Kebbi, where an army of fishermen gather with one goal in mind, to catch the largest fish. So at the sound of a gun they all plunge into the muddy waters of the Matan Fada stream, in teams of two, one armed with two calabash (used for flotation and fish storage) and the other with two giant fish nets.
The Matan Fada may not be very impressive but it’s full of fish, because people come here to fish only once a year. After the one our time limit is over, the team who caught the largest fish is escorted by the sultans’s guards to present their prize to him. The winners receive a brand new bus as a prize as well as one million Naira (around $7500).
Nigeria hopes the Arugungu fishing festival will soon become an important tourist attraction.













spencey89











March 25, 2008
That is one big-ass fish.
March 27, 2008
ARGUNGU FISHING FESTIVAL (AFF) OFFICIAL DATES: 12-15 MARCH, ANNUALLY - Kebbi State Govt.
http://www.argungufishingfestival.com
Argungu Fishing Festival (AFF) - Nigeria champion fisherman jailed. Rivals thought the winner was a bit fishy
Credit: BBC News 20 March 2008
Posted By Prince Kabir Abubakar
Webmaster, http://www.KebbiState.com
& http://www.ArgunguFishingFestival.com
The gills showed the fish was long dead - The Emir of Argungu
The winner of a prestigious Nigerian fishing festival has been stripped of his title and thrown in jail after rivals complained he cheated.
The 66kg (10st 6lb) fish that won the competition in Argungu, in northern Kebbi State, was already dead when it came out of the water, officials said.
Bello Yakub has been arrested and will appear before a magistrate next week.
The monster fish netted him prizes worth $33,000, including a car and a ticket to go on the Hajj pilgrimage.
It is thought the fish may have been caught in the much larger Niger River and brought to Argungu, where fishing is banned except during the festival.
“Other fishermen claimed he was not really one of them,” the Emir of Argungu, Samaila Mera, said.
“We investigated and found that he couldn’t have taken it from the river in Argungu because the gills showed the fish was long dead.”
The BBC’s Hassan Sahabi who was at the festival says this may seriously damage the reputation of an event considered a major tourist attraction in Nigeria.
Mr Yakub had told reporters this was the first time he had won in more than 30 attempts.
“I just hope I can use the prize money for something good,” he said.
The festival has been held regularly, along with an agricultural show and other cultural displays, since 1934.
Tens of thousands of fishermen wade through the water, which reaches chin-high in parts, dragging nets along the bottom.
Fish are placed inside a hollowed out calabash - a kind of dried pumpkin.
Email us at: Contact@ArgunguFishingFestival.com
Visit us at: http://www.KebbiState.com
January 25, 2009
Ciekawy blog, dodalem go do ulubionych, bede tu napewno wpadal czesciej
February 18, 2009
Ciekawa strona, dodalem ja do ulubionych, zapraszam do odwiedzenia mojej