 When elephants travelling to Jaipur’s Amber   Fort stop to answer nature’s call, the tourists on their backs may   groan “what a waste of time”. But for one man, the breaks mean   big bucks.
When elephants travelling to Jaipur’s Amber   Fort stop to answer nature’s call, the tourists on their backs may   groan “what a waste of time”. But for one man, the breaks mean   big bucks.   Vijendra Singh Shekhawat has struck gold by turning the   dung left behind by the 200-odd elephants into paper.
   Indians might be squeamish about paper made from   “elephant poo” — as the stamp on the sheets declares   — but Shekhawat has found that it is a hit abroad. The paper is   exported to Germany and   the UK.
      Dung paper has increased Shekhawat’s income by 20   per cent.
   The idea of turning elephant waste into paper dawned on   Shekhawat while he was driving past Amber Fort one day. “I saw the dung   spread across the road and noticed that there was a lot of fibre,” he   said. 
   Shekhawat did not waste time and began experimenting   immediately. But it took him eight or nine months to finally figure out the   right proportions. 
   The process is the same as making any handmade paper.
   After collecting the dung — only the best quality,   which comes at Rs 2,000 a trolley, will do — it is cleaned in water   tanks so that only the fibre remains.
   Softer after being cooked, the fibre is dried and sorted.   Then it is put into moulds on which muslin cloth is pressed to make paper. 
   “The colour of the dung varies depending on the   fodder the elephant is eating,” Shekhawat said.
   He has tried feeding the elephants different types of food   to get different colours. But so far, the animals have stuck to their regular   diet of sugarcane and jowar.
   Elephant dung paper may sound like a bizarre   idea in India, but in Sri Lanka and Thailand, it has been   done.