Scores of white cattle plod into the village for their only drink of water of the day. Herders, wearing brightly-colored robes, walk in tow.
Soon, they will wander miles back across the semi-desert of northern Senegal in search of sparse yellow stubs poking through the sand.
"There is no water, there is no pasture," says Adama Ba, a herder whose 100-head of cattle is his lifeblood, in his native Pulaar.
"I'm scared now. There is nothing here".
The 56-year-old is one of thousands of semi-nomadic Fulani pastoralists who have been stuck in Senegal's Louga region, in the Sahel, since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic.
The sparsely populated area is a sandy flatland, dotted with spindly gum arabic trees. The odd donkey shelters underneath them to escape soaring noon temperatures.
Pastoralists move with their cattle from north to south across Louga, and further afield, as pasture dries up, before returning north again with the summer rains.
But recent times have been hard. Less rainfall, attributed to climate change, has meant less grazing.
Worse, months of government restrictions on movement designed to curb the virus have coincided with the hardest months of the dry season.
Unable to travel far in an inhospitable landscape, herders have been forced to spend what little money they have on animal feed.
"Pastoralists are part of the population that has been the most impacted by the COVID-19 crisis here in Senegal," says local MP Yoro Sow.
"They are extremely vulnerable."
The Fulani herders' main of source of income -- selling livestock -- has also been cut off, because the local government has banned large markets over contamination fears.
Even when the restrictions lift, it is not clear that all the herders will have the money to leave for better grazing.
In the hamlet of Mbetiou Peulh, which is inhabited for only part of the year, Adama Ba says he must travel nearly 100 kilometres (60 miles) south soon, to a refuge containing pasture.
A shortage of cash means his car has to stay behind.
Ba's phone rings as he's walking across the scrub. A stroke of luck: A local official arrives in a blue pick-up, and agrees to transport one of his cows to the nearest town to be sold.
- No rain, no money -
Weekly markets known as "loumas," which can draw traders from as far as the seaside capital Dakar, were the region's economic heart until they closed in March.
To help herders, local authorities are distributing animal feed and are allowing them to sell livestock in small numbers, but it is not enough.
Mamadou Cisse, 51, the livestock ministry's veterinary inspector in the region, said that the dry season is always grueling for herders.
But bans on large gatherings, travel, and the closure of the loumas have been "very, very, very difficult," he said.
Meat prices have also tumbled as buyers play their stronger bargaining hand, several herders and local officials told AFP.
Diegane Daff, 40, a local councilor in the small market town of Barkedji, said that a head of cattle that once sold for 75,000 CFA francs ($127, 115 euros), now goes for 35,000 ($59, 53 euros).
Any money earned is spent on animal feed and sacks of rice for the family.
"The big crisis is here in the heart of small villages," Daff says, adding that herders are surviving by helping each other as much as possible.
A local NGO named ADID estimates the number of herders affected to be in the tens of thousands. Senegal is a majority-Muslim nation of some 16 million people.
- Ranch of refuge -
Many Fulani in Louga have turned to the so-called "Dolly Ranch" as a last resort.
Senegal dedicated the area -- which spans 87,500 hectares (216,000 acres), and which is enclosed by a concrete wall -- for pastoralists in 1969.
The inside looks nearly as barren as the surrounding region, but herders use the ranch less often during plentiful times, so it retains pasture for longer during the dry season.
Pastoralists, who enter for free, camp in straw huts surrounded by their animals.
On-site government vet Mamadou Sow, without offering precise figures, says that more people have come this year compared to last.
But herders take refuge every dry season. "Coronavirus simply accentuated a drastic situation that was already there," he says.
Late and irregular rains in recent years have been blamed for lower-quality pasture, complicating pastoralists' lives.
Standing near a watering point, in front of hundreds of cattle with lyre-shaped horns, Djibi Djarga Sow, 63, says he remembers a time when fodder was richer, and animals produced better milk and meat.
Dressed in a blue robe and carrying a wooden switch, the herder explains, that he has walked 250 kilometers (155 miles) to reach the ranch.
"Dolly is the refuge," he says, adding that herders' livestock is their "salary".
Asked what herders can do to tackle to their problems, he responds that prayer is their only weapon.
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