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It’s a Win-Win: Make Space for the Great Migration

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Wildebeest Migration

Well now here’s a win-win for all: Donate over $5,000 and automatically be entered into a raffle draw for a 6 night safari in Mara North Conservancy!

Dear Friends,

I know that you often get asked for donations for one worthy cause or another, but in this case I make no apology for doing so again. We need your help.

For over 30 years, the magical Maasai Mara has been a home from home for me, and the place where my passion for wildlife and its conservation was born. During this time I have personally guided many of you on breathtaking safaris to see the Maasai Mara and its great migration over the vast rolling plains dotted with hundreds of thousands of animals.

My mentor was Dr David Western, former Director of the Kenya Wildlife Service and Founder of ACC (African Conservation Centre), who taught me that wildlife, in order for it to succeed, must be able to earn their place on Earth and that local communities, who share grazing space with these wild animals, must also benefit from them in the simplest form of the “tourist dollar”.

I joined the board of ACC in 2002. I am a founder member and Chairman of the Mara North Conservancy and three years ago was asked to join the board of the “Northern Rangelands Trust“, another wonderful conservation success story, having established 27 separate conservancies in Northern Kenya.

Those of you who have not personally experienced the wonders of the Maasai Mara’s annual migration of wildebeest, zebra and gazelle may at least have experienced it on television and film, as the migration moves from the Serengeti in Tanzania to the Maasai Mara Reserve in Kenya before heading off into the neighboring community and private lands.

However, the future of Africa’s greatest migration and the Maasai Mara ecosystem that supports it, is increasingly under threat. Populations of the Mara’s resident wildebeest which take refuge in the community and private lands, have already suffered a dramatic decline in the last 10 years.

Scientists have linked this dramatic decline to the rapid increase in the break-up of community ranch land into smaller privately owned parcels, as well as to the expansion of local towns, the fencing of private plots, the grazing of livestock and the cultivation of land for agriculture. This has resulted in a huge reduction in the availability of grass and water, both essential for the survival of the great migration.

The great migration is also critically dependent on the Mara ecosystem for its annual dry season grazing – each year the animals travel 1,500km, seeking grazing in Kenya during the dry season of Tanzania. They have roamed free for centuries, but now with the pressures and degradation of the land, all this could end. If we don’t manage the development and keep space for the great migration to continue moving freely, then all that we have achieved these past years will be lost.

This is why in 2009, we set up the Mara North Conservancy.

Our activities were endorsed in 2013 when the United Nations Environment Program acknowledged the importance of action, stating, “Urgent efforts need to be made to protect wildebeest migratory corridors and dispersal areas to ensure these great migrations for the future“.

As the Founder and Chairman of Mara North Conservancy (MNC), I am writing to you to ask for your urgent helpPlease donate generously to MNC today, so we can protect the vital wildlife habitat of Mara North Conservancy for the great migration. Your gift of US$ 100, US$ 1,000 or US$ 5,000 can make all the difference. In total we are seeking to raise US$355,000 to help the Mara North Conservancy in keeping space for the Great Migration.

Historically, tourism provided much of the funding for the Mara conservancies to manage and protect the community and private lands surrounding the Maasai Mara National Reserve. With the tourism crisis our ability to pay and cover all the costs is seriously challenged. And if the conservancies go, the jobs disappear, the land lease payments stop and we say goodbye to the remaining resident wildebeest migration as well as the livelihoods of tens of thousands of people of the Maasai community. Now MNC is partnering with 736 Maasai landowners to lease 61,099 acres (24,726 hectares) of vital wildlife habitat, providing many benefits to the owners of the land, including guaranteed monthly rental income (amount for lease), an income for over 5,000 Maasai family members, employment for over 450 Kenyans – 60% of which are from the local area – as well as generating well over US$ 1 million in charitable support for the local schools and clinics these past years.

Your donation to MNC will mean that we can continue to operate the Conservancy, through funding essential equipment such as patrol vehicles, anti-poaching vehicles, tractors, digital VHF radios, ranger bases, and increasing much-needed boots on the ground plus securing vital habitat by registering leases for conservation. With these key requirements, we can carry out wildlife protection and monitoring patrols and be much better able to work with communities to keep the area open for wildlife through the management of local towns, fencing and livestock grazing – the greatest threats to the great migration of Africa.

We are also well aware that further loss of wildlife and their habitat of the Maasai Mara could jeopardise other key tourism destinations in Kenya and the rest of East Africa.

Please consider making your most generous gift to Mara North Conservancy. Not only in honour of your personal experience and involvement in the Maasai Mara and your love for Africa, but also to enable your family and friends to visit the Mara in years and generations to come.

Any donation will help protect the greatest mammal migration on the planet.

Never before have had we needed your help like we do now.

Thank you so much for your attention and much required generosity.

Thank you my friends,

Stefano Cheli

Chairman, Mara North Conservancy

Tongole Foresees Strong Partnership With African Parks

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Tongole Wilderness

African Parks, a renowned non-profit conservation NGO, recently took over the management of Nkhotakota Wildlife Reserve and Liwonde National Park in Malawi. Tongole Wilderness Lodge, a luxury eco-lodge nestled deep amongst the breath-taking Miombo woodlands of the Nkhotakota Wildlife Reserve, look forward to working with African Parks towards the common goal of ensuring the best management of the wildlife & communities in this wilderness area.

“We are very excited about the management of Nkhotakota Wildlife Reserve (NWR) being granted to African Parks. Tongole has laid strong foundations for improved conservation education and ensuring local communities are benefitting from the protection of this unique natural area. African Parks’ ethos complements that of Tongole perfectly and will ensure that the future is bright for both the wildlife of NWR and the surrounding communities and we look forward to working together to achieve this.”

A summary of proposed plans for NWR includes:

  • translocation of a large amount of wildlife, including approximately 400 more elephants and 600 more general antelope species to the reserve;
  • improved protection of the reserve by maintaining a strong force of government scouts;
  • training and equipment for staff, so that they can effectively conduct patrols, in order to reduce poaching;
  • creation of 150km of access roads in the reserve so that access and tourism revenue may increase;
  • initiation of community projects, including scholarships, cultural centres for tourism purposes, community employment and education projects to establish conservation value;
  • management of infrastructure e.g. park offices.

This is a historic and exciting development for Malawi, conservation of the country’s wildlife with direct benefits for local communities, and its growth as a tourist and safari destination.

Tongole have rightfully been nominated as Best Community Focused Safari Property in the 2016 Safari Awards.  African Parks, a 2015 Safari Awards winner, will no doubt give Tongole’s existing community empowerment efforts a massive boost.

Leobo: A James Bond Safari

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Leobo Private Reserve

‘Built on a 20,000 acre completely private conservancy with mountains, rivers, open plains, 250 kilometres of sandy tracks, lakes and waterfall and dubbed James Bond in the bush, Leobo Private Reserve has of all the toys for every generation to enjoy. From two resident helicopters, a fleet of quad bikes (including high speed racers for the more adrenaline thirsty to children’s mini quads for the more juvenile petrol heads), a Polaris buggy, five horses, dirt bikes, mountain bikes and kayaks, you name it, Leobo has it.’

With his close to 18 years in the travel industry Toby Warren, Founder of Exceptional Travel, thought he’d seen most angles, when it came to new safari properties, until he visited Leobo in South Africa’s Waterberg 2 months ago.

‘One of Leobo’s key differences is that where many African lodges focus on safari and conservation, Rory decided that the backbone of the property should instead be on science and quite simply good, honest fun (although the safari and conservation elements are thrown in for good measure too).

The science in question is astronomy and I don’t mean star gazing through any old telescope. Leobo has a revolving, fully automated observatory dome with a 20 inch research grade telescope and, with barely any light pollution in the Waterberg Mountains, the astrophysics experience at Leobo is both internationally renowned and is certainly unrivalled in any private property you will visit in Africa.’

But you don’t have to be interested in far off galaxies to enjoy Leobo’s own private galaxy.

‘the real key to Leobo is, and I make no excuses about saying it again, the fun of having a private reserve where there are no rules (except minor ones which may just about save your life), there are no time constraints and there are absolutely no limits to what you can do. Guests are encouraged to play hard and enjoy all that nature’s playground has to offer. And that is exactly what we did.

From being dropped off by helicopter for sundowners on an impossibly remote kopje, sipping cocktails in the roof-top Jacuzzi whilst drinking in the endless panoramic views and then helicopter paintballing (yes you heard me correctly) whilst your friends try to avoid being splurged on quad bikes below, our weekend at Leobo was something that only few can dream of, let alone do.

Designed by Silvio Rech and Lesley Carstens, famous for creating the infamous North Island in the Seychelles, their skill of blending design and interiors with the surrounding landscape, combined with owners Rory and Lizzy Sweet’s imagination, appreciation of adventure, and wicked sense of humour, has resulted in a property which not only breathtakingly beautiful, but which is also a feast for the senses.

Rory is passionate about the reserve that he owns and loves, and who says in his own words “it is my favourite place in the world and I want others to enjoy it too”. And he really means it. His enthusiasm for sharing the experience with others resonates around Leobo, its staff and its atmosphere and it is quite clear that this is no commercial enterprise but rather a personal invitation to enjoy something a little different.’

For all these reasons Leobo has maintained its top spot in the Safari Awards Best Safari House category for 2 years running and is already a nominee in a number of categories for the upcoming 2016 Safari Awards.

Want to feel like a secret safari agent in your very own award winning hideaway in Africa?  Here’s your chance, take advantage of Leobo’s incredible helicopter packages for next year.  Get in touch to find out more.

Angama Mara: A Ground Breaking Safari Lodge Launches In Kenya

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Angama Mara has opened! This much anticipated newcomer to Kenya’s bespoke safari scene has taken just 11 months to build since the first peg was planted – a ground breaking achievement in itself.

There is little that is conventional about the creation of Angama Mara: translated from Swahili to be suspended in mid-air, it is the only luxury lodge to be set high up on the Great Rift Valley Escarpment, with views that stretch for miles across the Maasai Mara 300 meters below. Its 30 tented suites, split between two totally separate camps, have been crafted by Nairobi’s finest tent maker, using the world’s largest custom built cutter/plotter and a further 42,000 man hours to complete.

With a pedigree in lodge high design, architect duo Silvio Rech and Lesley Carstens, working alongside stylista Annemarie Meintjes, have designed the tented suites with 11meter wide floor to ceiling windows – another industry first. Whilst taking inspiration from Nairobi’s Muthaiga Club but with a major departure from the norm, the guest areas will also offer a one-of-a-kind multifunctional space centred on the magnificent views.

Flexibility and ingenuity will be at Angama Mara’s core with days planned around what the guests may want to do, and when. As their wishes change from day to day guests will have the opportunity to enjoy the knowledge and companionship of more than one guide. The guiding team will also endeavour to match like-minded guests with each other: birders will go on safari with fellow birders and serious photographers the same. First-timers to Africa will be guided differently to old-timers. Holding guiding in the highest regard, Angama Mara’s guides have been chosen for their ability to find animals off the beaten track, their great knowledge and storytelling skills but most of all for giving their guests an unforgettable safari.

Another stand out point is Angama Mara’s access to the acclaimed Mara Triangle, a remote part of the Maasai Mara renowned for the year round quality of its game viewing as well as for the reduced number of vehicles that can access it. Wildlife viewing can also be enjoyed straight from the lodge looking down onto the plains below whilst resident game around the lodge is plentiful too. Every tent is equipped with binoculars and there is a spotting scope in the guest area.

Tailor-making their safari further, guests will also be encouraged to eat where they prefer, when they prefer: out on safari with a picnic under a solitary tree, privately on the deck of their tent, more romantically in the guest areas or family-style on long tables under the stars at a Bush BBQ. Celebrating Kenya’s best, they will enjoy tea and coffee from the Highlands, beef from the north, freshly grown fruit and vegetables from owner-run smallholdings and seafood from the coast.

And finally, it is not usual to see those with 30 years in the luxury safari industry having a hands-on approach in the day to day running of the business. Both at the lodge and in the market place, owners Steve and Nicky Fitzgerald’s active involvement will assure the sole and full focus of the management in ensuring their guests’ safari is as unforgettable as Angama Mara itself.

More about Angama Mara

With its modern interpretation of a 1920’s safari, unquestionably one of the attractions of staying at Angama Mara is because of where many of the most romantic scenes from the film Out of Africa were filmed 30 years ago adding romance and nostalgia to the guests’ stay. The Out of Africa kopje (small hill) which features on the movie’s poster has been left untouched for guests to picnic in private and explore.

With safaris being one of the most bonding, exciting and learning holidays on the planet it is only natural that Angama Mara welcomes children of all ages with arms wide open. There are four sets of 2 interconnecting tents, tailor-made menus and more activities than can be imagined to be enjoyed with or without parents.

Doing Well By Doing Good is Angama Mara’s ethos. They believe that by making guests happy they can make a real difference in the community in which they operate. Without happy guests they don’t have a business and without a profitable business they cannot make meaningful and sustainable differences. The Angama Foundation will engage with neighbouring Maasai communities and with the Mara Conservancy to deliver on their promise of Doing Good.

A Safari in a Kenyan Conservancy

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Kenya Safari Conservancy

Does a safari viewing wildlife in pristine wilderness without masses of other tourists present & which benefits the community who share the land with the wildlife tick a lot of your safari wishlist boxes?  Jake Grieves-Cook, Managing Director of conservation & safari experts Gamewatchers Safaris & Porini Camps, tells us why a safari on conservancy land provides the most rewarding wildlife experience.  Be prepared to make a difference.

‘The future outlook for wildlife in Kenya has greatly improved in recent years with the realisation that expanding the area of protected habitat for wild animals is vital if they are to continue to survive in their present numbers.  The movement to establish new wildlife conservancies beyond the parks is an important and positive step in providing a safe haven in which wildlife can increase.

Gamewatchers Safaris & Porini Camps have been at the forefront of creating what they are calling the Conservancy Concept.

The Conservancy concept was developed as one of the solutions to stop the increasing losses of wildlife populations in Kenya outside the parks where previously a large proportion of wild animal species were to be found. The conservancies create new areas of protected habitat exclusively for wildlife on additional land adjoining the existing parks and reserves. However this cannot be done unless the communities who own the land to be set aside as wildlife conservancies can derive income and benefits from allowing this to happen which match or exceed alternative forms of land use.

The renowned elephant conservationist Cynthia Moss has written recently:
“The establishment of the conservancies in Kenya has been the single most successful conservation initiative since the creation of national parks in the 1940′s. Conservancies protect land for Kenya’s wildlife and even more important create sanctuaries of safety. In addition conservancies bring benefits in the form of direct payments and jobs to the people who share the land with wildlife.”

Some of the first people to organise wildlife safari tourism on Maasai community lands outside the parks were Willie Roberts with Paramount Chief Lerionka Ole Ntutu at Ol Choro Oiroua who formed an association in 1993 to allow Maasai landowners to earn an income from tourism on their lands and Richard Bonham who established a lodge on the community-owned Mbirikani Ranch. Earlier on, in Laikipia the Craig family at Lewa Downs and the Dyers at Borana also pioneered the development of wildlife conservancies on what had previously been cattle ranches and Ian Craig has worked with pastoralist communities in the Northern rangelands of Kenya to conserve wildlife within a vast area.

Building on their example, over the last twenty years we developed a new model of leasing large tracts of land from Maasai communities of Amboseli and the Mara in the areas adjacent to the parks in order to create new wildlife conservancies. These are then paid for by using the income from tourists staying at our Porini Camps and they also create livelihoods for the families of the landowners whose plots make up the conservancy.

Starting with 14,000 acres at Selenkay Conservancy in Amboseli and 8,000 acres at Ol Kinyei in the Mara (which subseqently expanded to 18,000 acres) , our model was based on a minimum size of 8,000 acres, exclusively for wildlife and with limits on the tourism density by setting a maximum on the number of tents and vehicles allowed in the conservancy. Following this we were involved in co-operating with other tourism partners and Maasai landowners to set up Olare Orok, Motorogi and Naibosho Conservancies based on our models. This has created a new conservancy movement that has led to more wildlife conservancies being established on similar lines, such as Mara North and Olderkesi.

Visitors who stay in the small camps within the conservancies have a very special safari experience as they can see all the wildlife in pristine wilderness but without masses of other tourists present. We have established a formula of no more than one tent per 700 acres and no more than twelve guest tents per camp in the conservancies which we have been involved in establishing: Selenkay Conservancy in the Amboseli eco-system and Ol Kinyei, Olare Motorogi and Naboisho conservancies in the Mara. This ensures a low-density form of tourism which has less impact on the environment and which provides a more intimate and rewarding experience for the visitor.

As the land is leased on a per acre basis from the individual owners whose plots have been put together to form the conservancy and with an annual increase in the rent, the landowners income is guaranteed, regardless of whether the actual tourist numbers fluctuate, so they are not dependent on having more tourists in the conservancy in order to have a growing income. That removes the pressure to over-develop tourist facilities and makes it possible to keep to the maximum of 1 tourist tent per 700 acres and 1 vehicle per 1400 acres.

For more information on the Conservancies in the Mara and where to stay choose a camp in one of the conservancies where tourism income goes towards the costs of leasing the land as protected wildlife habitat and help to make a difference.’

Deservedly Jake Grieves-Cook is one of the 2016 Safari Awards Best Contribution to Tourism nominees.

Vanishing Kings: Namibia’s Desert Lions

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Namibia Desert Lions

With exceptional surviving skills lions roam the Namib Desert! On the brink of extinction, their future is at risk, and now a brotherhood of five young lions holds the key to the future of their kind. Two years ago an old queen and her two daughters gave birth to a total of five male cubs and despite the hardships of the desert they have managed to raise them successfully. But soon the time will come for the ‘Five Musketeers’ to continue life on their own, when their mothers begin their search for one of the last remaining adult male lions. Faced with many unforeseen challenges the five young males need to conquer the oldest desert on earth on their epic journey to adulthood.

In this 1-hour HD special we discover an extraordinary predator in one of the most remote wilderness areas in the world. Now for the first time ever in this extreme and epic landscape, we can observe, over an extended period, the secret lives of true desert lions. They roam the rugged mountains, the majestic sand dunes, the endless gravel plains and legend has it they prowl the beaches of the Skeleton Coast. With the help of lion researcher Dr. Philip Stander and sophisticated satellite tracking technology we will get the unique opportunity to witness the natural behaviour of one of the rarest kinds of lion. His lifelong devotion reveals an epic journey of hardship and triumph.

The blue chip style of the film will not be affected by the few and short appearances of the scientist who has collared all the lions for their own sake. He is aware that faced with the already ruthless elements of the desert there are even more dangers on the horizon: local villagers, poachers and hunters pose a threat to the survival of the population. And once the lions attack cattle the herders will unhesitatingly kill them. Philip Stander’s research over the past 17 years indicates that now more than ever our Five Musketeers’ survival is crucial. Without adult male lions, prides will fall apart and desert lions will vanish before our very eyes…

Go on safari in Namibia to witness first hand the phenomenal adaptations of its fauna & flora with a leading eco lodge & runner up in the 2015 Safari Awards Best Ecologically Responsible category.  Wolwedans Dunes Lodge ensures a very light environmental footprint on Namibia’s pristine desert ecology.  For the most incredible desert safari experiences on offer, be sure to also check out the best camps & lodges Namibia has to offer as reviewed by the most knowledgeable & highly respected Safari Awards Judges.

Rhino Conservation Botswana: First Black Rhino Born

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Young Black Rhino

Rhino Conservation Botswana are over the moon to announce the recently relocated black rhino population’s first birth in the Moremi Game Reserve, Botswana.  Since the start of its Botswana Wild Rhino Project in 2001, there has been a small but extremely dedicated group of people involved in monitoring the rhino populations of northern Botswana.

Wilderness Safaris, in partnership with the Botswana Department of Wildlife and National Parks and major security assistance from the Botswana Defence Force, continue to make strides in stepping up their efforts to secure the survival of the rhino. As we shared this past summer, the company was delighted to announce the successful capture of a small founder population of critically endangered black rhino.

Monitoring black rhinos is not a job for the faint of heart. These magnificent animals are browsers by nature and are particularly fond of hanging out in thick bush that sometimes appear impenetrable, and are certainly not a very natural habitat for humans on foot. It was in one of these thickets that one dedicated rhino monitoring officer and his three Botswana Defense Force companions ventured into in search of a large female black rhino who was known to have a liking for the leaves of the guarri bushes which grew in dense clusters in that area.

Normally, they would have left her alone to get on with her life except for the fact that they knew she was heavily pregnant. With great tracking skills, they managed to locate her right in the very heart of this difficult bush, and to their great joy and excitement, saw that she indeed had a very small calf with her, which they estimated to be no more than a few days old!  We look forward to learning more about this baby calf in the months to come.

Background

The re-introduction of a small population of white rhino as well as four black rhino to the Moremi Game Reserve over the last thirteen years has proven to be a considerable success with the white rhinos having increased from twenty seven individuals to over sixty through successful breeding, whilst the black rhinos, with the birth of the calf,  now number five animals.  Rhino Conservation Botswana was formed with a very clear mandate in mind. To train and properly equip up to five new rhino monitoring teams and to outfit a centralized management and data co-ordination centre to ensure all wild rhinos are regularly sighted and identified and biological data is properly collected, collated, disseminated and stored.

Angama Safari Lodge: Where You Ought To Be in June 2015

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Angama Safari Lodge

Opening 1 June 2015. Angama, named after the Swahili word ‘to be suspended mid-air’, is literally perched on the edge of the Rift Valley escarpment and sees each tented suite and guest area seemingly hanging on the edge with views that quite simply take your breath away. End-to-end glass fronts, sweeping canvas, polished parquet floors, just the right amount of furniture and decks overhang the Masaai Mara below. Guests wake up to hot-air balloons sailing past the 10m wide floor-to-ceiling glass fronts of their tented suites. Situated on two of three kopjes, the third was featured in the film Out of Africa, remains untouched and will be Angama Mara’s picnic spot.

What defines Angama Mara from other safari lodges is its location on a site almost without equal. Every tented suite shares a 180° view of the Mara below, possibly the best-known game reserve in the world, and one which consistently delivers extraordinary viewing of all Africa’s great mammals, and The Great Migration from July to October each year. Angama Mara guests descend a private track directly from the lodge to the most beautiful, least visited and best-managed part of the reserve – The Mara Triangle.

The Out of Africa back-story adds romance and nostalgia to the guest experience – when they arrive at the lodge guests will feel as if they have been there before. And where else in Africa can you wake up to the sight of balloons floating gently by at the foot of your bed in the very heart of Maasailand?

Click on the video to fly above, beyond and around Angama Mara. Witness the untouched beauty of their site before building commenced, and experience how the light and clouds never sit still on the vast grasslands of the Mara below…

Mango African Safaris to Offer Discounted Honeymoon Safaris

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Mango African Safaris

The #1 honeymoon registry will now include African Safari packages though Mango Safaris, a boutique tour company leading wildlife safaris and photo workshops in Africa. Operated by Casey Gamba and Teresa Isabelle, Mango’s safaris are spirited adventures that expose travelers to the many intangible components that make Africa magical: close encounters with wildlife, top guides, exclusive properties, and African culture.

Since The Big Day’s Web rollout in October 2001, the honeymoon registry concept has become quite popular, and shows no signs of slowing down. Company president, Michael R. Cottam, says, “roughly 75% of all couples who sign up for a honeymoon registry choose TheBigDay,” so the company’s buying volume alone nets them some of the best travel prices available. Because of their extensive experience in the honeymoon business, TheBigDay already recognizes what makes for a good honeymoon.

The arrangement with Mango Safaris complements other TheBigDay.com adventure honeymoon packages, such as hot-air ballooning, extended scuba trips, cycling tours, and weddings ceremonies performed in the Grand Canyon.

TheBigDay.com carries the BBBOnLine Reliability Seal, plus numerous endorsements of industry standards, and by TRSTe Privacy Program.