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(ECO)SYSTEM RESTORE

Amboseli’s rangelands are hurting. High numbers of livestock, and the breakdown of traditional rotational grazing practices, have resulted in unsustainable pressure on savannah grasses. Without a protective covering, soils are eroding, and gullies scar the landscape. This degradation has become more severe in the face of a changing climate and extreme droughts like we saw this past year. When the rains do fall, all of that life-giving goodness runs straight off the hard surfaces as there is no vegetation to slow it down. Enter the humble bund: a half-moon shaped trench which catches water, allowing it to seep into the ground slowly, recharging the groundwater and increasing the ability of vegetation to regrow.

Thanks to critical support from Apple Inc. and Conservational International, Big Life embarked on an ambitious project in 2021 to restore land that had become practically desert-ified. Two pilot sites of around 10,000 acres were chosen by the community, and a small army of Maasai women and men were employed to dig thousands of bunds – 77,898 bunds and counting - to be precise. 193 jobs were created at a time when the drought left many without an income, and 52 ‘restoration scholarships’ have been awarded primarily to kids from around the sites. Each bund was reseeded with palatable grass species and crucially, the community agreed to restrict livestock grazing to allow the sites to recover. It hasn’t been easy and the drought definitely impacted recovery, but we have been encouraged by the results. Our partners at Justdiggit and MWCT are doing similar pilots in neighboring areas, and collaborative and ambitious initiatives like these are crucial to large-scale recovery of rangelands.

All life in Amboseli - both wild and human – depends on healthy rangelands, and we hope to expand this work significantly in the years to come.

BLAZING A TRAIL

230623 World Female Ranger Week Susan LemomoThis week Big Life is joining fellow conservation organizations in celebrating the brilliant work done by female rangers - past, present, and future - who have been proving to the world that conservation is everyone’s business. In Maasai culture, like so many things, conservation and anti-poaching work has been dominated by men, while women are raised to become dutiful wives and caring mothers. And while many of Big Life’s 12 female rangers are wonderful wives and mothers, they are also bucking the trend. With their determination and fearlessness, these women are not only becoming part of the solution to protect Amboseli’s wildlife, but they are also blazing a trail for future female leaders. One such trailblazer is Constable Susan Lemomo, who was honored as a Disney Conservation Hero last November – an award provided by the Disney Conservation Fund that recognizes the heroic efforts and dedication of people around the world working to conserve wildlife and protect wild places.  In addition to her work as a ranger, she is one of the core instructors at Big Life’s Amboseli Ranger Training Academy and has helped to train more than 100 rangers. When Susan started, there were hardly any female rangers, let alone female ranger instructors, and she was one of the first Big Life instructors to train other female ranger recruits - something she is rightly very proud of. She adds, “In my recent position as a ranger instructor, I am seeing more and more women learn how to become rangers which is exciting for me. From my community, not many women receive a salary like I do, and I am happy to be an example to other women and girls to prove that we can support our families just as well as men can. I use my salary to support my three children and my mother.”

Well done, Susan - and the rest of our female rangers! You are an inspiration to us all. Photo: Josh Clay

OF POISON AND ARROWS

Of Poison and Arrows

The vet kept digging. He knew there was something in there. With all the dead tissue, there had to be. The elephant known as Pembe (meaning ‘ivory’ or ‘tusk’ in Swahili) snored gently as the probing continued in his back leg, asleep under the effect of the anesthetic drugs.

Only hours earlier, Pembe had been upright, walking on a swollen and clearly painful leg. Luckily, a guide from Ol Donyo Lodge spotted him on a morning game drive and placed the call to Big Life.

Our partners at the Sheldrick Wildlife Trust were airborne almost immediately, carrying a Kenya Wildlife Service vet in their Sky Vet helicopter. The darting was a textbook operation, and so it was that Pembe found himself unconscious and at the center of attention.

We’ve known Pembe a long time, but he’s always been a bit of an enigma. He comes and goes from Big Life’s core operating area, and we were never sure where he went to. It turns out the Sheldrick Wildlife Trust have seen him in areas on the far side of the Chyulu Hills.

Those areas are dangerous: where crafting poisons from local plants and hunting with a bow and arrow are common. And it is a poisoned arrow that the vet eventually pulled out, almost certainly from a failed poaching attempt. Thankfully, the poison did not make it beyond the leg or Pembe would be dead already.

Seeing him up close confirms something else, which is that in the decades since he was first seen at the Ol Donyo Lodge waterhole, Pembe has grown to be one of a few rare and special elephants: a ‘tusker’ who carries tusks that weigh more than 100 pounds each.  His impressive tusks make him a prize target for ivory poachers.

Another injection later to reverse the anesthetic, and Pembe is up and off back into the bush. We hope he won’t wander so far next time, but Big Life rangers will walk with him as far as they can.

Of Poison and Arrows - Pembe

Of Poison and Arrows

COMMUNITY STATEMENT ON LION DEATHS

230515 lionFollowing the traumatic incident this last weekend, in which six lions were speared on Mbirikani, we want to thank all of our supporters for the overwhelmingly positive words of encouragement. It means a huge amount during what has been a very difficult time for us.

We also appreciate the strong statements condemning the act that have been made by representatives from our local community and government. The message posted below is from the leader of the Mbirikani community, on whose land the incident happened.

The Governor of Kajiado County, the highest elected official of the 5.4-million-acre government administrative region within which Big Life operates, said the following:

“I would like to condemn this as a serious tragedy to us people who are pro-conservation, and as a community that has started to enjoy the benefits that go with conservation and wildlife. We are yet to fully establish what went wrong, but it is important for us to say that as a government, we support conservation and we condemn the act. I am sure that as a resilient community, a resilient people, we will overcome this.”

For Big Life, this incident has only highlighted the need for the conservation work that we do, and the importance of the achievements that we share with our partner communities who have made commitments to conservation on their land.

Click here to enlarge the statement below.

230515 MGR Statement letter

  • STATEMENT - MAY 13, 2023
  • MEMO PARIS X BIG LIFE
  • BOOM AND BUST
  • EARTH DAY 2023: WHAT YOU CAN DO
  • MAJOR IMPACT FROM PART TIME RANGERS
  • IVORY INTEL
  • DRINKING FROM THE SKIES
  • SPARED AN UNCERTAIN FATE
  • A GAME OF CAT AND VERY LARGE MOUSE
  • TO BEE OR NOT TO BEE
  • Maji ni Maisha
  • BIG LIFE’S ELEVEN
  • FROM THE FIELD - Q4 2022
  • ABANDONED ELEPHANT CALF RESCUED
  • ANOTHER DAY, ANOTHER ELEPHANT TREATED
  • A CELEBRATION OF MAASAI EDUCATION
  • SEND A VALENTINE
  • TWO FOR TWO
  • Mazarin Paris x Big Life
  • WATCH A WATERHOLE
  • WHAT’S BAD FOR THE COW IS BAD FOR THE ELEPHANT
  • EXTRAORDINARY CARGO
  • COMMUTE CUT SHORT
  • NEW YEAR, SAME DROUGHT
  • THE 2022 MAASAI OLYMPICS
  • STATEMENT - DECEMBER 10, 2022
  • FIRE SEASON IN THE CHYULU HILLS
  • GOOD NEWS, BUT NOT ENOUGH OF IT
  • INTO THE FINAL STRAIGHT
  • THE SILENT PROBLEM
  • LUCKY AND LANKY
  • THE AMBOSELI YOU DON’T OFTEN SEE
  • HOLIDAY GIFTS THAT PROTECT WILDLIFE
  • FROM THE FIELD - Q3 2022
  • RAZOR SHARP RANGER SKILLS
  • INTERVIEW WITH A BOREHOLE ATTENDANT
  • THE MAASAI OLYMPICS - BACK ON TRACK
  • THE KEYS ARE SAFE (FOR THE NEXT 50 YEARS)
  • ELEPHANT ORPHANS RESCUED
  • RHINOS DOING IT FOR RHINOS
  • A HAND FOR ANIMALS THAT DON’T HAVE ANY
  • THE WATER WATCHMEN
  • Big Life x Mazarin
  • THE PARADOX OF AMBOSELI
  • LIFTING THE WEAK
  • FROM SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENT TO EMPLOYEE
  • THE ELEPHANT CALF WITH NINE LIVES
  • AN EXTRA BOOST FOR THE BEES
  • PUTTING FOOD ON THE TABLE
  • World Lion Day
  • THREE MILLION MEALS
  • FROM THE FIELD - Q2 2022
  • MID-YEAR UPDATE: January - June
  • An Anti-Poacher’s Best Friend
  • RESCUED BABY ELEPHANT TRACKS DOWN FAMILY
  • TIME FOR TALK, THEN ACTION
  • BIG LIFE RANGER WINS INTERNATIONAL AWARD
  • THIRD TIME’S A CHARM
  • SPOTLIGHT ON: SERGEANT SINKOI KANCHORI
  • SPOTLIGHT ON: Constable Susan Manyanga Lemomo
  • Ranger Rations
  • New Girls’ Dormitory at Inkoisuk Primary School
  • GOING THE DISTANCE
  • WILL YOU JOIN THE RANGER CLUB?
  • Who are the Rangers of Big Life?
  • A RUNAWAY TRAIN
  • The Honorary Six
  • EXTRAORDINARY WOMEN
  • WHEN THE LIGHTS GO OUT
  • A PROMISING START
  • A YEAR OF WILD CARDS
  • LET THE GAMES RESUME
  • AN ANTIDOTE FOR ANGER
  • THE SADDEST DAY
  • Mother's Day Tribute Donations
  • DEATH OF A TUSKER
  • Vaccines in the Bush
  • GIRAFFES RESCUED FROM A TANGLE
  • Hidden Water of the Chyulu Hills
  • AMBOSELI’S LOST WORLD
  • TOLSTOY SPEARED AND TREATED
  • A VERY HUNGRY HONEY BADGER
  • FROM THE FIELD - Q4 2021
  • IVORY DEALERS CAUGHT ON THE RUN
  • THIS IS CRAIG
  • STOP THE TAXI!
  • A WORLD WITHOUT BIG LIFE
  • WE'RE IN NEED - GIVING TUESDAY MATCH
  • CONGRATULATIONS, MANYANI GRADUATES
  • FROM THE FIELD - Q3 2021
  • INTRODUCING BENSON LEYIAN: Big Life’s New CEO
  • A SUITCASE OF SKINS
  • JOAN AND HER MOTORBIKE
  • TIME TO CELEBRATE
  • MAASAI OLYMPICS: RESCHEDULED FOR 2022
  • A HIDDEN TREASURE: PROTECTING THE RHINOS OF THE CHYULUS
  • GOOD OUT OF A TRAGEDY
  • WHEN EVOLUTION BACKFIRES
  • LUNCH BREAK FOR NOOSIDAN PRESCHOOL
  • From the Field - Q2 2021
  • World Ranger Day - 2021
  • Defining Dedication: Senior Sergeant Ole Mpumpu
  • MEET CRAIG MILLAR, CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER
  • 2020 Impact Report: Special Anniversary Edition
  • A Head Above the Rest
  • WE ARE BIG LIFE
  • 2020 Disney Conservation Hero: C.O. Francis Legei
  • SAVING SANDALWOOD
  • 3RD CONSECUTIVE 4-STAR CHARITY NAVIGATOR RATING
  • FATHER'S DAY TRIBUTE DONATION
  • DIRECTOR'S NOTE - Q1 2021
  • REST IN PEACE, ANN
  • IVORY INTEL
  • AVOCADO FARM, DISMISSED!
  • Mother's Day Tribute Donation
  • Earth Day
  • ANOTHER PANGOLIN SAVED
  • STOP-WORK ORDER ON KILIAVO
  • ONE TON OF RELIEF
  • AFRICAN ELEPHANTS NOW LISTED AS ENDANGERED
  • SAVING TREES, IMPROVING LIVES
  • Meet Constable Susan Manyanga Lemomo
  • DIALOGUE DAYS
  • COMMUNITY HEALTH HEROS
  • SCALY SURVIVORS
  • A MESSAGE FROM THE ELEPHANTS
  • A SWEET ANNOUNCEMENT
  • SANCTUARY SUPERGROUP
  • WHY DID THE ELEPHANT CROSS THE ROAD?
  • DIRECTOR'S NOTE - Q4 2020
  • DEAD LIONS CROSSING THE BORDER
  • GIRAFFE RESCUED FROM A STICKY MESS
  • SPECIAL DELIVERY
  • WATCH OUT FOR THE WOMEN OF BIG LIFE
  • CONSERVATION EDUCATION
  • FAN FAVORITE
  • ARRESTED FOR “BYCATCH”
  • 2020 HOLIDAY GIFTS THAT HELP SAVE WILDLIFE
  • DIRECTOR'S NOTE - Q3 2020
  • Temple St. Clair X Big Life Foundation 2020 Partnership
  • CATCHING THE (REALLY) BAD GUYS
  • BACK TO SCHOOL
  • THE PROBLEM WITH PANGOLINS
  • TREATING AN ELEPHANT MOM
  • AVOCADOS VS ELEPHANTS
  • 4+ YEARS OF SUCCESS FOR RHINO
  • STAYING AHEAD OF THE HANGMAN
  • DIRECTOR’S NOTE – 2019 Annual Report
  • CUTTING TO THE BONE
  • MAASAI OLYMPICS 2020: POSTPONED
  • Fighting an Invisible Enemy
  • The Front Lines Are Still Open
  • THE WILD ORIGINS OF A HUMAN CRISIS
  • BIG LIFE EARNS 4-STAR CHARITY NAVIGATOR RATING
  • SETTING A FAIRYTALE STRAIGHT
  • BIG LIFE WINS PARADISE AFRICAN RANGER AWARD
  • A SAD GOODBYE TO AN UNLIKELY HERO
  • Trapping the Ivory Traders
  • Big Life's 2018 Annual Report
  • Maasai Olympics Winners Claim Glory (And Prize Bull)
  • Unearthing Tim: The Battle to Rescue an Amboseli Icon
  • SPACE (To Call Their Own)
  • New! Big Life Branded Merchandise
  • A Celebration of Culture and Sport
  • Yet Another Ivory Bust: What is CITES Thinking?
  • Surveillance Pays Off
  • When Giants Clash
  • Handover of Conservation Initiatives to OOGR
  • When 'In Vogue' Means 'In Trouble'
  • MONTHLY GIVING GIVES BACK – ENTER TO WIN
  • THE YEAR A MAN FIRST STEPPED ON THE MOON
  • ONE TON OF WORK: Big Life's 2017 Annual Report
  • BIG LIFE LAUNCHES AMBOSELI CONSERVATION ACADEMY
  • BIG LIFE PROTECTS WILD RHINOS: A MODERN DAY UNICORN
  • UK SETS BOLD NEW STANDARD IN IVORY TRADE BAN
  • ULYSSES FALLS AGAIN
  • ONE STEP FORWARD, TWO STEPS BACK
  • IN FOND MEMORY OF KIOR, UNSUNG CONSERVATION HERO
  • BIG NEWS: HONG KONG BANS IVORY IN LANDSLIDE VOTE
  • OUR NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTION: BIG LIFE TO PROTECT KIMANA SANCTUARY
  • A TALE OF TWO COUNTRIES
  • LOST AND FOUND: ONE BABY ELEPHANT
  • The Rains Return
  • LIVE ELEPHANTS TRUMP TROPHIES
  • A Healthy Future
  • THE (DEADLY) WANTED LIST
  • WE DIDN’T START THE FIRE
  • Class is Dismissed
  • THE MOMENT THE IVORY TRADE HAS BEEN WAITING FOR
  • A WANDERIN’ MAN
  • LOCAL UPDATE ON THE FIGHT AGAINST COVID-19
  • DIRECTOR’S NOTE – Q2 2020
  • MEET POPOTE: BIG LIFE OPERATIONAL COMMANDER
  • MEET TARAYIA: BIG LIFE SERGEANT
  • MEET JOHNSON: BIG LIFE CONSTABLE
  • MEET VERONICA: BIG LIFE CONSTABLE
  • MEET EZEKIEL: BIG LIFE DRIVER
  • MEET AMOS: CONSTABLE, MONITORING AND EVALUATION RANGER
  • BUCKING THE TREND
  • RANGERS SAVE A TINY LIFE
  • GIRAFFE POACHERS STRIKE AGAIN – AND SO DOES BIG LIFE
  • THE SNARE THAT (NEARLY) BROKE THE CAMEL’S BACK
  • A BIG BABY WITH A BIG PROBLEM
  • Director's Note - Q1 2020
  • THE IVORY SCAVENGER
  • WHEN LION MET OWL
  • THE POACHERS WHO SHOULD HAVE STAYED AT HOME
  • FROM KILI TO THE HIMALAYAS
  • TOMORROW’S CONSERVATION GAMECHANGERS
  • ONE BABY ELEPHANT LOST AND FOUND
  • OF HANDBAGS AND HOPE FOR THE FUTURE
  • SMALL BUT MIGHTY
  • THE SHUKA STANDS OUT
  • 8 LUCKY RHINOS
  • Saved By The Books
  • THE PATH FORWARD
  • PART TIME RANGERS X BIG LIFE FOUNDATION PARTNERSHIP
  • LION PRIDE IN HONG KONG
  • A LION IS DEAD, NOW WHAT?
  • REJECTED!
  • WITH GREAT POWER COMES GREAT RESPONSIBILITY
  • Big Life x Popsocket Collaboration
  • THREE TINY, HUGE REASONS TO CELEBRATE ON WORLD LION DAY
  • HOW TO FILL A CHURCH ON A WEDNESDAY
  • Be a Wildlife Warrior for World Elephant Day
  • A GIRAFFE IS NOT A GIRAFFE
  • A MOTHER’S WORST NIGHTMARE
  • Director's Note - Q2 2019
  • THE (PREVIOUSLY SHORT) LIFE OF AN AMBOSELI LION
  • SURROUNDED BY SPEARS
  • CONSERVATION’S NEW BATTLEGROUND
  • GIRAFFE ON A MOTORBIKE
  • BORN TO BE BIG
  • A STORY FROM A HAPPIER WORLD
  • LUCKY LIONESS SURVIVES CLOSE SHAVE
  • A BANDIT’S HAVEN NO LONGER
  • Hope in Spite of Bad News
  • A Long-Awaited Journey
  • Director's Note - 2018 Annual Report
  • Poachers Caught Off-Guard in Northern Tanzania
  • Director's Note - Q1 2019
  • ELEPHANTS HAVE FACES
  • BACK TO BOOT CAMP
  • BABY ELEPHANT RESCUED FROM STICKY PREDICAMENT
  • THREADING ELEPHANTS THROUGH THE EYE OF A NEEDLE
  • DIRECTOR'S NOTE - Q4 2018
  • A TALE WITH A LIFESAVING TWIST
  • THE SIGNIFICANCE OF ONE YOUNG WOMAN’S 7 KM WALK
  • QUAGGA GREEN LABEL x BIG LIFE FOUNDATION 2019 PARTNERSHIP
  • A BIG MILESTONE FOR A BIG ELEPHANT - HAPPY BIRTHDAY TIM
  • 4th Maasai Olympics Highly Successful
  • Tough Love Tracker Dogs
  • The Equation That Doesn't Sleep
  • Working with Nature - One Heart Farm
  • Director's Note - Q3 2018
  • The Gold Rush
  • Mobile Care, Lasting Impact
  • One Step Closer to the Finish Line
  • Caught on Camera
  • A Herculean Effort
  • The Real Deal
  • WORLD LION DAY
  • DIRECTOR'S NOTE - Q2 2018
  • AT THE STARTING LINE TO SUPPORT THE FRONT LINE
  • TODAY, WE STAND WITH RANGERS
  • THE VOICE ON THE LIFELINE
  • NDERU – A TRUE ORIGINAL
  • Let the Games Begin!
  • BIG LIFE’S CANINE RANGERS
  • WHO IS THIS MAN?
  • TAKING THE PULSE OF AMBOSELI
  • THE TALLEST LAND ANIMALS
  • COMMITTED TO COMMUNITIES
  • DIRECTOR’S NOTE – Q1 2018
  • BABY STEPS TOWARD RHINO RECOVERY
  • DIRECTOR’S NOTE - 2017 Year in Review
  • HOW TO GROW A LION CUB
  • HONORING THE WOMEN OF BIG LIFE
  • THE LION SLEEPS TONIGHT
  • NEW FILM ON THE FENCE
  • LETTER OF APPRECIATION FROM KENYA WILDLIFE SERVICE
  • AN UPDATE FROM OUR DIRECTOR (Q4 2017)
  • A Memory of Elephants
  • WILD SHIRTS FOR WILDLIFE – ONE WEEK ONLY
  • Kenyan environmental tribunal protects open rangeland
  • From Poacher to Protector: Sergeant Mutinda Ndivo
  • Big Life Wins Rhino Conservation Award
  • STORIES FROM THE FRONTLINES: CORPORAL MEJAI OLE’KUMARI
  • STORIES FROM THE FRONTLINES: CORPORAL OLCHURIE KAPASEI
  • STORIES FROM THE FRONTLINES: CONSTABLE SESEI LOORMONI
  • Elephants in the Crosshairs

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