FacebookTwitterLinkedInInstagramVimeo
Big Life Foundation

DONATE

DONATE
Big Life Foundation
Big Life Foundation
DONATE
  • WHAT WE DO
      • Back
      • PROGRAMS
      • rangers
        WILDLIFE
          PROTECTION
      • PROGRAMS
      • WILDLIFE PROTECTION
      • ANTI-POACHING
      • WILDLIFE CRIME /
            ANTI-TRAFFICKING
      • RHINO PROTECTION
      • TRACKER DOG UNIT
      • Back
      • Lions
        HUMAN-WILDLIFE
          CONFLICT
      • HUMAN-WILDLIFE CONFLICT
      • PREDATOR COMPENSATION
      • MAASAI OLYMPICS
      • HUMAN-ELEPHANT
            CONFLICT MITIGATION
      • Back
      • habitat
        HABITAT
          PROTECTION
      • HABITAT PROTECTION
      • Securing Wildlife Habitat
      • Rangelands Management
      • REDD+ Carbon Project
      • Back
      • Student
        COMMUNITY
         
      • COMMUNITY
      • Education
      • Healthcare
  • HOW WE DO IT
      • Back
      • THE RANGERS
        rangers
      • The Rangers
      • Back
      • PARTNERS
        elephants
        FINANCIALS
        zebras herders
      • Partners
      • Financials
  • WHERE WE WORK
      • Back
      • INTERACTIVE MAP
      • INTERACTIVE MAP
        Area of Operation
  • WHO WE ARE
      • Back
      • Big Life Kenya Big Life Kenya
      • Big Life USA Big Life USA
      • Big Life Canada Big Life Canada
      • Big Life UK Big Life UK
      • Back
      • About Big Life
      • Mission & Vision
      • History
      • Awards & Recognition
      • Back
      • Co-Founders
      • Board of Advisors
      • Contact Us
  • PROGRAM UPDATES
      • Back
      • BIG LIFE NEWS
        rangers elephants
      • Big Life News
      • Photos From The Field
      • Short Films Gallery
      • In the Media
      • Operational Reports
      • 2023 Impact Report
      • Back
      • 2024 IMPACT REPORT
        Operational Reports
      • Back
      •  PHOTOS FROM THE FIELD
         SHORT FILMS GALLERY
        IN THE MEDIA
        OPERATIONAL REPORTS
  • SHOP
      • Back
      • BLF Shop
        BIG LIFE
        MERCHANDISE
      • Big Life Merchandise
  • GIVING
      • Back
      • Giving Essentials
        Manage Your Monthly Gift
        Give Monthly
        Start a Fundraiser
      • Giving Essentials
      • Manage Your Monthly Gift
      • Give Monthly
      • Start a Fundraiser
      • IRA Charitable Rollover
      • Stock Gifts
      • Leave a Gift In Your Will
      • Other Ways to Give
      • Back
      • IRA Charitable Rollover
        Stock Gifts
        Leave a Gift in Your Will
        OTHER WAYS TO GIVE
  • BIG LIFE MERCHANDISE
 
 

THIS IS CRAIG

211227 craig the tusker and motorbikes

You may be familiar with this magnificent tusker. He is one of the most famous and most photographed elephants that Big Life protects. Most photographs depict him majestically in landscapes devoid of humans, with Kilimanjaro beyond and the dusty earth of Amboseli at his feet. Although beautiful and inspiring, they only tell half the story.

The reality is that Craig and other elephants must frequently navigate landscapes containing people. Whether they’re crossing busy roads, passing through community lands, or occasionally raiding crops, elephants spend a lot of their time outside of protected areas like national parks and amid human development.

Most of their human interactions are harmless. The riders of these motorbikes simply slowed to have a better look before moving on. But some can turn ugly. In areas not protected by Big Life’s crop-protection fence, crop raiding is an ongoing issue. When livelihoods are lost, tempers flare with potentially fatal consequences for both sides.

So far in 2021, Big Life has been alerted to 249 incidents of threats to or active raids on crops. Big Life rangers were able to prevent elephants from entering farms on 113 of these occasions, chasing elephants from fields a further 85 times (limiting the damage caused) and verifying the damage after it was done on the remaining 51.

Because of the constant monitoring by Big Life’s rangers, and their close relationships with each community, Big Life has been able to prevent many of the angry reactions to crop raiding that have been seen in previous years. And as a result, Craig and the other elephants of Amboseli can continue to roam freely.

Thanks to your support, we will continue to keep magnificent elephants like Craig safe. If you haven’t already, please consider making a year-end donation to Big Life. All December donations are being MATCHED up to $250,000. 

STOP THE TAXI!

211216 giraffes running in the wild

The minibus was traveling through the middle of nowhere, the surrounding wilderness just visible in the predawn light, when someone shouted for an unscheduled stop.  The other passengers turned to stare. The man appeared regular enough, just another traveler on his way to a nearby town. But this was no ordinary man: this was a Big Life ranger.

While making a personal trip during his time on leave, he saw something from the minibus that gave him cause for alarm. A giraffe sprinting through the bush near the road, with four men close on its heels.

The driver agreed to stop in return for an extra payment, and the ranger jumped out, calling the Big Life operations room as he went. Our radio operators quickly identified the closest vehicle unit, which happened to be Big Life’s USAID-funded mobile unit on Eselengei.

The ranger waited for the backup unit to arrive, and then they all moved quickly into the bush and onto the giraffe’s tracks. The rangers followed quickly but quietly, eventually stumbling onto a grisly scene. The poachers had chased the giraffe straight into a fence in order to trip it so that they could kill it more easily.

While it was too late to save the giraffe, it wasn’t too late to catch the poacher. The poacher still on scene attempted to run, but he was quickly caught. Rangers got the names of three accomplices who had already bolted, but without hard evidence of their involvement, they will be hard to prosecute. 

The one arrested poacher is now in jail and awaiting trial. But more importantly it’s another lesson to would-be poachers out there: Big Life has eyes and ears everywhere and our rangers are never fully off duty.  Poaching is still a very risky business.

If you haven’t yet, please support our work so our rangers can continue to catch poachers and keep wildlife safe. All donations made in December will be matched up to $250,000, doubling your impact.

 Photo: Jeremy Goss 

A WORLD WITHOUT BIG LIFE

211201 african lion family on camera trapIn the grass, the tawny bodies are motionless, as if there is no sign of life.

But the herder knows better. Keeping his livestock at a safe distance, he watches, and eventually there is the swish of a black-tipped tail. The seven lions are lying in the shade, calm and at ease. It’s a pride of two adults, four juveniles and a cub. A growing family. 

The following morning, the herder returns to the same area. This time he can smell carrion; the lions must have fed overnight. He eventually spots them, again lying motionless in the shade. 

Curious to see what they have fed on, he approaches closer, and closer still. The lions don’t move. Something is wrong. 

All seven are dead.

They have fed on a goat carcass laced with poison, assumedly in retaliation for killing livestock. It’s a huge loss to a vulnerable population of lions.

On a different day and in a different place, an elephant is found dead with a spear wound in his back. His tusks are gone; he’s been poached. In this case, the poachers get away, and the ivory is not recovered.

In yet another corner of the ecosystem, a land buyer from ‘out of town’ has bought a 40-acre piece of wilderness. He builds a fence to keep out the Maasai and their livestock, but no-one checks if any animals are trapped inside before it is completed. Or worse, no-one cares. The fence builders drive off, and a family of nine giraffes is trapped inside the fence, with no source of water. By the time rangers are notified, seven have died of dehydration, and two can barely stand. 

Aside from all being horrendous incidents that took place in the Greater Amboseli Ecosystem in the last year, these events have one thing in common: 

They happened in places outside Big Life’s core area of operation. 

We wish we could expand our circle of protection, and in an ideal world of limitless resources, we would. But we believe it is better to do the job well within our core 1.6 million acres than to be stretched too thin. 

This is not to say that bad things don’t happen where we work, but because of our presence (and the support of partners), these incidents are very rare in our area of operation. For example: 

In the last 4 years, no lions have died from poisoning in areas covered by our Predator Compensation Fund, while 21 lions have been poisoned in neighboring areas with no compensation. 

The last time an elephant was poached in Big Life’s area of operation was March 2018, also killed by a spear. But we arrested the poachers two days later and recovered the ivory. 

We have land lease agreements with hundreds of landowners, currently keeping 26,000 acres of wild land free from fencing, and thereby keeping important wildlife corridors open and grazing lands intact. 

In the Amboseli ecosystem, because of Big Life, animals are protected. The biggest danger they face now is to their home.  

211201 giraffe in the wild in east africa

Land subdivision is breaking large community-owned lands into thousands of privately-owned parcels. This shattering of the ecosystem is the greatest long-term threat to this incredible place. 

We already have the solution – conservation land leases to protect the most important wildlife corridors and grazing areas. Communities are eager to participate, and we’re very relieved that in the near-term, people realize the importance of funding leases. 

If we can get ongoing funding to lease the most important areas, then we are well on our way—for now—to keeping this ecosystem alive. 

But ironically, at a time when there is much to celebrate, we are facing an equally serious problem: funding for all of our other critical programs. 

The programs that prevent lion prides from being poisoned, elephants from being poached, and fences from choking the landscape. The programs that put children through school, provide healthcare in remote areas, and keep the peace between farmers and elephants. 

For 10 consecutive years our programs and impact have grown, and with them, our budgets. In synchronicity, amazingly, so has all of your support. Each year for the last ten years, more funds were raised than the last. 

But we’re now in a position that we’ve never been in before: fundraising is down so far this year that for the first time, we are in severe danger of being stretched too thin in our core area. 

With just six weeks to go in the year, donations are down by more than 45%. 

This reality is heartbreaking, as our budget is not just a number. It is not just a goal to achieve. 

Our budget represents each of our rangers and the salaries that keep them in the field stopping poachers and wildlife traffickers. It represents the fuel for the vehicles and planes that are critical to patrolling thousands of miles across vast terrain. It represents the legal costs of fighting to ensure wild land doesn’t disappear forever. It represents scholarships for a child who lost a family member to human-wildlife conflict. 

Our budget represents the price we need to pay to ensure the Greater Amboseli Ecosystem survives now and far into the future. 

In an extraordinary act of generosity, a long-time anonymous donor has committed to matching any donations before the end of the year up to $250,000. This means that your donation will stretch even further across the ecosystem, and have double the impact for wildlife and wild lands.

We need your help. Amboseli needs your help.

Please donate to keep Big Life doing what we do, where we do it. Because what we do keeps animals, and the ecosystem they inhabit, alive.


DOUBLE YOUR IMPACT FOR WILDLIFE
Any donation will be matched before the end of the year up to $250,000. 
This means that your donation will stretch even further across the ecosystem, and have double the impact for wildlife and wild lands. 

DONATE NOW

211201 big life rangers by Clifford Pickett

WE'RE IN NEED - GIVING TUESDAY MATCH

GIVING TUESDAY 800 x 800 px

What if wildlife and people could flourish in the same place, forever?

This is exactly what Big Life Foundation is dedicated to achieving in the Greater Amboseli ecosystem, and it’s only possible with the involvement of the local community.

The heart of our work is our community ranger program. Big Life’s 323 trained rangers work day and night to protect all wildlife including over 2,000 migrating elephants, 200+ lions, 8 critically endangered Eastern black rhinos, and the space they need to survive.

But to ensure this work has staying power for years to come, Big Life must also support local communities. So while you might be most familiar with Big Life’s rangers arresting poachers or removing snares, behind the scenes, Big Life rangers do so much more.

They are driving pregnant women to the hospital in the middle of the night. They are locating lost children gone astray in the African bush. They are utilizing the tracker dogs to solve community crimes. They are putting out forest fires. They are distributing food to communities in need.

They are more than rangers. They are ambulance drivers, search and rescue, firefighters, emergency support, crop protectors. They are fathers, sons, mothers, and daughters.   

They strengthen the community support for wildlife, because the Greater Amboseli is their home, and the local community members are their families.

Today on #GivingTuesday, to celebrate Big Life’s rangers, and all the roles they play to protect wildlife and support communities, Temple St. Clair – Big Life Advisory Board member and longtime Big Life donor – will match any new donations up to $20,000.

Fundraising is down this year for Big Life, and we are struggling to find the means to keep core ranger operations funded. We know this year has been another difficult one for all, but if you can, please consider donating to Big Life. It is a great day to donate, as your gift will have double the impact.

Thank you, as always, for your confidence in our work. 

Double Your Impact - DONATE Today

 

  • 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

Page 50 of 101

  • 45
  • 46
  • 47
  • 48
  • 49
  • 50
  • 51
  • 52
  • 53
  • 54

DONATE

Big Life Foundation USA
1715 North Heron Drive
Ridgefield, WA 98642
USA
info@biglife.org
+1 971 322 3326
Big Life Foundation Canada
17474 Humber Station Road 
Caledon Ontario L7E 0Z2
Canada
Canada@biglife.org
+1 416 624 6568
Big Life UK
c/o Chapel & York Ltd 
Unit 12 Ladycross Business Park 
Hollow Lane 
Dormansland 
Surrey RH7 6PB
United Kingdom
UK@biglife.org
e-news signup
 
FacebookTwitterLinkedInInstagramVimeo
  •  Privacy Policy  •  Cookie Policy  •  Terms of Service  •  GDPR Compliance  •  Contact
Big Life is registered in the USA as a 501(c)(3) charity (EIN 27-3455389). Donations are tax deductible as permitted by law. BIG LIFE FOUNDATION® is a registered U.S. trademark of Big Life Foundation USA.
Donate