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World Ranger Day - 2021

210731 Big Life Commanding Officer LegeiI lead more than 300 rangers for Big Life, and I know the voice of each one of those men when they call me on the phone. 
 
We are the human protectors of wildlife and have dedicated our lives to it. I’m proud that the safety of these animals is in our hands. I believe that we are doing something good. There is a benefit for us too, because without my job, my kids might not have gone to school.
 
I have seen the change, been part of the change, as Big Life has expanded to protect wildlife here.  When I started eleven years ago, there was a lot of poaching. One by one, we arrested the poachers. Today, the elephant poachers have now either been arrested or gone to find work elsewhere.
 
We know what is happening in all areas of the ecosystem, but we cannot be everywhere across the 1.6 million acres where we work. The community provides us with that information. This takes trust, which requires action. Big Life doesn’t make empty promises. If we say something, we do it. It doesn’t matter whether it's transporting a woman in labor to a hospital or moving elephants that are blocking kids from going to school, we are always there on time.
 
Our rangers are the strongest link between Big Life and the community. It is one community member talking to another, Maasai to Maasai. I always tell people, ‘I am also a Maasai like you, and I have a cow like you, and I am farming like you, I am facing the same challenges.’ And the love that rangers have for protecting wildlife out there in the field, they take that home. The life of a ranger is sometimes in danger and their morale depends on the support they receive. We need to pay salaries, provide equipment, keep training. If Big Life went away, the poachers would go back to their old ways.
 
But the other day a poacher called me. He had been in jail for two years after I had arrested him for ivory. Now out, he asked me if I wanted to buy his honey. That is the change that we have achieved.
 
Thank you to everyone for your support this World Ranger Day.
 
Francis Legei
Big Life Commanding Officer
P.S. And if you haven't yet seen our NEW 2-minute ranger video, click here to watch now. We are Big Life because of you.  

Photo: James Suter / Black Bean Productions

Defining Dedication: Senior Sergeant Ole Mpumpu

210728 Big Life Commanding Officer Mpumpu

Big Life rangers are responsible for a number of vital conservation gains for the Greater Amboseli ecosystem. But those gains are only possible because of the dedication of each individual. One such individual is Senior Sergeant Ole Mpumpu.

Born and raised in the town of Kimana, in the shadow of Kilimanjaro, Mpumpu received no formal education, but was determined to find his place in the world. Working his way from the bottom up, he now has over 27 years dedicated to his personal and professional mission of protecting wildlife and wild lands.

Mpumpu is currently in charge of four outposts in Kenya near the Tanzania border. These outposts are critically situated in zones with the highest rates of human-wildlife conflict and instances of poaching. Along with his fellow rangers, Mpumpu conducts extensive daily patrols on foot and by vehicle to gather intelligence, detect and intercept illegal activity, and monitor activity via hidden field cameras to thwart poachers and prevent habitat destruction.

Importantly, Mpumpu also coordinates and leads community rangers to help reduce human-elephant conflict. His team responds quickly to community calls for help, preventing elephants from entering farmland when possible, and pushing them out when not. On rare occasions, Mpumpu has even gone alone to take on the incredibly dangerous task of chasing elephants from farms. His dedication and courage are constantly on display, and he is an incredible role model for new recruits and his fellow rangers.

Senior Sergeant Ole Mpumpu is an exceptional person for many reasons, but his resolute life-long commitment to the flourishing of wildlife, wilds lands, and his community, despite the inherent danger and reality of working as a ranger in the East African bush, is an inspiration to us all.

We are grateful to Sergeant Mpumpu and his incredible dedication to the wildlife, wild lands, and communities of East Africa.

If you are also inspired by his dedication, you can support him and his fellow rangers with sustainable, reliable funding by joining our Ranger Club as a monthly donor. New Ranger Club members, or existing members who increase their giving amount, will be entered to win a bundle of Big Life merchandise. Sign up at biglife.org/monthly-giving.

Photo: Bruce Reynolds

MEET CRAIG MILLAR, CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER

210714 coo craig milliar biglife

As we approach World Ranger Day on July 31st, we are excited to introduce you to the man that oversees our wildlife security programs, including our ranger units: Craig Millar.

Craig is Big Life’s Chief Operating Officer (formerly Head of Security), and one of our pilots frequently spotted on aerial patrols. Helping to coordinate all 300+ community rangers, including our mobile units and tracker dogs, is no small feat. To streamline operations, Craig facilitated Big Life’s Radio Room upgrade in 2019 with state-of-the-art security technology, and has spearheaded the rhino recovery work in the Chyulu Hills, as well as developed Big Life’s intelligence network well beyond our area of operation.

A 4th generation Kenyan, Craig first became involved with Big Life while studying for his zoology degree at Newcastle University UK. He interned with Big Life in 2011, while researching ecosystem predators, focusing on data specific to Big Life’s Predator Compensation Fund.

Years later, he remains steadfastly committed to protecting the Greater Amboseli ecosystem and is an integral part of all Big Life operations across all departments.

---

In the lead up to World Ranger Day on July 31st, we’ll be highlighting Big Life’s rangers and ranger operations. Please support our rangers with sustainable, reliable funding by joining our Ranger Club as a monthly donor. New Ranger Club members, or existing members who increase their giving amount, will be entered to win a bundle of Big Life swag. Sign up at biglife.org/monthly-giving

2020 Impact Report: Special Anniversary Edition

210625 AR Cover

His name was Igor.

For 49 years, he wandered the plains and woodlands of the Amboseli ecosystem, so relaxed that in 2007, he allowed me to come within a few meters of him to take his portrait.

Two years later, in October 2009, he was killed by poachers for his ivory. 

At that time, on an almost weekly basis, many of Igor’s brethren were being killed in the same way. The Amboseli ecosystem, with one of the most important populations of elephants left in East Africa, was suffering badly due to insufficient funding of both government and the very few nonprofit organizations in the area.

Action had to be taken, and urgently, to fill the gaping hole. I had a series of plans, among which were:

  • A local leader on the ground to direct and coordinate operations firsthand, to have an open door and an open ear to the local community. If you don't have the local community on your side, you're screwed. For exchange of information, the bush network beats the social network any day.
  • Teams of rangers that were locally hired and fully mobile, with vehicles, radios, and tracker dogs on stand-by. All obvious stuff.
  • Cross-border anti-poaching patrols. Most of the poachers were coming over the border from Tanzania, making their kills, and then escaping back with no-one to arrest them on the other side. Teams of rangers on both sides of the borders were needed, working in close communication, to track and pick up any poachers escaping back over into Tanzania. No organization had yet done this, but animals don’t pay attention to borders, nor do poachers, so neither should we.

Back in the US, I visited a collector of my photos and talked her through my plans. She immediately committed $500,000 a year for the first 3 years. We will be forever grateful to that donor (who prefers to remain anonymous). In that one moment, with that money, things became possible.

I had a name: Big Life Foundation. Now I needed that leader on the ground.

There was one renowned conservationist with a great reputation who lived in the Chyulu Hills.

His name was, of course, Richard Bonham.

For 20 years, Richard had been building an effective conservation force in the Chyulu Hills with his Maasailand Preservation Trust. Richard had the same holistic vision of conservation - community rangers, support of the local community, a livestock compensation fund, and more.

I wrote to Richard about my plans and asked him if he knew of anyone to run Big Life. He wrote back that my plans were what he had been shouting from the treetops for years, but had never had the funds to implement. To my surprise and delight, he suggested that he could run Big Life. This was the perfect solution - someone with his reputation and 20 years of experience, running the organization on the ground.

In late 2010, Big Life fired up and went into action with Richard as its co-founder. Igor became Big Life’s unfortunate poster child, and his home, the Greater Amboseli ecosystem, is the place where Big Life today protects 1.6 million acres.

With that first precious funding and subsequent donations, within a year, Big Life was able to hire 85 fully-equipped well-trained rangers plus platoon commanders, construct 12 anti-poaching outposts, purchase 9 anti-poaching patrol vehicles and a Microlight plane for aerial monitoring, and grow an informer network on both sides of the border.

A series of quick dramatic arrests was made of several major poaching gangs, who had been poaching the Amboseli region's elephants for many years. They were tracked down by Big Life’s teams in exactly the way we had planned, through coordination between rangers in both countries, our network of informers, and local community help.

Cut forward to the present day.

Under the stellar, rock-solid leadership of Richard and now also his second-in-command, Craig Millar, Big Life has become the biggest employer in the region, with 500+ local staff.

And so it is that 10 years on…

The number of elephants killed by poachers last year in the areas patrolled by Big Life rangers was ZERO. The number of rhinos killed by poachers last year was ZERO. The populations of elephants, lions, giraffes, cheetahs, and most other species in the ecosystem have all markedly increased since 2010.

However a new threat to elephants was growing in the ecosystem. More elephants were now being killed by farmers whose crops had been destroyed than by poachers. Only a few years ago, 20 elephants were killed in one year in this way. To solve this latest problem, Big Life built over 100 km of electrified fence. As a result, in 2020, just two elephants were killed. And now, because of this, both elephants and farmers live happier, safer lives.

But now, we face the biggest, most complex threat of all. 

And it all comes down to land.

Back in 2010, to combat the poaching, to staunch the flow of blood, we were engaged in a form of triage. By triage, I mean that we had to make brutally hard decisions about which were the most critical areas to set up outposts, knowing that we were leaving many elephants in other areas unprotected until we got more funding. 

Today, we find ourselves dealing with another utterly necessary form of triage: to save the most important land for wildlife through leasing wildlife habitat before it is swallowed up to development.

The ecosystem is being rapidly transformed from community-owned land into private ownership that will shatter the landscape into thousands of 20-60 acre parcels. As the parcels are converted to other uses, wildlife will run out of space. It will be difficult to preserve the ecosystem in its current state. However, there are key wildlife corridors and dispersal areas that we can still protect, which would allow the ecosystem to support wildlife numbers similar to those now.

Today, this is Big Life’s most urgent task. There is no time to waste. Land preservation can be a win-win for all, not just for the animals, but also for the local communities.

Thank you to all of you from me, Richard and everyone at Big Life for being with us on our journey up until now. 

We hope that you will stay with us for the next, most vital stage of our journey.

Nick Brandt

Read the Full 2020 Impact Report.

 

 

  • 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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