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
 
 

SAVING TREES, IMPROVING LIVES

210324 Big life foundation chyulu hills redd projectThree years ago, Big Life joined with local community, government, and NGO partners to implement a carbon credit program. The Chyulu Hills REDD+ Project is part of a global network of interventions aimed at helping communities to conserve forests and other important carbon stores, and in doing so keeps carbon out of the atmosphere. This benefits not only the people living around the Chyulu Hills, but the entire planet for the stable climate upon which we all depend.

Like a curtain rising from the arid plains below, the Chyulu Hills catch moist air coming in from the Kenyan coast. This water falls as rain or mist, finding its way into the porous volcanic soils, and eventually resurfaces at Mzima Springs in Tsavo, where an estimated 90 million liters per day emerge from the ground. Besides being a precious water resource, the hills are also home to a range of mountain species that are isolated from the rest of their kind, including a small population of the critically endangered Eastern black rhino. The Chyulu Hills are part of a critical link between two of Kenya’s most important wildlife areas - the greater Tsavo and Amboseli Ecosystems.

Local communities and partners (Big Life included) directly benefit from the sale of two million carbon credits being marketed by Conservation International. Some of the credits have been purchased by big luxury brands like Tiffany & Co. and Gucci. The revenue is being invested in local community development projects and conservation efforts. In 2020, Big Life received more than $140k in revenue, which helped to fund the salaries and equipment of some of the Big Life’s rangers protecting the area, as well as build a new outpost in the northernmost reaches of the rhino area. Additional benefits included funding for: fire response training and equipment, community water infrastructure, and student scholarships.

To purchase your own carbon credits and offset your personal carbon footprint, please visit Conservation International’s carbon calculator and help protect the Chyulu Hills for the benefit of all.

Meet Constable Susan Manyanga Lemomo

Today, for International Women’s Day, we’d like to introduce you to Constable Susan Manyanga Lemomo.

Susan is one of Big Life’s 12 female rangers and is stationed with the Nailepo Unit. Here she describes what it’s like working in the bush, and what some of her experiences have been like as a wildlife ranger for conservation, whether it’s 30-kilometer patrols, arresting bushmeat poachers, or helping to prevent elephants from raiding crops at night. She is 21 years old and has 3 children. She is interviewed by Lilian Sailepu, Big Life’s human-elephant conflict fence project assistant.

Thank you, Susan, for sharing your story, and for joining Big Life as a wildlife ranger to protect nature for the benefit of us all. We are grateful to women the world over for their contributions, but especially those who help run Big Life’s operations, as rangers, as fundraisers, as program managers, and at the Board level. 

DIALOGUE DAYS

210301 big life foundation community dialogue days 2Myths and misinformation about sexual health can be challenging to correct, as such beliefs are deeply rooted in cultural traditions. This is as true for the Maasai as it is for any rural community. The health of any ecosystem depends on setting the record straight.

To that end, Big Life’s Community Health Volunteers (CHVs) and the Ministry of Health Community Health Assistant have hosted 36 Dialogue Days, meetings which bring together community leaders, gender groups, and/or specific age sets to discuss health issues in a safe environment.  These community dialogue meetings allow for concerns and opinions to be voiced, and in turn for health professionals to respond, providing explanations and helping to dispel myths, particularly around sexual health.

Initially, these meetings were focused largely on men, as without their permission, it is very difficult for wives and daughters to access not only family planning, but any reproductive health services, such as antenatal care, assisted delivery, and cervical cancer and STI screening. Recognizing that women and youth need these meetings too, Dialogue Days have expanded to include them. In time, we hope to involve husbands and wives in couples’ meetings together.

These conversations are desperately needed and are helping to bring about positive changes for the Maasai as individuals and as a community, as evidenced by powerful testimonials.

One example is a man we’ll call John, a 48-year-old man married to two wives, with 14 children between them. He is primarily a pastoralist and does some farming. His children all go to school, either at the secondary or primary level. John and his two wives never attended school, making it hard to monitor their children’s education. Regardless, he is very passionate about his children getting a formal education in order for them to have a better future. But having such a large family makes it very difficult to provide for their basic necessities.

After being walked through the importance of family planning both by our CHVs during household visits and at the dialogue meeting, he realized that his situation is currently experienced by almost everyone in his village and is due to a lack of family planning, which would have helped them space their children and be able to provide for them with ease. As a village elder, John says he will approve for his wives (who are still of reproductive age) to take up family planning. This way, his current children will be able to continue their education. He will also advise his own children and others who come to him for his counsel as an elder, on the importance of family planning.

We are grateful to our partners at CHASE Africa, the Leila and Mickey Straus Family Foundation, and our supporters around the world for investing in these vital community dialogue meetings for the benefit of all.

COMMUNITY HEALTH HEROS

210226 big life community health herosThe core of Big Life’s ethos is this: if conservation supports the people, then people will support conservation. This has never been truer in the face of a global pandemic.

Along with our partners, Big Life Foundation has been able to expand our existing Community Health Volunteer (CHV) program on Mbirikani Group into Eselengei and Rombo Group Ranches. The CHVs are trusted and respected members of their communities and their primary role is to go door-to-door providing healthcare education, as well as referrals to their local government facility. They also let everyone know when a backpack nurse is coming, where she or he will be located, and assist with organizing on the day of the visit. The backpack nurse provides maternal health services that include immunizations, de-worming, antenatal care, and family planning.           

Big Life has continued to support the local government health facilities with the provision of hand sanitizer and soap, as well as the PPE needed by the CHVs in their line of work. Unfortunately, government nurses and clinical officers went on strike on December 8, 2020, due to a lack of sufficient Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), insufficient pay for their increased risk, and the fact that the National Hospital Insurance Fund does not cover them for COVID-19 treatment.  

Despite the numerous obstacles, the work is getting done. In 2020, CHVs visited 22,553 households. Between household visits and Dialogue Days, 75,593 people were provided with sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) information, as well as COVID-19 prevention and containment information. Importantly, the CHVs are also able to advise couples on the best form of family planning for their individual needs. Because mobile clinics have been on hold since last March, due to the inability to safely gather in numbers, household visits by our CHVs have provided critical healthcare support at a time when there were no other options for care. 

We’re incredibly grateful for CHASE Africa, the Leila and Mickey Straus Family Foundation, and all of our supporters around the world that have fortified our ability to support the local Maasai community’s needs, while also protecting nature for the benefit of all.

  • 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 59 of 101

  • 54
  • 55
  • 56
  • 57
  • 58
  • 59
  • 60
  • 61
  • 62
  • 63

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