
The volunteers have had a lucky week with recent sightings including: Leopard Cheetah (including a sighting on a kill) Spotted hyena swimming in the dam...

Twitter is a great way to share and discover what is happening right now. You can find out exactly what’s happening at all our projects each day and learn more about African animals from our wildlife facts. Each day features a different animal and news from the field. ...

Did you know? The black rhino declined drastically in the 1970s and 1980s due to poaching. To prevent extinction, many rhinos were translocated to fenced sanctuaries in the early 1990s. This effort appears to be succeeding, as 1994 was the first time in 20 years that rhino numbers did not decline...

Does anyone have any large landscape photos of you or you and your group working with the wildlife on a project? This would feature on the front cover of our brand new brochure! Please send any photos to katrina@conservationafrica.net

“The Tuli Conservation project in Botswana was where I did the animal tracking, observation and recording work. However, it was also an exercise in wilderness living – it was very rustic stuff! We did two game trips a day, split roughly half and half between walks and drives. I ...

African Conservation Experience
Please follow this link for information on how you can work alongside an experienced wildlife vet in the bush http://www.conservationafrica.net/projec ts/Shimongwe.html

Some of the highlights on the Tuli Conservation project for our volunteers included a mother cheetah and two cubs on a fresh kill, bat-eared foxes, brown hyenas, an aardvark, 25 elephants and 80 eland!! The bird sightings included plenty of vultures, eagles, buzzards, kites and water birds.

























