
CONSERVATION PROJECTS
PANGOLIN

Through our financial aid, pangolins rescued from the illegal wildlife trade are given a renewed chance of survival.
At the rehabilitation centre we support, these remarkable creatures receive expert veterinary care and all the assistance they need to regain strength and resilience. From the moment a pangolin arrives, right through to its eventual release, we work closely with the centre, helping to turn stories of adversity into journeys of recovery, resilience and renewed freedom.
Our involvement also extends to release and monitoring, enabling us to connect the centre with wild spaces that are suitable release sites for pangolins who are ready to return to the wild. This process includes ongoing monitoring, which we have been able to facilitate.
WILD DOGS & CHEETAH
We play a vital role in supporting metapopulation conservation efforts for cheetahs and African wild dogs across South Africa and beyond.
Our funding enables the safe capture, professional translocation, and release of both species between suitable reserves, ensuring healthy, genetically diverse, and resilient populations. We contribute to post-release monitoring which provides crucial data for
long-term management.
By working closely with reserves, conservation partners, and stakeholders, we facilitate coordinated conservation action, research, and effective landscape-scale management that underpins the future of these iconic predators.

EWT VULTURES

We support the Endangered Wildlife Trust’s Vulture Safe Zone Programme by funding specialised emergency response kits deployed during mass vulture poisoning incidents.
These comprehensive kits contain everything field teams need to deliver immediate on-site treatment—antidotes, activated charcoal for toxin absorption, intravenous fluids for rehydration, and supportive medication—enabling rapid stabilisation of affected birds before transport to rehabilitation facilities.
By equipping rapid-response units to intervene within the critical first hours of a poisoning event, we help dramatically reduce mortality and bolster frontline conservation efforts for
Africa’s critically endangered vulture populations.
RHINO
In partnership with Rhino Revolution, we fund and support essential rhino conservation work across the Lowveld.
This includes providing financial assistance for horn-trimming operations on reserves that cannot afford the costs associated with these proactive security measures.
Our involvement helps reduce poaching risk and ensures that vulnerable populations receive the protection they need.
Working closely with Rhino Revolution and reserve managers, we contribute to practical, on-the-ground interventions that strengthen rhino security and support long-term population resilience.

LANDSCAPE CONNECTIVITY RESEARCH

We are leading pioneering research that is especially close to our hearts. This is work we are carrying out ourselves in proud partnership with the University of Mpumalanga. The aim is to discover whether a genuine Kruger to Canyons wildlife corridor can truly exist.
By tracking leopards, spotted hyenas and the rarely studied brown hyena across reserves, private land and working farms, we are uncovering whether everyday farmland can become the vital connective tissue that keeps these magnificent predators moving freely between Greater Kruger and the Drakensberg escarpment.
The evidence we gather will stand alongside the best large-carnivore science being produced anywhere in Africa, and will directly inform the broader effort to save and reconnect the habitats these animals need to survive. It will deliver practical, landscape-scale solutions that reduce conflict, protect livelihoods and ensure these iconic species keep roaming for generations to come






























