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Through symbolic “adoption,” making a monthly or one-time donation, or honoring a loved one, you become part of the systematic plan to save the rhino from extinction.
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We donate monthly to our partners, working in collaboration to define what they need. The needs change and evolve. We are there to facilitate what we can, thus enabling them to expand and serve the needs of their rhinos.
Baby Rhino Rescue is partnering with the Waterberg Landscape Alliance to help them in their quest to preserve the species and habitats of the entire landscape. We have funded half of their security initiatives for the entire region for 2023 and our support will be ongoing.
In the Kalahari region of South Africa is a 100,000 hectare property running a cutting-edge conservation project. This land was reclaimed from beef farms in the area. Now, with a truly wild and happily reproducing group of 130 rhinos, this reserve is a glimpse into how the world once was! Keeping the rhinos, and all the animals at the reserve, safe is a BRR priority.
In partnering with Solio Game Reserve and Rhino Sanctuary, BRR expands partners and operations into Kenya. In the famed Laikipia area of Kenya, Solio is renowned for pioneering rhino conservation in Kenya. It is therefore a significant partner.
BRR is intrinsically involved in the rehabilitation and release phases of the orphaned calves at the CFW rhino sanctuary, the biggest rhino sanctuary in the world. Defenseless babies arrive injured and compromised. The rehabilitation process is complicated and expensive. Once the rhinos are rehabilitated, a process taking two years, they are released into a stronghold that is protected 24/7.
Founded in 2016 by Tersia Jooste, Rhino Connect was created out of a crisis. What began as an awareness campaign has grown into a dynamic coordination network that now supports more than 40 private rhino custodians. Rhino Connect brings together custodians, veterinarians, and conservation partners to safeguard wildlife, strengthen collaboration, and build lasting systems that help rhinos thrive in the wild.
Founded in 1981, Lapalala Wilderness is a 48,000 hectare, formally declared protected area situated within the UNESCO declared Waterberg Biosphere. It is renowned for its focus on conservation, research, sustainability, and education and is dedicated to the conservation of biodiversity and protection of endangered species.
Because there has been no reduction is demand for rhino horn issuing from China and Vietnam, primarily, there has been no fall off in poaching. The rhinos remain under dire threat. Poaching moves from one part of the country to the other, so it is essential to have a security system with areas that “speak” to one another. Teamed up with two top intelligence operatives, BRR has funded a large security system in the NW Cape and Kalahari areas.
It is widely understood that conservation goes hand in hand with community. The Solio Game Reserve is surrounded by a million people and are large supporters of community projects. The main aim is to empower the community as their most important stakeholders and for the community to learn about environmental impact and conservation, which in turn creates a future generation which will protect the wildlife & its environs. One of their largest projects is the Women’s Empowerment Project, which was created to help women in the surrounding communities learn new skills, make a livelihood, and build confidence.
Lying in a catchment between the Limpopo and Olifants Rivers, “Dinokeng” means “a place of rivers.” A unique model, it is the first free-roaming Big Five game reserve on land jointly owned by the South African government and 170 private landowners. The aim was to create a self-sustaining savanna ecosystem that supports indigenous species.
Established in 1993, Selati is listed as a critical biodiversity area. It was established when several landowners came together to convert former farmland into a wildlife conservancy. The restoration of veld after decades of agricultural misuse does the crucial task of rewilding landscape.
Part of the UNESCO Biosphere reserve, this extraordinary wildlife area lies within one of South Africa’s richest biodiversity zones. There are over 380 indigenous tree species, which alone out-numbers the entire Kruger National Park! A microclimate with mist, and
moisture supports very unique flora and fauna. Sustainability is a focus and the wilderness operates off grid. While this wilderness is not Big Five, it has a multitude of diversity, including pangolin, leopard, many antelope and plain’s game and of course rhinos. The risk of poaching is always present and the wilderness needs an active anti- poaching unit.
Saving the Survivors NPC (STS) was founded by veterinarian Dr. Johan Marais in 2012 with the goal to provide care and treatment for wildlife that have suffered due to the impact of man, mainly through poaching. As a field-based project, STS assists various wildlife species across Africa and Asia. Dr. Marais and his new team of experts began to tackle the poaching crisis from a veterinary perspective.
Through symbolic “adoption,” making a monthly or one-time donation, or honoring a loved one, you become part of the systematic plan to save the rhino from extinction.
DONATE NOW