Big Life Foundation

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Big Life Foundation On the ground in East Africa, partnering with communities to protect nature for the benefit of all.
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WILDLIFE PROTECTION

Big Life strives to prevent the poaching of elephants and all wildlife within our area of operation, which consists of more than 40 permanent outposts and tent-based field units, tracker dogs, and aerial surveillance. In addition to preventing poaching before it happens, we track and apprehend wildlife criminals and collaborate with local prosecutors to ensure that they are pu

nished to the fullest extent of the law. One of the largest employers of local Maasai in the Amboseli-Tsavo-Kilimanjaro ecosystem, our rangers are expertly trained and well-equipped to tackle a variety of wildlife crimes. As a result, poaching activity in our area of operation, whether for trafficking or bush meat, has dropped significantly since our inception in 2010. RHINO PROTECTION

Big Life works in partnership with the Kenya Wildlife Service to protect the endangered Eastern black rhino population in the Chyulu Hills area. Together, we conduct extensive foot patrols, aerial surveillance, and monitoring via camera traps. We also provide reliable, year-round access to protected watering points in this remote wilderness area to discourage rhinos from wandering beyond our area of operation in search of water during the dry seasons. PREDATOR PROTECTION

For Maasai herders, their cattle are their livelihood. When livestock falls prey to local predators, like lions or hyenas, the herders are financially disadvantaged and justifiably frustrated. To prevent herders from retaliating with spears or poisoned carcasses, Big Life incentivizes members of our partner communities to protect their livestock through improved fencing and husbandry practices. In the event that an animal is lost to a predator through no fault of the herder, Big Life will compensate the herder for a percentage of the market value of the animal. This small consolation is significant to the Maasai, and as a result, retaliatory killings have been dramatically reduced in the area, with lion and other predator populations now on the rise. HUMAN-WILDLIFE CONFLICT

As the human population increases, so do competing land-uses, such as farming and cattle grazing. Fighting for desperately limited resources like water and grass, humans encroach further and further onto what once were wild lands. With less space to share, people and animals now come into contact at an alarming rate, often with catastrophic and deadly results. Big Life works in partnership with the local Maasai to mitigate the impact of wildlife interactions, such as crop-raiding by hungry elephants, both for the people and the animals. EDUCATION

Fighting wildlife crimes helps the ecosystem today, but winning the hearts and minds of the community and providing a mutual benefit through conservation is the only way to protect wildlife and wild lands far into the future. Big Life invests in the future of participating communities by funding teachers’ salaries, providing scholarship funds for local students, and conducting conservation workshops. When the entire community benefits from conservation efforts and recognizes the value of protecting the ecosystem, enforcement becomes self-policing. MAASAI OLYMPICS

In 2008, the cultural fathers of the new warrior generation asked Maasailand Preservation Trust—now Big Life Foundation—to help them eliminate lion hunting from the Maasai culture. In response, we partnered with the local Maasai to create the first-ever Maasai Olympics: the hunt for medals, not lions. This biennial event is a critically important—and effective—part of the initiative to create a cultural shift in attitudes of the Maasai toward a broader commitment to wildlife and habitat conservation.

Across the Greater Amboseli Ecosystem, climate change is not a distant threat. It is something local communities, wildli...
05/06/2026

Across the Greater Amboseli Ecosystem, climate change is not a distant threat. It is something local communities, wildlife, and livestock are already living with.

Over the last two decades, our area of operation has experienced increasingly extreme weather patterns. Prolonged droughts have become more frequent and severe, putting enormous pressure on wildlife, livestock, and the people who share this landscape. When the rains do arrive, they can be intense and unpredictable, bringing flooding, erosion, and damage to infrastructure.

For elephants, lions, giraffes, and countless other species, these changes affect access to food, water, and the ability to move safely across the ecosystem. For local communities, climate impacts threaten livelihoods that have depended on healthy rangelands for generations.

Protecting nature is one of the most powerful tools we have to build resilience. Healthy grasslands store carbon, absorb rainfall, reduce erosion, and support both wildlife and livestock. By protecting habitat, securing wildlife corridors, and partnering with local communities to conserve this landscape, we are helping both people and nature adapt to a changing climate.

This World Environment Day, we are reminded that conservation is about more than protecting wildlife. It is about safeguarding the ecosystems that sustain all of us.

📸: Jeremy Goss

TRACKING MARTIAL EAGLESThe Amboseli ecosystem is one of the most biodiverse landscapes in East Africa, home to more than...
02/06/2026

TRACKING MARTIAL EAGLES

The Amboseli ecosystem is one of the most biodiverse landscapes in East Africa, home to more than 500 recorded bird species, ranging from nectar-sipping sunbirds to snake-stomping secretary birds. This remarkable richness is part of what makes Amboseli so iconic. Yet, with such a concentration of life, there is still much to learn.

Raptors provide a compelling example. Birds of prey play a critical role in regulating populations of rodents, reptiles, and other small animals, helping to maintain ecological balance. Due to their sensitivity to environmental change, they also serve as important indicators of ecosystem health. When raptors thrive, it often signals a resilient and functioning landscape. Improving our understanding of these species strengthens our ability to protect the habitats they depend on, as well as the many other species that share them.

Recently, we were pleased to support an operation led by Vasco Nyaga, a scientist with the Kenya Wildlife Service Training Institute (WRTI) and a PhD student at Wageningen University & Research, in collaboration with experts from The Kenya Bird of Prey Trust and the Kenya Wildlife Service. The team successfully tagged one juvenile and one subadult Martial Eagle.

Martial Eagles are among Africa’s largest eagles, powerful and wide-ranging hunters that require extensive territories to survive. Despite their size and strength, their populations are declining across much of the continent due to habitat loss and human disturbance and they are now listed as Endangered.

By gaining insights into their movements, particularly those of dispersing young birds which can cover tens of thousands of square kilometers, we can better identify and protect critical habitats, mitigate threats, and inform long-term conservation planning across the Amboseli landscape and beyond.

Every transmitter deployed, every data point collected, and every partnership formed brings us closer to understanding and safeguarding this extraordinary ecosystem and its biodiversity.

📸: The Kenya Bird of Prey Trust

29/05/2026

You are looking at the world’s most abundant wild bird: the red-billed quelea.

Over the past few weeks, these feathered locusts have laid siege to the plains across Greater Amboseli, after plentiful rains created a lush paradise for this nomadic species.

Quelea live life in the fast lane. They have one of the shortest breeding cycles of any bird with an incubation period lasting as little as nine days, and they fledge after just two weeks. This allows them to grow their populations rapidly in response to availability of their main food source - grass seed - as their unending search for it takes them across Africa’s savannah landscapes.

Their arrival is a great indicator that there is plentiful grazing for the ecosystem’s livestock and wildlife.

Much of the grasslands quelea rely on have been converted to agriculture. Africa still has many wild spaces, but they are being rapidly developed, and loss of habitat threatens the red-billed quelea as much as the far more iconic species we help to protect, like elephants and giraffes.

Here in Amboseli we are working to protect critical areas of natural habitat. Conservation leases have secured more than 120,000 acres in partnership with local landowners, protecting the grasses and the space necessary for wildlife and livestock to continue moving freely across the ecosystem.

We can’t do it without you. Thank you for your support.

📹: Joshua Clay

26/05/2026

CELEBRATING THE GREEN SEASON

As the emerald grass plains begin their slow transformation to dry-season gold, the pulse of life is still palpable across Greater Amboseli. We’re coming to the end of a bumper rainy season, and it’s has been thrilling to experience the ecosystem at its bountiful best.

Seasonal wetlands that we protect outside of Amboseli National Park have hosted elephant herds more than 100 strong, coming together to mate, reaffirm family bonds, and make the most of the plentiful grazing. Flocks of queleas and weavers have swarmed the skies above them, moving as one in mesmerizing murmurations. Butterflies still fill the daytime air, replaced in the evening by insect symphonies of churring and buzzing.

Freed from their seasonal dependence on Amboseli’s permanent swamps, zebras, wildebeest, and other grazers have spread far and wide to take advantage of the rich grazing.

It’s important to savor these times. The memories of the 2022 drought are still fresh and in the face of increasing climatic unpredictability, healthy natural ecosystems are the key to resilience.

By protecting wildlife, and partnering with local landowners to keep this landscape open and connected, we are helping ensure that these natural spectacles endure - sustaining not only elephants and migratory herds, but also the people whose lives are deeply tied to this land.

📹: Joshua Clay

22/05/2026

Thanks to this incredible community, our match challenge has been met.

Together, we’ve unlocked thousands of additional days of protection for elephants across Greater Amboseli. Our rangers protect elephants like One Ton, seen here last week, looking majestic as ever.

Your support helps carry forward the bigger picture of conservation: the people, partnerships, and protected landscapes that make lasting impact possible. From rangers on patrol to communities living alongside wildlife, you help sustain this work from many angles.

It’s the only thing that makes scenes like this possible.

THANK YOU.

📹: Joshua Clay

20/05/2026

“Help! There’s a zebra in my toilet!”

These may not be the exact words used, but our ranger teams were recently called out to two separate incidents in two days where zebras had fallen into pit latrines.

Thankfully, both stories have happy endings.

The first incident involved a large, frisky, and nippy adult zebra. Once our rangers had assessed the situation, it was clear that it would require Dr Kariuki, the local Kenya Wildlife Service vet, to sedate the zebra. Once down, our rangers helped to hoist it out, and it was soon trotting away as if nothing had happened.

The second incident involved a zebra foal, which our rangers were able to get out of the pit without the need of any anesthetic.

On both occasions, members of the community alerted Big Life and asked for help.

This is one of the clearest indicators that what we do is having an impact.

Without trust, and constant communication with the many communities and villages across our area of operation, we wouldn’t be able to attend nearly as many incidents.

The owners of both latrines have been instructed to cover them to prevent this from happening again, but these cases also highlight the ever-increasing strain that human development is putting on Amboseli’s wildlife.

This is why securing natural spaces is just as important as protecting wildlife.

📹: Elizabeth Thithi

16/05/2026

We’re almost there – will you help?

We’re just $10,000 shy of our matching challenge to protect the elephants of Greater Amboseli, which has been extended thanks to a generous donor.

Every dollar is still being doubled…for now.

If you’ve been thinking about giving, please give today, and DOUBLE YOUR IMPACT.

Our rangers provide daily protection for elephants to keep moving across the ecosystem - from tiny calves to iconic tuskers. But we can’t do it without you.

https://give.biglife.org/-/XCVMZDUC

📹: Toby Strong, Jeremy Goss, & Joshua Clay

14/05/2026

This is what protection across Greater Amboseli looked like over the past 72 hours:

• A ranger unit tracked elephant movements near a high-risk area, coordinating cross-border protection
• Rangers helped safely guide elephants away from farmland at night
• Aerial surveillance identified potential threats before they escalated

Protection isn’t one moment: it’s constant.
And it’s powered by people like you.

It takes just $17 to keep an elephant safe for a full day across Greater Amboseli. Please help.
https://give.biglife.org/-/XCVMZDUC


📹: Toby Strong, Jeremy Goss, & Keith Allen

12/05/2026

Before sunrise, Big Life’s rangers are already in the field.

This week alone, our rangers have:
• Conducted early morning patrols along key elephant corridors
• Removed multiple snares set by bushmeat poachers before they could cause harm
• Responded to a crop-raiding and prevented escalation against wildlife

This is what your support makes possible: real action, every day.

And right now, your gift is being matched.
https://give.biglife.org/-/XCVMZDUC

A young calf stays close to her mother as the herd moves across open ground.Moments like this look peaceful, but they de...
10/05/2026

A young calf stays close to her mother as the herd moves across open ground.

Moments like this look peaceful, but they depend on constant protection.

Because of ranger patrols and community partnerships, elephants here are safer than they’ve been in decades.

You can help double that protection. Donations in honor of the matriarch in your life for Mother’s Day are being matched.

Donate at: https://give.biglife.org/-/XCVMZDUC


📸: Jeremy Goss

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