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Fast Facts

Dates:

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2012

Feb
, Jun
, Jul
, Aug
, Sep
, Oct

Duration:

15 days

Rendezvous:

Nairobi, Kenya

Activity Level:

Help for 'Very Active'Very Active

Minimum Contribution:

Help for 'Minimum Contribution:'£1795

Briefing:

Download Briefing

Essential information for the expedition - daily schedule, research area details, project conditions etc.

Amenities:

  • Couples Accommodations
  • Electricity
  • Flush Toilets
  • Hot Running Water
  • Research Station
  • Single Accommodations Available

Links:

More Information:

Take a Walk on the Wild Side...
Rachel Batley joins Earthwatch’s efforts to Save Kenya’s Black Rhino. Read about her experiences.

Kenya's Black Rhinos
Volunteer, Dawn Kane, talks about her "adventure that did not disappoint!"

On the Expedition

Help bring black rhinos back from the brink of extinction.

Working in a classic African savannah landscape, your activities will focus on gathering data on the distribution of wildlife and rhinos. You will also measure the composition and condition of the vegetation that competing large herbivores eat, namely rhinos, elephants and giraffes. Some trekking over uneven terrain on the equator can be demanding, but well rewarded by abundant wildlife, including lions, leopards, zebras, buffalo, impala, baboons, hippos, and many other species, including 232 kinds of birds. One day will be spent with the neighboring communities and seeing firsthand how benefits from wildlife conservation have been used to improve livelihoods of people bordering the Ol Pejeta Conservancy. An adjacent chimpanzee reserve is worth a visit in your recreational time.

Meals and Accommodations

After hot days in the field, you will return to the comfortable Research Center at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy, with an open veranda and a campfire for evening chats. An early rise also gives you the opportunity to enjoy the sunrise in the backdrop of the beauty of Mt. Kenya. The center offers single rooms (two doubles available for couples), either in the main building or in rondavels (traditional thatched huts), with potable water, electricity, toilets, and wood-fired warm showers. An excellent cook prepares all meals, including dinners of Nile perch, nyama choma (grilled meat), potatoes, vegetables, casseroles, and pasta, topped off with peerless Kenyan coffee and tea.

About the Research Area

The Research Center is located within the 46,000 hectare Ol Pejeta Conservancy and covers an area of 9,000 hectares, north of Nairobi near the town of Nanyuki on the Laikipia plateau. It lies between Mt. Kenya and the Aberdare Mountains. The Laikipia plateau is a lava plateau used almost entirely for cattle and sheep ranching. It is flat and rolls gently only where it is cut into by rivers such as the Ewaso Narok and Ewaso Ngiro, which flow down from the Aberdare Mountains. The latter flows north through the reserve and provides water year round, but it is supplemented by five earth dams.