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Sheldrick Wildlife Trust

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Pioneers in the rescue, rehabilitation & rewilding of orphaned elephants and rhinos, we actively work to conserve all wildlife and wilderness areas in Kenya.

Shorts

Wonderful, breaking news! Early this morning, ex-orphan Melia returned to introduce a brand new baby girl to Head Keeper Benjamin and the rest of the Ithumba team. Moon, as we’ve named her, is Melia’s second baby. She is a lovely little elephant, bold and brimming with character. More to come, but we wanted to share the news in real time. Supporters like you make these stories possible: enabling us to rescue orphans like Melia, dedicate years to their recovery, and help them reclaim their place in the wild – paving the way for a new generation of wild elephants, like baby Moon. If you're new to our work, discover how every rescue has the potential to forge future dynasties here:

Wonderful, breaking news! Early this morning, ex-orphan Melia returned to introduce a brand new baby girl to Head Keeper Benjamin and the rest of the Ithumba team. Moon, as we’ve named her, is Melia’s second baby. She is a lovely little elephant, bold and brimming with character. More to come, but we wanted to share the news in real time. Supporters like you make these stories possible: enabling us to rescue orphans like Melia, dedicate years to their recovery, and help them reclaim their place in the wild – paving the way for a new generation of wild elephants, like baby Moon. If you're new to our work, discover how every rescue has the potential to forge future dynasties here:

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Hungry tummies wait for no one — come rain or shine, the routine is the same at our Nairobi Nursery. Mzinga, Taroha, Arthi, Nyambeni and Pardamat are sure-footed today despite the mud, eyes firmly on the prize: two bottles of milk, fresh greens, and a warm stable to sleep in. New to our feed? Meet the rest of the herd who will be joining them for bed:

Hungry tummies wait for no one — come rain or shine, the routine is the same at our Nairobi Nursery. Mzinga, Taroha, Arthi, Nyambeni and Pardamat are sure-footed today despite the mud, eyes firmly on the prize: two bottles of milk, fresh greens, and a warm stable to sleep in. New to our feed? Meet the rest of the herd who will be joining them for bed:

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Breakfast for Bumpy. He's one of our newest orphans, at our Kaluku Neonate Unit in Tsavo. His mother was killed – likely defending him in a territorial fight – and he spent at least a day alone beside her before the Kenya Wildlife Service brought him in. He's a baby hippo. Hippos start their lives in water and learn to nurse beneath the surface, diving and resurfacing for breath between sips. Bumpy's bottle feeds are easier – no diving required. He has a long road ahead. Adopting Bumpy helps fund his milk, his Keepers, and the years of care between now and his return to the wild. Adopt Bumpy:

Breakfast for Bumpy. He's one of our newest orphans, at our Kaluku Neonate Unit in Tsavo. His mother was killed – likely defending him in a territorial fight – and he spent at least a day alone beside her before the Kenya Wildlife Service brought him in. He's a baby hippo. Hippos start their lives in water and learn to nurse beneath the surface, diving and resurfacing for breath between sips. Bumpy's bottle feeds are easier – no diving required. He has a long road ahead. Adopting Bumpy helps fund his milk, his Keepers, and the years of care between now and his return to the wild. Adopt Bumpy:

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Yesterday, we introduced you to our newest addition, Bumpy the orphaned hippo. This was his flight down to Kaluku. He was a perfect passenger – he scrambled right into Keeper Joseph's lap and spent most of the trip chattering in little hippo grunts! Bumpy is very new to the fold – he was rescued over the weekend. His mother appears to have died in a territorial fight, likely defending her baby's life. Now, Bumpy has a family with us and a wild future ahead. Read his full rescue story and become part of his journey through an adoption:

Yesterday, we introduced you to our newest addition, Bumpy the orphaned hippo. This was his flight down to Kaluku. He was a perfect passenger – he scrambled right into Keeper Joseph's lap and spent most of the trip chattering in little hippo grunts! Bumpy is very new to the fold – he was rescued over the weekend. His mother appears to have died in a territorial fight, likely defending her baby's life. Now, Bumpy has a family with us and a wild future ahead. Read his full rescue story and become part of his journey through an adoption:

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When an orphaned elephant loses their mother, we step in to offer them hope and a family. Kaikai, rescued as a newborn, wanted constant physical touch and to know she was at the centre of her Keepers’ universe – which she was! The care they receive today helps ensure they can return to the wild when they are ready. Alongside comfort, we provide three-hourly milk feeds, specialist care and a nurturing environment where they can thrive. Help provide the care that gives these orphans a second chance. Become an adopter and follow an orphan’s journey right from the very beginning:

When an orphaned elephant loses their mother, we step in to offer them hope and a family. Kaikai, rescued as a newborn, wanted constant physical touch and to know she was at the centre of her Keepers’ universe – which she was! The care they receive today helps ensure they can return to the wild when they are ready. Alongside comfort, we provide three-hourly milk feeds, specialist care and a nurturing environment where they can thrive. Help provide the care that gives these orphans a second chance. Become an adopter and follow an orphan’s journey right from the very beginning:

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These little moments speak volumes. After everything he went through, Bumpy is feeling safe, supported, and so full of joy. Earlier this month, Bumpy’s mother died, likely in a territorial fight defending her baby’s life. He spent at least a day huddled by her body before the Kenya Wildlife Service found him and brought him into our care. You can become part of Bumpy’s journey. Read his full rescue story and support him through an adoption:

These little moments speak volumes. After everything he went through, Bumpy is feeling safe, supported, and so full of joy. Earlier this month, Bumpy’s mother died, likely in a territorial fight defending her baby’s life. He spent at least a day huddled by her body before the Kenya Wildlife Service found him and brought him into our care. You can become part of Bumpy’s journey. Read his full rescue story and support him through an adoption:

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Wangalla has joined a flock. Our newest orphan, at our Kaluku Neonate Unit in Tsavo, has fallen in with the resident vulturine guineafowl. She's not the first, although her predecessors preferred chasing them into an explosion of blue feathers. Wangalla's approach is much more companionable. She stands among them, plucking blades of grass with her trunk while they peck and poke around her. The birds have completely embraced her as one of their own. An unconventional chick, but a chick nonetheless. Discover how you can join Wangalla's offbeat family by adopting her today:

Wangalla has joined a flock. Our newest orphan, at our Kaluku Neonate Unit in Tsavo, has fallen in with the resident vulturine guineafowl. She's not the first, although her predecessors preferred chasing them into an explosion of blue feathers. Wangalla's approach is much more companionable. She stands among them, plucking blades of grass with her trunk while they peck and poke around her. The birds have completely embraced her as one of their own. An unconventional chick, but a chick nonetheless. Discover how you can join Wangalla's offbeat family by adopting her today:

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Wangalla is in her happy place – fresh greens, hand-picked by Keeper Misheck. How can we tell? Her crossed-back leg is a pose we see when orphans are relaxed. Seeing her enjoy such simple pleasures brings a smile to our faces. Follow Wangalla's journey right from the beginning by adopting her:

Wangalla is in her happy place – fresh greens, hand-picked by Keeper Misheck. How can we tell? Her crossed-back leg is a pose we see when orphans are relaxed. Seeing her enjoy such simple pleasures brings a smile to our faces. Follow Wangalla's journey right from the beginning by adopting her:

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After a long day, here's your moment of peace and calm, courtesy of Latika and Lenny amid the lily pads. Take it with us for a second. Lenny has only ever known the stillness of the forest. Latika’s start in life was more tumultuous: a dry season, a snare around her neck and a rescue that brought her into our orbit. Today she is growing up amid a loving human-elephant family and learning what it means to love and be loved with her adoptive nephew Lenny. Click the link in our bio to discover how we're giving orphaned elephants like Latika a second chance at life.

After a long day, here's your moment of peace and calm, courtesy of Latika and Lenny amid the lily pads. Take it with us for a second. Lenny has only ever known the stillness of the forest. Latika’s start in life was more tumultuous: a dry season, a snare around her neck and a rescue that brought her into our orbit. Today she is growing up amid a loving human-elephant family and learning what it means to love and be loved with her adoptive nephew Lenny. Click the link in our bio to discover how we're giving orphaned elephants like Latika a second chance at life.

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Tytan is a rhino. Notty is a zebra. Together, they are inseparable. Both are orphans at our Nairobi Nursery and both were rescued in infancy. In their sheltered corner of Kenya, this peas-in-a-pod duo are growing fast: Tytan is already sharpening his horn against tree stumps. Notty met some wild zebra recently, but she wasn't ready to join them, preferring her human caregivers. We rescue and raise orphans across many species – not just elephants. Their family at the Nursery is whichever animals are growing up alongside them. Follow us Sheldrick Wildlife Trust for more interspecies friendships and family.

Tytan is a rhino. Notty is a zebra. Together, they are inseparable. Both are orphans at our Nairobi Nursery and both were rescued in infancy. In their sheltered corner of Kenya, this peas-in-a-pod duo are growing fast: Tytan is already sharpening his horn against tree stumps. Notty met some wild zebra recently, but she wasn't ready to join them, preferring her human caregivers. We rescue and raise orphans across many species – not just elephants. Their family at the Nursery is whichever animals are growing up alongside them. Follow us Sheldrick Wildlife Trust for more interspecies friendships and family.

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Naptime for Bumpy, with no detail spared: a soft bean bag, a cosy blanket, and a special nanny to watch him as he sleeps! Pips the giraffe loves to look after the little orphans – so naturally she was very excited to meet the small, stout hippo who just entered the fold. Bumpy is our newest rescue. After his mother died, the little orphan spent at least a day huddled by her body before the Kenya Wildlife Service found him and brought him into our care. Now at our Kaluku Unit, he is really settling in – and sleeping in! You can become part of Bumpy’s journey – read his full rescue story and support him through an adoption:

Naptime for Bumpy, with no detail spared: a soft bean bag, a cosy blanket, and a special nanny to watch him as he sleeps! Pips the giraffe loves to look after the little orphans – so naturally she was very excited to meet the small, stout hippo who just entered the fold. Bumpy is our newest rescue. After his mother died, the little orphan spent at least a day huddled by her body before the Kenya Wildlife Service found him and brought him into our care. Now at our Kaluku Unit, he is really settling in – and sleeping in! You can become part of Bumpy’s journey – read his full rescue story and support him through an adoption:

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Let's play Keeper. Our orphan caregivers can recognise the orphaned elephants by their physical differences, ear notches, tusk shape and all. Now it's your turn. This orphan's trunk is shorter than you'd expect. She lost the tip to a poacher's snare and then, to compound matters, was found alone, stuck in the mud. Do you recognise her? Drop your guess below.

Let's play Keeper. Our orphan caregivers can recognise the orphaned elephants by their physical differences, ear notches, tusk shape and all. Now it's your turn. This orphan's trunk is shorter than you'd expect. She lost the tip to a poacher's snare and then, to compound matters, was found alone, stuck in the mud. Do you recognise her? Drop your guess below.

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Lenny and Sulwe must feel so cool right about now! Ex-orphan Ziwa, who has been living wild for many years now, popped by to visit our Umani herd. The 14-year-old bull has real gravitas, but Lenny and Sulwe were unfazed. The little babies toddled over to join him in the mud and tried their very best to impress, before beating a hasty exit. We'll let you decide how that went.

Lenny and Sulwe must feel so cool right about now! Ex-orphan Ziwa, who has been living wild for many years now, popped by to visit our Umani herd. The 14-year-old bull has real gravitas, but Lenny and Sulwe were unfazed. The little babies toddled over to join him in the mud and tried their very best to impress, before beating a hasty exit. We'll let you decide how that went.

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Throwback to Tytan's first 24 hours in our care. His rescue was something of an endurance race – after his mother fell off a cliff and died, Tytan somehow survived, making his way down to her lifeless body. Then, he disappeared. Rangers, aircraft, even drones, went out in search of him, knowing that the seven-month-old would not survive long on his own. When Tytan arrived at the Nursery after his rescue, he was wild-eyed and wary. Our Keepers sat with him in shifts, day and night. It turns out scratches are the way in with a young black rhino – ours soon stopped flinching at the contact and started leaning into it. Hands up – which rescue stories have stayed with you, even to this day?

Throwback to Tytan's first 24 hours in our care. His rescue was something of an endurance race – after his mother fell off a cliff and died, Tytan somehow survived, making his way down to her lifeless body. Then, he disappeared. Rangers, aircraft, even drones, went out in search of him, knowing that the seven-month-old would not survive long on his own. When Tytan arrived at the Nursery after his rescue, he was wild-eyed and wary. Our Keepers sat with him in shifts, day and night. It turns out scratches are the way in with a young black rhino – ours soon stopped flinching at the contact and started leaning into it. Hands up – which rescue stories have stayed with you, even to this day?

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Meet Sulwe. You met her mum, Sonje, earlier this week. Sulwe was born wild on Christmas morning 2024, in the Kibwezi Forest just outside our Umani Springs Reintegration Unit. Sonje was once one of our most seriously wounded rescues – she arrived in 2012, nine months old, with a fractured leg – a victim of the poaching crisis. Thirteen years later, Sonje is wild, and Sulwe is the proof. She turned one in December. Earlier this year she tried to pull the tail of another wild-born calf, found out he was stronger than she expected, and ran back to her mother. Human or elephant, the kids all have to learn how to get along, it seems. Every calf like Sulwe is a bright light of hope for elephants. Meet some of the others, alive today because years ago we rescued their orphaned mothers:

Meet Sulwe. You met her mum, Sonje, earlier this week. Sulwe was born wild on Christmas morning 2024, in the Kibwezi Forest just outside our Umani Springs Reintegration Unit. Sonje was once one of our most seriously wounded rescues – she arrived in 2012, nine months old, with a fractured leg – a victim of the poaching crisis. Thirteen years later, Sonje is wild, and Sulwe is the proof. She turned one in December. Earlier this year she tried to pull the tail of another wild-born calf, found out he was stronger than she expected, and ran back to her mother. Human or elephant, the kids all have to learn how to get along, it seems. Every calf like Sulwe is a bright light of hope for elephants. Meet some of the others, alive today because years ago we rescued their orphaned mothers:

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Raising orphaned elephants takes a community – Keepers on the ground, and people like you thousands of miles away, united by the belief that every wild animal matters. From quiet bonding moments to milk feeds, night-time cuddles to mud baths and graduations, adopters ensure we have what it takes to remain by their sides at every stage. Find your orphan and begin play your part in an orphans’ story through an adoption:

Raising orphaned elephants takes a community – Keepers on the ground, and people like you thousands of miles away, united by the belief that every wild animal matters. From quiet bonding moments to milk feeds, night-time cuddles to mud baths and graduations, adopters ensure we have what it takes to remain by their sides at every stage. Find your orphan and begin play your part in an orphans’ story through an adoption:

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Four years ago this week, a group of ex-orphans arrived at our Ithumba stockades with something very small trailing behind them – a calf just days old, too weak to nurse, with no mother anywhere to be found. The ex-orphans had found him on their wild wanderings and brought him somewhere they knew help could be found. Today, Toto turns four years old. He is gentle, patient, and quietly confident – and still as devoted to his Keepers. Join us in wishing Toto a happy birthday in the comments, then watch his rescue story at:

Four years ago this week, a group of ex-orphans arrived at our Ithumba stockades with something very small trailing behind them – a calf just days old, too weak to nurse, with no mother anywhere to be found. The ex-orphans had found him on their wild wanderings and brought him somewhere they knew help could be found. Today, Toto turns four years old. He is gentle, patient, and quietly confident – and still as devoted to his Keepers. Join us in wishing Toto a happy birthday in the comments, then watch his rescue story at:

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This week's treatment in the Mara was an interesting one: A sizeable bull was spotted with a spear wound. To make matters more complicated, he was in musth, a testosterone-fuelled period in which bulls are particularly set on breeding. Hormone levels are high and bulls can be aggressive. Darting animals can present a risk - there's a 50% chance the patient can fall down on the 'wrong' side. That's exactly what happened here, but he was in the best hands: Using special straps and two Land Cruisers, the team carefully turned the bull, who weighed several tonnes, over, then set to work treating this likely victim of human-wildlife conflict. Post-op, we weren't sure how he would behave. But he spent quite some time gazing at the treatment party before heading off into the bush. Thanks to treatment from the SWT/KWS Mara Vet Unit, with assistance from the Olare Motorogi Conservancy team, he should make a full and speedy recovery. Our SWT/KWS Mobile Vet Units are an important part of our conservation footprint, providing emergency treatment to wildlife across Kenya. See more life-saving rescue missions:

This week's treatment in the Mara was an interesting one: A sizeable bull was spotted with a spear wound. To make matters more complicated, he was in musth, a testosterone-fuelled period in which bulls are particularly set on breeding. Hormone levels are high and bulls can be aggressive. Darting animals can present a risk - there's a 50% chance the patient can fall down on the 'wrong' side. That's exactly what happened here, but he was in the best hands: Using special straps and two Land Cruisers, the team carefully turned the bull, who weighed several tonnes, over, then set to work treating this likely victim of human-wildlife conflict. Post-op, we weren't sure how he would behave. But he spent quite some time gazing at the treatment party before heading off into the bush. Thanks to treatment from the SWT/KWS Mara Vet Unit, with assistance from the Olare Motorogi Conservancy team, he should make a full and speedy recovery. Our SWT/KWS Mobile Vet Units are an important part of our conservation footprint, providing emergency treatment to wildlife across Kenya. See more life-saving rescue missions:

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A little window into how deeply elephants love each other: Today, Kinyei was tired – and Kindani was worried! Seeing her best friend lying down, Kindani rushed over to check on her. After a thorough inspection, she was relieved to find nothing amiss; Kinyei was just having a midday nap. Orphaned as infants and rescued three months apart in 2018, Kindani and Kinyei have grown up side by side. Together with their adopted ‘little brother,’ Bondeni, they form an inseparable unit. These girls are sisters by circumstance, not birth, but they have become family in every sense of the word. Adopt Kinyei and discover her rescue story: Adopt Kindani and discover her rescue story:

A little window into how deeply elephants love each other: Today, Kinyei was tired – and Kindani was worried! Seeing her best friend lying down, Kindani rushed over to check on her. After a thorough inspection, she was relieved to find nothing amiss; Kinyei was just having a midday nap. Orphaned as infants and rescued three months apart in 2018, Kindani and Kinyei have grown up side by side. Together with their adopted ‘little brother,’ Bondeni, they form an inseparable unit. These girls are sisters by circumstance, not birth, but they have become family in every sense of the word. Adopt Kinyei and discover her rescue story: Adopt Kindani and discover her rescue story:

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The best part about being an elephant Keeper? The elephant snuggles are up there, sure. But watching an orphan that you have raised rejoin the wild, and then go on to start a family, is priceless. For our adopters, we hope the sentiment is just the same. Our foster family help fund the milk and specialist care the orphans need to survive and grow, and later help keep them safe in the wild too. Join the family and help us create new dynasties in the wild:

The best part about being an elephant Keeper? The elephant snuggles are up there, sure. But watching an orphan that you have raised rejoin the wild, and then go on to start a family, is priceless. For our adopters, we hope the sentiment is just the same. Our foster family help fund the milk and specialist care the orphans need to survive and grow, and later help keep them safe in the wild too. Join the family and help us create new dynasties in the wild:

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