Cheetah Conservation Botswana Archives - Safari West https://safariwest.com/tag/cheetah-conservation-botswana/ The Sonoma Serengeti Fri, 15 Mar 2024 16:33:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 Generation Conservation: Meet Mercedie https://safariwest.com/2016/01/generation-conservation-meet-mercedie/ Thu, 21 Jan 2016 11:50:13 +0000 https://safariwest.wpengine.com/?p=4154 Last month, we spotlighted young Teylana Jenkins, a conservation advocate and one of the youngest donors we’ve ever come across. To say we were excited to see such passion in...

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Last month, we spotlighted young Teylana Jenkins, a conservation advocate and one of the youngest donors we’ve ever come across. To say we were excited to see such passion in the up and coming generation is a tremendous understatement. As excited as we were about Teylana, we knew she couldn’t be the only one of her kind and amazingly, before we even published her story, another equally impressive young cheetah conservationist arrived on our doorstep.

In this months issue, we’d like to spotlight Mercedie, who came to Safari West with her family in late December. Like Teylana, young Mercedie is a cheetah fanatic and huge conservation advocate. Her love of cheetahs developed when she was only three years old and has grown with each passing year. A few years back, she came to Safari West and met Cheetah Conservation Fund founder and executive director, Dr. Laurie Marker. Around this same time, she began fundraising for cheetah conservation.

Cheetah Hero Merced

When Mercedie came to Safari West for this recent visit, she and her cousin A.J. experienced one of our Fast Cat Alley tours and got up close and personal with our cheetahs. With a huge grin on her face, Mercedie also presented a sizable donation to Megan and Marie of our Carnivore Department. The money she collected went by way of the Wildlife Conservation Network to Rebecca Klein at Cheetah Conservation Botswana.

Now, We here at Safari West applaud any young conservationist. In a world of diminishing ecosystems and increasingly endangered wildlife, the dedication of today’s youth is perhaps our greatest source of hope. We love to hear about the kids who aren’t waiting until adulthood to get to work; the kids who are making strides here and now toward saving what can’t wait to be saved. In addition, it goes without saying that underfunded conservation organizations around the world are ecstatic about every dollar they receive. All that aside, Mercedie is doing something beyond fundraising that has us truly excited.

Mercedie and her school friends have established a “Kitty Club”. No mere fan club, the terms of admission to Kitty Club include require researching a cat of your choice and presenting a poster or paper to the club membership. Mercedie and her club mates make and sell crafts to raise money. The funding Kitty Club brings in goes to the Barry R. Kirschner Wildlife Sanctuary in her hometown of Chico. More important than the fundraising here is the emphasis on education and research. These kids aren’t just trying to save something they find cute, they’re working to save something they understand. Responsibility, initiative, curiosity; these are traits that should be encouraged in all kids, but they are especially valuable in the world of conservation.

Thank you Mercedie, as partners in your work, we appreciate what you are doing and are truly excited to hear what projects you take on next.

At Safari West, it is our hope that we’ll continue to see this kind of commitment and dedication to conservation from the up and coming generation and if the visitors we’ve had in the last few months are any indicator, we surely will. If you or a youngster you know are die-hard rhino advocates, focused lemur-conservationists, or planet-savers of any type, send your story along to jpaddock@safariwest.com. We love hearing from you and are always on the lookout for another amazing story to spotlight!

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Meet Teyla! https://safariwest.com/2015/12/meet-teyla/ Tue, 01 Dec 2015 14:37:34 +0000 https://safariwest.wpengine.com/?p=4485 Cheetah Conservation Hero! Once upon a time zoos and wildlife parks existed mostly as venues to experience the mysterious and the fantastical. They were places where the behemoths and monsters...

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Cheetah Conservation Hero!

Cheetah Hero Teyla

Once upon a time zoos and wildlife parks existed mostly as venues to experience the mysterious and the fantastical. They were places where the behemoths and monsters of exotic lands could amaze sightseers of bygone days. Wonderful places to be sure, but places in which the creatures presented were displayed out of context with the real world they came from. Here and now, in the era of Youtube, the National Geographic Channel and Wild Kratts, things have changed. The eyes are still wide and the wonder is if anything more prominent than ever. What’s changed is that the animals are no longer seen as alien, exotic and unreal. Instead, we’ve become aware that they are fascinating, important, and deeply vulnerable beings who also happen to share this small blue planet with us. This shift in understanding is most apparent for our younger guests.

The kids who come visit Safari West each day often have a base-level of knowledge that is staggering in its breadth and surprisingly sophisticated. Our guides are out there talking about conservation to crowds of six and seven year olds who arrive here already comfortable talking about why rhino horn isn’t at all medicinal and how the deforestation of Madagascar is driving lemurs toward extinction. It’s fascinating. We’re living in a time when a word like “nerd”, once hurled as an insult, has instead evolved into something to aspire to. We’ve reached the era in which curious equals cool.

Recently, we at Safari West had the privilege of meeting a spectacular member of this youngest generation. We were visited by Teylana Jenkins and her family, who came here for cheetahs; to finally see them live and in the flesh. As we would later discover, young Teylana also had another goal in coming here; to donate her carefully saved money to cheetah conservation. Teyla is an incredible person and a strident conservation advocate. She is driven, productive, tenacious, and self-motivated. We should probably pause and take a moment to note that Teyla is also only six-years-old.

When Teyla was four, her mother Jennica Jenkins took her to a toy store where she gravitated toward a small, plastic cheetah figurine. The cheetah figurine quickly became one of her favorite toys and spawned an interest in all things cheetah. Her blossoming passion would soon lead Teyla to Wild Kratts, a wonderful and scientifically educational television show that is famous around Safari West for its well-informed young fans. One of the first things new safari guides around here learn is that Wild Kratts fans will show you up in a hurry if you’re not on your game.

Teyla’s passion for cheetahs accelerated with the celebration of her fifth birthday. Her party was cheetah themed and according to Mrs. Jenkins, every day since then her daughter has worn cheetah-print clothes. That summer, Teyla went to visit the Sacramento Zoo looking to see her favorite animal in real life. While Sacramento doesn’t currently house cheetahs, she did get to see their lions, jaguar and snow leopard and began to learn how to identify and differentiate the different big cats. More knowledgeable than ever and still focused on cheetahs, Teyla (under her parent’s supervision of course) took to the internet and the magic of YouTube.

Teyla’s mother told me about watching cheetah videos with her five-year-old daughter. Teyla would pause on occasion, thoughtful and pensive, and then ask her mom very somber questions. What is a poacher? What is endangered? Poaching, habitat loss, and conflict with farmers and livestock; these are just a few of the things cheetahs run up against in the wild and Teyla, suddenly confronted with this harsh reality, was understandably upset. In an effort to cheer her up, Teyla’s parents, Jennica and Russ began introducing her to the idea of conservation. Their initial exploring led them to the Cheetah Conservation Fund and the Wild Kratts Foundation. After some digging, they also discovered Safari West.

Originally, Teyla was going to visit us in September to meet real live cheetahs for the first time. It was a gift for her sixth birthday and though we didn’t know it, she was packing up her best cheetah clothing and all of her birthday card money for the trip. Unfortunately, the planned visit just happened to coincide with the now famous Valley Fire and when the Jenkins family got out here they found that all the hotels had filled with evacuees. They went home. Teyla, though disappointed, demonstrated characteristic maturity when she told her parents, “it’s okay. We can go see the cheetahs after the fire people go back home”.

As it turned out, the third time was the charm and Teyla finally got her wish in October. The Jenkins family came out to Safari West and went on one of our classic safari tours. Their guide Jessica, impressed by young Teyla, talked to the head of our Research, Education and Conservation department who then talked to the head of our Carnivore department and with the speed you’d expect from somebody with her title, “Cheetah Marie” came to meet our young conservation hero.

Cheetah Marie talked with Teyla and told her all about the cheetahs living at Safari West. Teyla, Jennica, Russ, and Marie visited for quite a while and to this day Marie gets a bit misty when Teyla’s name comes up. Why? Because at the close of their time together, Teyla presented Cheetah Marie with a small coin purse. Inside it, all the birthday and allowance money she’d been saving for cheetahs. After gratefully accepting, Cheetah Marie sent Teyla’s donation to the Wildlife Conservation Network who passed it along to our friend Rebecca Klein from Cheetah Botswana to help with the amazing work they do.

This newest generation currently coming into their own is amazing. They understand the interconnectedness of the world and its ecosystems in an intuitive way. Earlier generations, including the one writing our laws and making conservation a priority have done an excellent job educating the world and teaching it to care, but it’s this generation, the one growing up in the information age that will enact real change. They are passionate, well-informed and deeply curious about the world around them. As they go into the world in their twenties and thirties, these kids will take on global leadership roles. Amazingly, Teylana Jenkins has already begun to do this at six years old. This is one of the most hopeful signs imaginable and, though rare, Teyla’s not alone. There are other kids just like her out there and we at Safari West have the privilege of meeting some of them from time to time. We’re incredibly lucky to have people like Teyla fighting for this world and as she continues down the path she’s forging for herself, it’s comforting to know she’ll inspire a million more just like her.

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