Nowadays, we are increasingly aware of the importance of protecting the environment and enjoying it in the most ecologically sound possible manner. We, at Campi ya Kanzi, are proud to be among the most environmentally friendly camps in all of Africa (so quoted by Adventure Magazine, National Geographic magazine, USA Today).
To properly and adequately assist the local community, we have founded the Maasai Wilderness Conservation Trust, which employs nearly 200 local people; runs conservation, education and health programs; and invests US$1,000,000 per year into the community.
We help and assist the Maasai community to implement
sustainable ways to manage their land and their resources. We
organize workshop and trips to enable the Maasai community to
better protect their wilderness. Schools courses run by
teachers and Maasai elders address the need to understand the
delicate balance of the environment and how the entire
community can play a role protecting it.
If you have some old school text books for primary school
please bring them with you, it will certainly help
us.
The Trust we created is sustained by our guests, through the
$100 conservation fee they contribute to it for each day spent
with us.
Your money contributes to:
We are proud to say that we have achieved meaningful results in protecting both the wilderness and the wildlife, working handin-hand with the Maasai.

Cartier, through Edward Norton, President of the
Maasai Wilderness Conservation Fund, has
declared its LOVE to the Maasai Wilderness Conservation
Trust.
Thanks to this LOVE Campaign we have started, in 2007, our Predator Compensation Program (Simba Project).
We are now able to compensate to the Maasai
community for livestock losses inflicted by lions and other
predators. This is the only way to protect the lives of the
lions. Join Cartier and help us: for every green bracelet sold,
Cartier is donating $150. You will help the lions and the
Maasai to co-exist peacefully together. Do you know that there
are more polar bears (24,000 to 30,000 is the number
drawing most consensus) than lions? And that the lion
population in Africa was estimated in 100,000 lions just ten
years ago, in 23,000 four years ago and in 18,000 two years
ago?! Act now if you want your kids to see wild lion in
Africa!
Our lion population, since the beginning of the Simba Project,
has increased more than 300%!

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