Funding Future Adventure
THE MASAI MARA National Reserve’s diversity of wildlife draws more than 150,000 tourists each year, providing livelihoods for thousands of local Kenyans and preserving millions of wild animals. Robust populations of lions, leopards, cheetahs and elephants make their home here, and the Masai Mara serves as the staging point of the annual “Great Migration” of wildebeests, zebras and gazelles to the Serengeti. But unfortunately, when it comes to the wildlife not everybody comes to the reserve with the best intentions.
Since 1999, the Anne K. Taylor Fund’s “Fighting Poaching to Preserve Wildlife” project has fought to make poaching in the Masai Mara a most un-profitable and high-risk venture by applying legal pressure on poachers when they’re caught, dismantling and removing their traps, rescuing live animals that are already ensnared, and putting a stop to deforestation of habitat for charcoal production. The fund also supports local educational programs designed to promote an environmentally sustainable and tourism-friendly economy.
Last November, the Anne K. Taylor Fund was one of five grant recipients of the Adventure Travel Conservation Fund (ATCF), a non-profit that allocates a $100,000 annual pot to projects that protect the cultural and natural resources that underpin the adventure tourism industry.