Dayton Daily News

» Cheetah conservati­on:

Warren County couple have set aside 10,000 acres to save cheetahs.

- By Lawrence Budd Staff Writer

Learn why Carl and Cathryn Hilker have spent decades saving wild cats from extinction from their Warren County home,

TURTLECREE­K TWP., WARREN — A Warren County COUNTY man who joined recent efforts to protect a beaver in Mason also played a key role in establishi­ng a 28,000-acre safe haven for cheetahs in Africa.

Last year, Carl Hilker and his wife, Cathryn, sold a 10,000-acre farm in Namibia, capping several decades of effort devoted to saving the wild cats from extinction through initiative­s including the Cheetah Conservati­on Fund (CCF).

The sale of the last piece of the Namibian property was part of plans to secure both the land for cheetah

conservati­on and the Hilkers’ legacy, Carl Hilker said last week.

“We’re just happy,” said Hilker, 80. “It’s time to let go.”

Earlier this year, people rallying against eradicatio­n of a beaver living in a lake at Mason’s Pine Hill Lake Park enlisted Hilker in hopes of also winning support from his wife, who created the Cat Ambassador Program at the Cincinnati Zoo.

“They call her the Cat Lady,” Tom Walker of Mason said. “I thought maybe she could convince the zoo to put it (the beaver) on their wetland.”

Ohio law prohibits such a relocation, and Mason continues to work for a solution.

Cheetah conservati­on

For decades, the Hilkers, who live near the Butler-Warren county line, were central characters in cheetah conservati­on.

Since the 1980s, Cathryn Hilker promoted the welfare of captive and wild cheetahs, as well as other big cats.

She gained recognitio­n by taking big cats, including a cheetah named Angel, to events around the region and the world, and establishe­d the Angel Fund to support cheetah conservati­on.

“She was clairvoyan­t with animals,” Carl Hilker said. “She could take wild animals out in public.”

Cathryn Hilker is now 83.

In 1989, at an event in Washington D.C., she met Laurie Marker, founder of CCF, beginning a relationsh­ip that led to collaborat­ions on cheetah conservati­on and the establishm­ent and expansion of the nonprofit’s holdings.

“Cathryn is the icon of the Cincinnati Zoo,” Marker said in a phone call from Indianapol­is.

Carl Hilker said he flew to Africa in 1994 with the down payment for the Cheetah Conservati­on Fund’s first land and current headquarte­rs in Otjiwarong­o, Namibia. He later purchased the larger farm, which he sold last year to the World Wildlife fund Namibia for CCF.

“We now had the whole place locked up,” he said.

Today these lands comprise about a quarter of the 100,000 acres now held by CCF, Marker said.

In 2000, CCF dedicated an education center at the field headquarte­rs in the Hilkers’ names. Among those on hand was Namibian President Sam Nujoma.

That same year, Nujoma gave 10 orphaned cheetahs being held at CCF’s sanctuary to the U.S., four of which then helped start the Cincinnati Zoo’s breeding center in Clermont County. The zoo plans to move this facility to Warren County this year.

From its start in a borrowed farmhouse, the CCF has developed a global reach, one Marker is currently working to expand with a speaking tour also celebratin­g the organizati­on’s 25th anniversar­y in July.

In addition to public relations, CCF focuses on minimizing conflicts between cheetahs and humans. It also conducts research and collaborat­es with other conservati­on groups in Zimbabwe, Iran and other countries and trains Namibians in farming techniques.

Cheetahs are Africa’s most endangered big cats, with an estimated 10,000 remaining in the wild. Despite conservati­on efforts, they are still headed toward extinction, due to habitat loss, illegal poaching and human-wildlife conflicts, Marker said.

“Cheetahs don’t do very well in captivity,” Carl Hilker added. “The current state is precarious.”

Locally, CCF works with the Cincinnati Zoo and Miami University to spread the word.

“They say if you can save a cheetah, you can save anything,” said Carl Hilker, a pilot also known for a variety of aviation activities.

Moving on

Walker remembered Carl Hilker regaling members of the Neutrons flying club at the Blue Ash Airport with stories of island hopping a refurbishe­d DC-3 back from Guyana after the proprietor­s of the Hamilton Airport traded helicopter parts to the Guyanese government for the plane.

In Dayton, Hilker was known for piloting hot air balloons at Dayton Internatio­nal Air Shows and firing a cannon to start half marathons.

“All the car alarms in downtown Dayton went off,” he recalled.

Carl Hilker remains on the CCF board but has refocused his efforts on proving a tree on CCF land is the oldest in the world. Last week he was reviewing informatio­n about carbon dating.

“I wish I was just getting out of grad school,” he said. “This is probably the last significan­t thing I can do in my life.”

 ?? NICK GRAHAM / STAFF ?? Carl and Cathryn Hilker of TurtleCree­k Twp. are playing a key role in starting a haven for cheetahs in Namibia. Their efforts on behalf of the cheetah have lasted several decades.
NICK GRAHAM / STAFF Carl and Cathryn Hilker of TurtleCree­k Twp. are playing a key role in starting a haven for cheetahs in Namibia. Their efforts on behalf of the cheetah have lasted several decades.
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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Laurie Marker, founder of the Cheetah Conservati­on Fund, shares Carl and Cathryn Hilker’s passion for preserverv­ation. This cheetah is from the Cincinnati Zoo.
CONTRIBUTE­D Laurie Marker, founder of the Cheetah Conservati­on Fund, shares Carl and Cathryn Hilker’s passion for preserverv­ation. This cheetah is from the Cincinnati Zoo.

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