
The Goddesses, Butterflies, Rivers and Winds - names of the seventy odd families you could meet in Samburu, along with their impressive matriarchs, Athena, Monarch, Euphrates, and Mistral.
Thanks to the long-term research of our conservation partner, Save The Elephants - who continuously trains our guides - you'll get to know Samburu's enigmatic elephants as 'persons', diving into their triumphs and tragedies, and learning how they negotiate the many challenges of life in a mercurial landscape.
The intimacy of our encounters with these special free-roaming elephants - that have come to know and trust us over years of consistent, gentle interactions - is quite remarkable.
Welcoming us into the heart of their herds, we delight in the unadulterated pleasure of watching the secrets of their lives unfold in unhurried elephant-time, in a completely relaxed manner. The more we learn about this fascinating society, the clearer it becomes that 'family' is the single most important unit for their survival.
An expansive memory is both enviable and essential for elephant survival. As the primary repositories of knowledge, Matriarchs glean wisdom as calves or through hard-won experience that helps guide their families through times of hardship or uncertainty. Remembering the location of distant waterholes, good pasture, safe migration routes through dangerous landscapes, or even the audial and olfactory imprint of other elephants, can be matters of life and death.
No two elephants are the same. Each individual has its own unique character and personality. Some are bold and curious, others are cautious and reserved, while a few can even be grudge-holding or taciturn. These traits shape how individuals interact within and between families, build longterm friendships, define leadership roles and even found dynasties.
Elephants are ecosystem engineers. By feeding, digging, felling trees or trampling vegetation, they clear boulevards, open up impenetrable scrubland, disperse seeds, plant forests, and dig down to water giving acces to all other species. The health of landscapes are closely tied to the presence or absence of elephants.