OL PEJETA CONSERVANCY is a 90,000 acre wildlife
conservancy situated between the foot hills of the Aberdares and the magnificent
snowcapped Mount Kenya.
Ol Pejeta Conservancy boasts an astounding variety of animals including
the non-indigenous chimpanzees and the big 5 (the endangered black rhino,
leopard, elephant, buffalo and lion).
The combination of amazing wildlife and stunning views across the open
plains of Ol Pejeta guarantees an unforgettable safari experience.
During the colonial era, the Laikipia Plateau was utilized as an extensive
cattle ranching area. Lacking the rainfall required to successfully
cultivate crops, cattle ranching was seen as the next best way to utilize
the land. In those days wildlife was perceived as having little or no
value to landowners.
Ol Pejeta’s past is filled with many colourful characters.
John & Jane Kenyon took over the management of Ol Pejeta
in 1949 when it was owned by Lord Delamere and together they
spent the next 15 years putting their lives and souls into the development
of the ranch.
When John first took on Ol Pejeta he was joined by a school friend
named Marcus Wickham Boynton. Together they took on the challenge
of organizing the then 57,000 acre ranch into a successful beef producing
company. Over the next few years they successfully expanded the farm
to cover an estimated 90,000 acres.
Quotes Jane Kenyon: “Cattle and wildlife were not considered a
healthy match. If you were a farmer you were a farmer, you took the
rough with the smooth, your goals were to have a good herd, with good
births and low deaths and wildlife was not part of that equation”
John and Jane left Ol Pejeta in 1958, returning in 1959 for a further
ten years before finally retiring to run their own cattle ranch to the
north.
Since that period the conservancy has had a number of owners, all entrepreneurs
in their own right. They included John Kenyon’s old school-friend
Marcus Wickham Boynton, notorious for occasionally shooting cattle “he
didn’t like the look of”.
Over time cattle ranching became less and less profitable. Increasingly
elephant populations that previously used the ranch as a transit area
from the north to Mount Kenya and the Aberdares were forced to take
up permanent residence on the property. As a result the fences required
to maximize cattle productivity were destroyed, becoming impossible
to maintain cost-effectively.
Consequently, in the face of declining wildlife populations elsewhere
and as a means to effectively utilize the land, the recent past has
seen increasing emphasis placed upon wildlife conservation.
In 1988, the Sweetwaters Game Reserve(24,000 acres) was opened by another
of Ol Pejeta’s previous owners, Lonrho Africa. Primarily started
as a sanctuary for the endangered black rhino, wildlife populations
(including the “Big Five”) have steadily increased since that
time.
The Sweetwaters Chimpanzee Sanctuary opened in 1993. Lonrho
Africa, the Kenya Wildlife Services (KWS) and the Jane Goodall Institute
(JGI) established a facility to receive and provide sanctuary and housing
to an original group of 3 chimps orphaned at a young age by the bush-meat
trade. With the evacuation of the JGI facility in Bujumbura due to civil
war breaking out in Burundi, the chimps were brought to Sweetwaters.
In 1995, 9 older chimpanzees arrived, followed at the beginning of 1996
by 10 younger chimpanzees.
The Sanctuary is partitioned into two parts, with the river acting
as a natural border between the two groups. The eastern side of the
sanctuary is 96 acres and home to the older group while the western
side is 151 acres and home to the younger group. The sole objective
of the sanctuary is to provide a safe, secure and permanent refuge for
theses chimpanzees in an environment that is as natural as possible.
Owing to the ongoing destruction of the West African rainforest and
continued demand for bush-meat, Sweetwaters is compelled to continue
accepting new orphaned and abused chimpanzees. The sanctuary now holds
40 chimpanzees with 16 fully qualified staff taking care of them day
and night.
In 2004 the reserve was purchased by Fauna and Flora International,
a UK based conservation organization. The Sweetwaters game reserve
has now been extended to encompass the entire ranching area to create
the “Ol Pejeta Conservancy”, approximately 90,000 acres in
extent. This has created the largest black rhino sanctuary in East Africa,
with the aim of generating profit from wildlife tourism and complementary
activities (including cattle) for reinvestment into community development
in the local area.
SAFARI ACCOMMODATION IN OL PEJETA CONSERVANCY
Porini Rhino
Camp in Ol Pejeta Conservancy
Sweetwaters Tented Camp
Ol Pejeta House
SAFARI ITINERARIES INCLUDING AMBOSELI
2 or 3 night
air safaris to Ol Pejeta
PORINI
EQUATOR SAFARI : 4 to 6 nights safaris combining Amboseli
& Ol Pejeta
PORINI
BIG FIVE SAFARI: 4 to 6 nights safaris combining Ol Pejeta &
Mara
PORINI
WILDERNESS EXPERIENCE: 6 to 9 night safaris: combining Amboseli,
Ol Pejeta and Mara
PORINI
BIRDS & BIG GAME SAFARI : 8 to 12 night safaris: combining
all 4 Porini Camps in Amboseli, Ol Pejeta and Mara