It is very important for African Travels to have an eye for animal welfare and the responsible handling of animals during your travels. This is an integral part of our sustainable tourism policy. With your trip you can play a positive role in this: for example, if you visit a national park, you support wild animals and help maintain biodiversity. But tourism can also have a negative impact on animal welfare. Think of captive wildlife activities, which are set up especially for tourists, and the wildlife trade that is often associated with this.
The extremes of the spectrum are clear: spotting wildlife is fine, but watching an elephant show is not done. African Travels will not send you to accommodations where we know they have captive animals on the property with the wrong intentions. Rehabilitation projects with lodges/campsites on site are different.
We think it’s okay to visit Sheldrick Wildlife Orphanage in Nairobi because the animals are in a rehabilitation project where the animals get enough rest (tourists are only allowed to visit once a day for an hour). Visiting Buffelsdrift in Oudtshoorn where you can have your picture taken with elephants (children love it) is an excursion that African Travels does not promote at all.
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