We operate a single website, with regions serving tailored fundraising, giving and shopping content. We use your device’s IP address to find the most appropriate region for you to get the most out of our website. If you would like to switch to another region, for content or currency reasons, you can do so at any time.
Global
Our Global region presents an online merchandise store, and fundraising and giving options, appropriate for people living all over the world.
Currency: United States Dollar
US
Our US region presents an online merchandise store, tailored fundraising information, and donation options that are particularly pertinent to people in the United States of America.
Our UK region presents an online merchandise store, tailored fundraising information, and donation options, including Gift Aid, that are specific to people in the United Kingdom.
Currency: British Pound
Europe
Our Europe region is best suited to those living in the Eurozone. All amounts for adoptions, donations, and goods in our online shop (orders shipped from UK) are displayed in Euros.
Currency: Euro
Please note that all adoptions and wishlist items are processed centrally by the Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, irrespective of region. Switching between regions will remove any items in your basket.
At 6 a.m. during the morning of the 18th August, 2009, community folk from Rumuruti spotted a tiny baby elephant stuck in the mud in a swampy area of the drying Pesi river. There were no other elephants in the area, so the community alerted the Kenyan Wildlife Service who came to rescue the tiny newborn calf at 7 a.m., and alerted the Trust that yet another Rescue was required.
Pesi's Story
At 6 a.m. during the morning of the 18th August, 2009, community folk from Rumuruti spotted a tiny baby elephant stuck in the mud in a swampy area of the drying Pesi river. There were no other elephants in the area, so the community alerted the Kenyan Wildlife Service who came to rescue the tiny newborn calf at 7 a.m., and alerted the Trust that yet another Rescue was required.
The calf was back in the Nairobi Nursery by noon, a tiny newborn baby bull, whose umbilicus was still moist and whose ears were petal pink and soft, indicative the he was brand new and might not have even suckled his elephant mother to benefit from her first colustrum milk which imparts the antibodies a baby needs to trigger the immune system for survival.
Very fortunately, we still had a stock of frozen Plasma spun from the blood of a healthy Mara Bull elephant. This infused into the calf's ear vein, the vital life support a newborn elephant needs for even a chance of survival. He is an enchanting and very endearing miniature who captures the hearts of all who meet him. Shaded by an umbrella to protect his baby ears and body from sunburn, and still fed on demand, he spends his days with his Keepers and some of the other babies near the Elephant Stables, still too young and fragile to be with all the others. His rescue brings the number in the Nairobi Nursery to 25, now that Tassia and Taveta have been sent to join Lesanju's group at the Voi Rehabilitation Centre to free up Nursery space for others that are bound to need help during this extremely challenging year.