In early December, a male bat weighing just 1 gram arrived at Cango Wildlife after being attacked by a cat and brought in by a concerned member of the public. At that weight, he fit easily into the palm of a hand. Fragile. Silent. Fighting for survival long before he reached our care. Whenever wildlife has contact with a cat, immediate veterinary care is essential. Cat saliva carries bacteria that can be...
How a Dog Shelter in South Africa Changed the Way These Future Vets See the World
There are moments in veterinary studies that go far beyond anatomy charts and clinical rotations - moments that shape not only careers, but worldviews. For a group of American pre-vet students travelling abroad through the Loop Abroad programme, one of those moments happened not in a lecture hall or a lab, but at a modest dog shelter tucked away in the heart of South Africa.
With wagging tails, dusty paws, and eyes full of hope, the shelter dogs greeted the students not with fear or hesitation, but with raw, unfiltered affection. And in return, the students gave what the animals craved most: time, attention, and the simplest acts of kindness.
“The whole experience was emotional. These dogs are so incredibly friendly, despite their rough pasts. It’s humbling.”
The visit was eye-opening. Many of the dogs had been abandoned, surrendered, or rescued from neglect, and yet their spirit remained unbroken. They approached the students with a level of trust and excitement that took many by surprise. For some students, the bond formed in just a matter of minutes.
“I didn’t expect to fall in love with them so fast. One minute I was scratching behind some ears, and the next I was trying not to cry when it was time to go.”
The facility itself may not have matched the scale or polish of shelters back in the United States, but it carried something else entirely - a sense of grit, compassion, and resilience that transcended borders.
“The space was simple but clean. You could tell the people here care deeply. You feel it in how the animals respond to them.”
For many of the students, this experience lit a spark - not just of empathy, but of advocacy. It reframed their understanding of animal welfare work. They realised that compassion is a universal language, and that animal care doesn’t require perfection - it requires presence.
“This trip reminded me that compassion doesn’t need borders. No matter where you are, animals need voices. They need action.”
Though the students came to learn, they left with something far more profound - a deeper appreciation for the human–animal bond and the urgent need for ethical, accessible animal care everywhere.
As they packed up and returned to their host facility, their shoes were covered in dust, but their hearts were undeniably full. Many expressed renewed commitment to supporting their own communities, volunteering more often, and never underestimating the impact of simply showing up.
In just a few hours, they didn’t just interact with shelter dogs. They connected with beings who needed to be seen, and for a brief but beautiful time, they truly were.
Further Reading
On the first of February, Monique and Rouan Engelbrecht chose to celebrate one of life’s most meaningful milestones in a way that reflected their values. They hosted a conservation conscious gender reveal at Cango Wildlife.
At Cango Wildlife, conservation isn’t something we only talk about; it’s something we’re constantly trying to refine, improve, and live out in practical ways. That includes looking inward: examining how we manage our own environmental footprint, how we treat and restore the land we steward, and how we align our practices with the bigger global sustainability framework - from South Africa’s climate goals to the guiding principles of UN-aligned sustainability and the...










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