Two travellers and their rescue dogs arrived in a truck the size of a tiny home. A day later, they were in our kitchens, spending time with our animals and sharing an unforgettable eye to eye moment with Jason the Nile Crocodile. Meet Susi and Kim. For most of their adult lives, their story looked familiar. Susi ran a large veterinary practice. She managed a team, handled emergencies and often slept four...
Work. Explore. Grow
Wild Animal Volunteers arrive with purpose. Their days begin with structure and intention as they join the team for morning duties. They help prepare specialised diets, assist with habitat care, support Animal Caregivers, and take part in the routines that keep our facility running smoothly. Every task is practical. Every action matters. Each moment contributes directly to animal welfare.
The learning is steady and hands-on. Volunteers observe behaviour, practice safe handling techniques under supervision, assist during enrichment sessions, and gain insight into ethical animal care. They develop confidence through guidance and repetition. They form meaningful connections with the animals they help care for and with the staff who mentor them.
When the weekend arrives, the rhythm shifts. Volunteers use their off days to explore the region that surrounds us - a landscape rich with wildlife, culture, and adventure. Some spend their time on horseback in the Klein Karoo, enjoying slow, scenic routes through open terrain. Others join guided game drives, learning more about the species that inspire their conservation journey.
Some choose adventure with dust and speed, taking on quad-biking trails that offer laughter and release after a full week of work. Others head to the coast to experience seal dives, tidal pools, coastal walks, and ocean photography. These excursions create a balance between responsibility and exploration.
These shared experiences build strong bonds. Volunteers arrive as strangers. They become a team. They support one another during busy days, new tasks, and weekend adventures. When they return home, they leave with friendships, stories, and a deeper understanding of wildlife care.
Their work matters. It strengthens our welfare programmes. It supports our staff. It reinforces ethical conservation. And the time they spend exploring matters too. It keeps them motivated. It keeps them inspired. It reminds them that conservation is not only routine - it is connection, growth, and purpose.
The Wild Animal Volunteers work with intention. They learn with heart. And they leave South Africa with memories and skills that last far beyond their stay.
They also leave with something else - friendships that begin quietly and grow quickly. Volunteers start their journey as strangers. They share tasks, challenges, early mornings, and weekend adventures. By the end, the goodbyes are the hardest part.
Many return in the years that follow, often bringing along the friends they met here. Those bonds become part of the programme’s story. They reflect the connection, trust, and shared purpose that define the WAV experience.
Further Reading
Jade and Levinia met in the most unexpected way. Both attended the same church - he played the organ, and she was trying to leave early, and found her car blocked in by his. While he played, she waited. When she finally drove off, neither imagined that moment would change their lives.
A young pangolin is alive today because a chain of people acted fast, paid attention and refused to look away. Her rescue, which took place recently near Beaufort West, shines a light on a growing crisis in South Africa and across the world: wildlife trafficking and the illegal pet trade. During a routine roadblock, SAPS officers searched a vehicle and found her hidden in a box in the boot. She had been...









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