Donate

With no government funding, Umoya Khulula is entirely dependent on donations from kind people like you.

Donate to Us!

With no government funding, Umoya Khulula is entirely dependent on donations from kind people like you. Your donations are used to feed rescued wild animals and provide life-saving medical care. Without such generosity, we simply cannot care for the variety of wildlife that come through our doors every year.

However much you choose to donate, you can be sure that Umoya Khulula will use your gift in the most efficient and effective way to help animals in most need.  We are incredibly grateful for the support of our donors and collaborating partners – past and present – who have made our work possible. A huge thanks to all the countless individuals who support us.

Other Ways to Help

Donate to Us!

With no government funding, Umoya Khulula is entirely dependent on donations from kind people like you. Your donations are used to feed rescued wild animals and provide life-saving medical care. Without such generosity, we simply cannot care for the variety of wildlife that come through our doors every year.

However much you choose to donate, you can be sure that Umoya Khulula will use your gift in the most efficient and effective way to help animals in most need.  We are incredibly grateful for the support of our donors and collaborating partners – past and present – who have made our work possible. A huge thanks to all the countless individuals who support us.

Vounteer with Us

Umoya Khulula Wildlife Centre offers a once in a lifetime volunteer experience. Our paid-for volunteer programme is designed to give volunteers a genuine understanding of the rescue, rehabilitation, rewilding, and release processes, for a variety of wild animals.

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Our Work

As a private non-profit, we strive to bring awareness and sound rehabilitative care to animal’s that have suffered from poaching, snaring, the illegal pet trade, black market trafficking or human wildlife conflicts.

Poaching

Poaching

Poaching is the illegal hunting, capturing, and often killing of wild animals. It is the largest direct threat to the future of many of the world’s most threatened species, second only to habitat destruction in overall threats against species survival.

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Snaring

Snaring

A snare is a long piece of wire with a loop at the end that is attached to a stationary object, such as a tree or log. The loop of wire in intended to catch the animal by the neck or leg.

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Wildlife are NOT Pets

Wildlife are NOT Pets

It is illegal to keep any indigenous wild animal as a pet in South Africa. Baby wild animals can be irresistibly adorable — until the cuddly baby becomes bigger and stronger than ever imagined.

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Wildlife Trafficking

Wildlife Trafficking

Wildlife trafficking involves the illegal trade, smuggling, poaching, capture, or collection of protected animal species, and affects one third of all the world’s wildlife species.

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Human Wildlife Conflict

Human Wildlife Conflict

Human-wildlife conflict occurs when animals pose a direct and repeating threat to the livelihood or safety of people, leading to the persecution of that species.

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