Conservation in the Naboisho Conservancy
Kenya

Conservation in the Naboisho Conservancy

Mara Naboisho

is one of several private areas

set up to protect the Maasai Mara

is one of several private areas set up to protect the Maasai Mara
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Conservation in the Naboisho Conservancy

an elegant solution to a conservation crisis

The Maasai Mara National Reserve only covers around half of the Mara ecosystem, the remainder is made up of land owned by the local Maasai people.

During the general election campaign of 2010, one of the candidates came up with the vote-winning wheeze of dividing up this communal land into small parcels for private ownership. It was not long before these new landowners started to sell their plots off to foreigners for holiday homes or to build their own homesteads and lodges. In other words the whole area had suddenly come under serious and immediate threat from development.

From around 2012 a number of pioneering conservationists recognised the problem and came up with an innovative solution. After years of complex negotiations with the many Maasai landowners, they were eventually able to amalgamate the many small parcels of land into conservancies.

The deal was that, in return for stopping all development and keeping their domestic herds out of large areas, the local people would be compensated by receiving a significant share of the tourism revenues.

The safari operators then go to construct a range of camps and lodges, in the hope that enough guests could be tempted into these areas to provide enough revenue to hold up their end of the deal.

The conservancies have had differing degrees of success. Core areas like Mara Olare Motorogi, Mara North and Mara Naboisho have proved a great success, the landscapes have been secured for wildlife. Other more peripheral areas are still struggling to keep up their end of the bargain and continue to experience human encroachment.

Your stay on one of these conservancies represents a very real and significant contribution to these conservation efforts. Not only will you benefit from the low visitor traffic and unusually broad range of safari activities, but you will do so in the certain knowledge that your money has been spent in a very positive direction.

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Traffic avoidance in the Mara Naboisho Conservancy

traffic is not a significant issue in the conservancy

Being a private conservancy, there should be very little in the way of traffic issues here in Mara Naboisho. We would anticipate only bumping into the occasional vehicle when out on safari, usually stopping for a chat along the way, which is nice.

However if you wander out of the area, you can very quickly get snagged in the horrible traffic around the Sekenani and Talek entrances into the main reserve, as well as down at the migration river crossings.

Better to stay put and enjoy the blissful peace of this lovely area.

It is perhaps worth mentioning that you might encounter another type of traffic in the Naboisho area, namely local Maasai people and their domestic stock. Although the areas for wildlife and herds are, in theory, well defined and separated, these boundaries can become blurred, especially during very dry periods when competition for grazing and water becomes more intense.

Although it is easy to be sympathetic to the Maasai under these circumstances, it is perhaps more supportive to conservation efforts if you complain publicly about such incidents. It’s very important that a balance is maintained in these areas, otherwise the herds will continue to grow and it will be the wildlife that dies off during the long dry season.

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