
News Updates
In Partnership with the Community
No matter how much progress we make with the dogs, itβs no use if we work in isolation from the surrounding communities. In 2020 and in 2021 we had a mutually beneficial and successful operation in collaboration with the Mabale Community Anti-poaching Volunteers. This year, we got funding to engage the Mabale Community Anti-Poaching Unit volunteers for another six months. Keeping our foot on the pedal by having and maintaining a heavy presence on the ground.
Mabale Community Anti-Poaching Unit Volunteers
No matter how much progress we make with the dogs, itβs no use if we work in isolation from the surrounding communities. In 2020 and in 2021 we had a mutually beneficial and successful operation in collaboration with the Mabale Community Anti-Poaching Unit (MCAPU) This year, we have again got funding to engage the MCAPU for another six months. Keeping our foot on the pedal, so to speak, by having and maintaining a solid presence on the ground.
In 2020, we saw an escalation of poaching activities in the areas bordering Hwange National Park due to hardships caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. We formally engaged the 45-strong MCAPU, mainly women, whose children benefit most from our Childrenβs Bush Camp. We deployed the MCAPU in areas outside their community to assist our 16-strong professional Anti Poaching Unit. We gave them a daily stipend for these patrols to support their families. This collaboration resulted in a record +5000 snares being recovered in three months, more than double the average number of snares collected annually.
In 2021, thanks to your generous support, we again engaged the MCAPU for six months. We managed to maintain a presence and pressure in the field, which reduced poaching activity. As a result, only 2000 snares were collected. The MCAPU's life-saving work provided a blanket of protection for all wildlife in the area. The stipend they received significantly boosted the local economy at a time when opportunities were scarce from the impacts of lockdowns due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
It is worth noting that many communities in our core operating area are replicating the efforts of the Mabale Community and making their villages safe for livestock and wildlife. These communities living on the edge of Hwange National Park are prone to human-wildlife conflict incidents. Sianyanga community is the latest to show interest and set up a voluntary community anti-poaching unit.
PDC Anti-Poaching Unit Manager Enock Zulu Addresses Community Volunteers
We havenβt been spared from the escalating costs of operations due to fuel price increases. A huge financial backing is needed to do the work we do. We were very pleased and grateful to receive 296 food ration for our Anti-Poaching scouts from the French Embassy in Zimbabwe. The work at hand is still daunting, we continue to call for increased support for us to continue with this critical and life-saving work not only for us but for the generation to come.
Local Kids Excel: Wildlife and Environment Quiz Competition
Beyond our flagship Iganyana Children's Bush Camp that teaches conservation concepts to kids from surrounding communities, we have created Conservation Clubs and run Conservation Education Quiz competitions in schools. The aim is to keep the kids connected to conservation education even after they have left the Bush Camp.
Kids During a Computer Lesson at Iganyana Childrenβs Bush Camp
The greatest threat to painted dogs isnβt from large predators or other natural causesβitβs from humans. Because of this, we put a lot of energy into working with local communities, farmers, and children to improve the perception and awareness of the painted dogs. Beyond our flagship Iganyana Children's Bush Camp, which teaches conservation concepts to kids from surrounding communities, we have created Conservation Clubs and run Conservation Education Quiz competitions in schools. The aim is to keep the kids connected to conservation education even after they have left the Bush Camp.
In the period under review, PDC conducted cluster and district wildlife and environment quiz competitions. Ndangababi Primary School and Mazwa Primary School came 1st and 2nd in the district competition finals respectively. PDC will be sponsoring these two local schools to represent the Hwange district in the regional competitions that will be held in the second largest city in Zimbabwe, Bulawayo, in October 2022.
St Francis Primary School (Dete), Makwandara Primary School, Chezhou Primary School, Ndangababi Primary School (Cross Dete), Mabale Primary School and Mazwa Primary School from Mazwa, battled out their knowledge of wildlife and their environment at Miombo Safaris Lodge in Dete.
The Iganyana Children's Bush Camp imparts critical wildlife and environmental education to local kids giving them the confidence and ability to compete with some of the elite schools in the cities. For some kids, this will be the first time they leave their rural homes to visit a city. We take pride in the support you give us, which enables us to avail opportunities to the local people. In turn, it enhances their appreciation of the wildlife around them and creates an environment where painted dogs and other wildlife can thrive.
Special thanks to the following: Miombo Safaris for generously offering the venue for the competition, all the kids who participated, all the schools and teachers for taking their time to coach the kids for the competition, the Iganyana Children's Bush Camp staff, and last but not least to Ashleigh Moore from Tusk as our guest of honour and sending a critical message about how we should "...look after it (nature) for the future..."
Painted Dog Conservation partners Wild and Free Foundation
Painted Cog Conservation (PDC) and Wild and Free Foundation (WFF) have partnered to support conservation through sport, sponsoring the Iganyana Football League. Wild and Free Foundation (WFF) is a non-profit organization based in the United States and South Africa with a mission to empower youth and communities living around the national parks and wildlife reserves in Africa through sport and economic opportunities to reduce their dependence on poaching.
Painted Dog Conservation (PDC) and Wild and Free Foundation (WFF) have partnered to support conservation through sport, sponsoring the Iganyana Football League. Wild and Free Foundation (WFF) is a non-profit organization based in the United States and South Africa with a mission to empower youth and communities living around the national parks and wildlife reserves in Africa through sport and economic opportunities to reduce their dependence on poaching.
For over 15 years now, PDC has been sponsoring the local football league - Iganyana Football League β to reach out to the youth about conservation, keeping them engaged and away from illegal activities in the wilderness, e.g. poaching. Over the years, the league yielded significant results in reporting poaching activities, reporting painted dog sightings and supporting community-based initiatives such as clean-up campaigns and borehole repairs.
The PDC WFF partnership couldn't have come at any better time than now. To reflect this partnership, the league will now assume a new name, 'Rhino Cup Champions League Zimbabwe β Iganyana Division' to reflect this partnership.
Rhino Cup Champions League (RCCL) is the brainchild of WFF. WFF successfully implemented the Rhino Cup Champions League in Mozambique in 2017 with positive results such as reduced rhino poaching. Boredom, idleness, and poverty are some of the contributing factors to becoming a poacher. RCCL Zimbabwe addresses these factors by supporting and sponsoring the sports communities love - football - helping save wildlife and people.
Soccer Kit and Equipment Handover Ceremony
Under this new partnership, we distributed WFF Germany-sourced soccer kits and equipment on the 2nd of July 2022 to all 20 community-based teams in the league. The local chief, Chief Dingani-Nelukoba, who is also the Vice-Chairman of the PDC Board of Trustees, Col K Mhlophe from the national football governing board Zimbabwe Football Association (ZIFA), Zimbabwe women's national team coach Sithetheliwe' Kwinji 15' Sibanda, WFF's Kathrin Ehrke, community leaders and team representatives among others graced the event.
Each team received at least two soccer kits, including boots, socks, balls, cooler boxes, nets, cones, and bibs.
PDC and WFF's common goal is to empower and uplift young people and to help them get on a positive life path instead of the destructive path of poaching or any other types of illegal activities while engaging with people, uplifting communities and protecting wildlife. We are creating an environment where endangered species like painted dogs and other wildlife can thrive.
The RCCL Zimbabwe - Iganyana Division supports 20 male and four female community-based teams from communities adjacent to Hwange National Park, directly impacting wildlife and people welfare in the area.
To support conservation through sport, kindly send us a direct email or donate to the button below.
Giving poaching the red card!
Conservation through Action and Education!
Keeping Up with the Dogs
The dog stories for the period are a mix of both good and bad news. Most of you would know about the Mpindothela pack, a merger of the four males from the Mathathela pack which used to roam near our headquarters in Dete and the four remaining females of the notorious Mpindo pack. The pack was formed when we released the Mpindo females to join the waiting males outside our Rehabilitation facility last year.
A happy pack of painted dogs by Nicholas Dyer Photography
The dog stories for the period are a mix of both good and bad news. Most of you would know about the Mpindothela pack, a merger of the four males from the Mathathela pack which used to roam near our headquarters in Dete and the four remaining females of the notorious Mpindo pack. The pack was formed when we released the Mpindo females to join the waiting males outside our Rehabilitation facility last year.
Tragedy struck when Chenai, the seeming alpha female, was run over and Peace, one of the males, disappeared. This was quickly followed by the death of the male Khule and suddenly the pack was only five in number.
The Mpindothela pack
The pack separated soon after Khuleβs death. The females Madube and Clara spent a lot of time near our Rehab facility, making frequent βvisitsβ to villages nearby to predate on goats. Despite the losses we are very delighted to report that the community responded positively. They did not kill or harm the dogs. We worked closely with the communities involved, Mabale, Dopota, Lupote and Magoli, as well as the community anti-poaching volunteers to safeguard livestock as well as keep the dogs safe.
A fellow stakeholder, Soft Foot Alliance has been piloting an earth regeneration project in a small area of Mabale and has been promoting group herding and bomas for livestock. It is interesting to note that none of the households partaking in this Soft Foot Allianceβs program lost goats to painted dogs or any livestock to any wildlife.
Community Ant-poaching Volunteers helping our Research and Anti-poaching team
In light of this and with some insights from the Tusk Symposium that we recently took part in, which emphasized working together to build resilience in conservation, we are exploring opportunities and possibilities of collaborating with Soft Foot Alliance. The aim is to expand their programs outside of Mabale village into all the villages in our core operating area. Their programs are proving to be effective in reducing human-wildlife conflict and we believe we can do more for both painted dogs and the community by working together with Soft Foot Alliance.
The Batsha pack
In Sinamatela, our base tracker Washington Moyo reported a new pack composed of two females and two males which, he named the Batsha pack, meaning βthe new packβ. He sighted the pack for the first time in the Kashawe concession in Sinamatela. Upon investigation, he discovered that the two males are Lifa and Dela, once with the Lukodet pack and they had dispersed in 2021. The two females, Zizi and Rocco, are also dispersals from one of the well-known packs, the Bumbusi pack. A family has been formed and we are happy with this new possible breeding unit that will add to the Hwange National Park painted dog population.
The Batsha pack
Thank You Dominic, Farewell
Dominic βDJβ Nyathi has left Painted Dog Conservation to pursue other interests. Many of you who visited us in Zimbabwe might have met Dominic, our Conservation and Community Liaison Manager.
Dominic βDJβ Nyathi has left Painted Dog Conservation. He has been chosen by Wilderness Safaris to head up their Children In The Wilderness (CITW) programme, which is actually modelled on our Conservation Clubs that DJ established.
He served with us for 11 years and immensely contributed to our education and community programs over the years. For that, we are really grateful. While his leaving us is a loss, itβs a great opportunity for him and well deserved.
We know he will continue to represent PDC in the best possible way and we wish him all the best of luck in his new role.