Current Sustainability Projects

CURRENT SUSTAINABILITY PROJECTS
Black Rhino range expansion project
In a joint project with WWF, the Ezemvelo KZN-Wildlife Black Rhino Range Expansion Project selected Phinda Private Game Reserve as the first release site for 16 Black Rhinos in 2004. The endangered rhinos have thrived in their new home, providing further evidence of the successful restoration of farmlands into prime wildlife habitat. Ecotourists frequently observe the Black Rhinos on Phinda game drives and the reserve celebrated the birth of the first baby rhino in August 2006. Control of Invasive Triffid Weed
The exotic Triffid Weed (Chromolaena odorata) is native to South America but has spread to South Africa where it is classified as one of the country's most noxious weeds. In the absence of any natural control mechanisms, this plant proliferates in savanna ecosystems and Phinda Private Game Reserve has embarked on an ambitious control program which uses fire and mechanical clearing. Goal is Life Soccer Challenge
Mark Fish, former Bafana Bafana and international soccer star, arrived at Phinda Private Game Reserve in KwaZulu-Natal in October 2006 to launch the "Goal is Life" soccer programme. John Lane of World Wide Sports donated soccer nets, balls and shin pads to get the programme off to a great start. Inkwazi Ranger Training School
Overlooking the Mzinene floodplains in the south of Phinda Private Game Reserve, the Inkwazi Ranger Training School provides facilities and accommodation for groups of up to 20 learners. Trainees undertake a rigorous six-week course that covers all aspects of guiding, such as communication, safety and wildlife knowledge. Successful candidates are employed at &Beyond, where they undergo three months of on-site training and ongoing mentorship from experienced guides. Lion Reintroduction Research at Phinda Private Game Reserve
Prior to Phinda Private Game Reserve's establishment in 1990, esident populations of lions were last recorded in Maputaland in 1938. Between May 1992 and January 2003, 15 lions were released into the Reserve. Research conducted to determine the success and failures of the reintroduction has recently been completed, providing valuable information to the conservation world and paving the way for more incredible victories. Mduku Clinic and Digital Eco-Village
Working with leader's from Phinda Private Game Reserve's neighbouring Mduku village, Africa Foundation have funded and facilitated the construction and staff training at a 24-hour clinic which attends to the health needs of over 10 000 people every month. The Digital Eco-Village (Dev Centre) provides easy access to technology with computer courses, skills training and internet access facilitating the advance of education, agriculture and health care. Monitoring of Leopard in the Munyawana Conservancy
In order to establish the population density and dynamics of Leopard at Phinda Private Game Reserve and adjacent properties, a number of individuals have been radio-collared for satellite tracking. A full time researcher, working under the auspices of the World Conservation Society's Global Carnivore Program, documents the movements and interactions of Leopards in the area, making use of remote digital camera trapping technology. This is the first serious study of Leopard ecology in a matrix of protected areas and hunting concessions. Monitoring of Phinda Private Game Reserve's Birds of Prey
As predators at the top of the food chain, eagles and other raptors are important indicators of ecosystem health. As a means of monitoring the full recovery of Phinda Private Game Reserve as a wild landscape, senior rangers are engaged in locating nest sites and documenting the breeding success of eagles, vultures, hawks and owls. This project is part of a regional study under the direction of the Endangered Wildlife Trust's Bird of Prey Working Group. Neil Tovey Supports Goal is Life Challenge
Phinda Private Game Reserve recently hosted Neil Tovey (former captain of South Africa's national team) to partake in &Beyond's Goal is Life' challenge, which aims to inspire &BeyondERS to look after their health through the game of soccer. Despite heavy rain, the dedicated sportsmen from &Beyond's Mountain Warriors and Phinda Forest Cheetahs teams played exciting games against the neighbouring communities. The Warriors were the overall winners but the invaluable experience and knowledge shared by Neil Tovey made it a memorable occasion for all. Phinda Forest Lodge works to help their communities
The &BeyondERS from Phinda Forest, have decided to help the Advent Christian School in a nearby community by helping them build a worm farm; an organic garden aimed at providing a continual source of nutritious vegetables for the school children. Ultimately, we hope to assist the school in providing enough vegetables to sell to &Beyond for the use in the lodge. This will provide a very valuable source of income to the school, ensuring they will be able to provide better education for the students. The staff from Forest will set up an organic garden, supplying the school with a weekly supply of all the food waste from the lodge. Five trenches will be built and filled as the waste accumulates. Earthworms will be built and used to assist in the breaking the waste into fertile compost. The trenches can then be used to grow nutritious vegetables, which will primarily fill hungry stomachs and improve the childrens' ability to concentrate, and ultimately provide a source of income to the school. Population Control of African Elephant
The African Elephant is one of the continent's most loved and charismatic animals, but when confined to a fenced reserve, growing populations can have negative impacts on the landscape and other species. A total of 58 elephant were released at Phinda Private Game Reserve between 1992 and 1994, and the population had doubled to over 100 by 2003. In addition to translocating a number of individuals in 2003, Phinda has also embarked on an experimental contraception program with a team of wildlife veterinarians. Lessons learned from this, and similar experiments elsewhere, may help provide solutions to the long-term management of elephant in other parts of the continent. Skills training at Phinda Private Game Reserve
Africa Foundation, &Beyond's social development partner aims to empower communities through skill development- providing them with a means of generating their own income. Seventeen individuals from the community of KwaNgwenya have recently completed a construction skills training course. The 30-day course was aimed at teaching the skills of plastering, tiling, bricklaying and carpentry. The group was divided into four smaller groups which will then be able to form separate co-operatives and can take on construction projects in the future. The group will now go on to construct 6 classrooms, 12 teachers accommodation units and an admin block at Mdolomba Junior Secondary School in KwaNgwenya, gaining valuable, on-site training and experience. South African History is made as &Beyond signs Phinda land deal
17 March 2008 marked a joyous and momentous occasion at Phinda Private Game Reserve as R18 million was handed over from &Beyond to our two landlord communities surrounding the Reserve. In August 2007, &Beyond and the Makhasa and Mnqobokazi community leaders signed a groundbreaking land restitution deal which restored 9 500 hectares of the Reserve to the ancestral owners of the land. Now, as landlords, these communities will continue to share meaningfully in the benefits of conservation and ecotourism and will receive substantial, escalating rental from the Phinda land. They have engaged &Beyond to continue running the business of Phinda for the next 72 years, and the communities have in turn committed the land to wildlife in perpetuity.
In a joint project with WWF, the Ezemvelo KZN-Wildlife Black Rhino Range Expansion Project selected Phinda Private Game Reserve as the first release site for 16 Black Rhinos in 2004. The endangered rhinos have thrived in their new home, providing further evidence of the successful restoration of farmlands into prime wildlife habitat. Ecotourists frequently observe the Black Rhinos on Phinda game drives and the reserve celebrated the birth of the first baby rhino in August 2006. Control of Invasive Triffid Weed
The exotic Triffid Weed (Chromolaena odorata) is native to South America but has spread to South Africa where it is classified as one of the country's most noxious weeds. In the absence of any natural control mechanisms, this plant proliferates in savanna ecosystems and Phinda Private Game Reserve has embarked on an ambitious control program which uses fire and mechanical clearing. Goal is Life Soccer Challenge
Mark Fish, former Bafana Bafana and international soccer star, arrived at Phinda Private Game Reserve in KwaZulu-Natal in October 2006 to launch the "Goal is Life" soccer programme. John Lane of World Wide Sports donated soccer nets, balls and shin pads to get the programme off to a great start. Inkwazi Ranger Training School
Overlooking the Mzinene floodplains in the south of Phinda Private Game Reserve, the Inkwazi Ranger Training School provides facilities and accommodation for groups of up to 20 learners. Trainees undertake a rigorous six-week course that covers all aspects of guiding, such as communication, safety and wildlife knowledge. Successful candidates are employed at &Beyond, where they undergo three months of on-site training and ongoing mentorship from experienced guides. Lion Reintroduction Research at Phinda Private Game Reserve
Prior to Phinda Private Game Reserve's establishment in 1990, esident populations of lions were last recorded in Maputaland in 1938. Between May 1992 and January 2003, 15 lions were released into the Reserve. Research conducted to determine the success and failures of the reintroduction has recently been completed, providing valuable information to the conservation world and paving the way for more incredible victories. Mduku Clinic and Digital Eco-Village
Working with leader's from Phinda Private Game Reserve's neighbouring Mduku village, Africa Foundation have funded and facilitated the construction and staff training at a 24-hour clinic which attends to the health needs of over 10 000 people every month. The Digital Eco-Village (Dev Centre) provides easy access to technology with computer courses, skills training and internet access facilitating the advance of education, agriculture and health care. Monitoring of Leopard in the Munyawana Conservancy
In order to establish the population density and dynamics of Leopard at Phinda Private Game Reserve and adjacent properties, a number of individuals have been radio-collared for satellite tracking. A full time researcher, working under the auspices of the World Conservation Society's Global Carnivore Program, documents the movements and interactions of Leopards in the area, making use of remote digital camera trapping technology. This is the first serious study of Leopard ecology in a matrix of protected areas and hunting concessions. Monitoring of Phinda Private Game Reserve's Birds of Prey
As predators at the top of the food chain, eagles and other raptors are important indicators of ecosystem health. As a means of monitoring the full recovery of Phinda Private Game Reserve as a wild landscape, senior rangers are engaged in locating nest sites and documenting the breeding success of eagles, vultures, hawks and owls. This project is part of a regional study under the direction of the Endangered Wildlife Trust's Bird of Prey Working Group. Neil Tovey Supports Goal is Life Challenge
Phinda Private Game Reserve recently hosted Neil Tovey (former captain of South Africa's national team) to partake in &Beyond's Goal is Life' challenge, which aims to inspire &BeyondERS to look after their health through the game of soccer. Despite heavy rain, the dedicated sportsmen from &Beyond's Mountain Warriors and Phinda Forest Cheetahs teams played exciting games against the neighbouring communities. The Warriors were the overall winners but the invaluable experience and knowledge shared by Neil Tovey made it a memorable occasion for all. Phinda Forest Lodge works to help their communities
The &BeyondERS from Phinda Forest, have decided to help the Advent Christian School in a nearby community by helping them build a worm farm; an organic garden aimed at providing a continual source of nutritious vegetables for the school children. Ultimately, we hope to assist the school in providing enough vegetables to sell to &Beyond for the use in the lodge. This will provide a very valuable source of income to the school, ensuring they will be able to provide better education for the students. The staff from Forest will set up an organic garden, supplying the school with a weekly supply of all the food waste from the lodge. Five trenches will be built and filled as the waste accumulates. Earthworms will be built and used to assist in the breaking the waste into fertile compost. The trenches can then be used to grow nutritious vegetables, which will primarily fill hungry stomachs and improve the childrens' ability to concentrate, and ultimately provide a source of income to the school. Population Control of African Elephant
The African Elephant is one of the continent's most loved and charismatic animals, but when confined to a fenced reserve, growing populations can have negative impacts on the landscape and other species. A total of 58 elephant were released at Phinda Private Game Reserve between 1992 and 1994, and the population had doubled to over 100 by 2003. In addition to translocating a number of individuals in 2003, Phinda has also embarked on an experimental contraception program with a team of wildlife veterinarians. Lessons learned from this, and similar experiments elsewhere, may help provide solutions to the long-term management of elephant in other parts of the continent. Skills training at Phinda Private Game Reserve
Africa Foundation, &Beyond's social development partner aims to empower communities through skill development- providing them with a means of generating their own income. Seventeen individuals from the community of KwaNgwenya have recently completed a construction skills training course. The 30-day course was aimed at teaching the skills of plastering, tiling, bricklaying and carpentry. The group was divided into four smaller groups which will then be able to form separate co-operatives and can take on construction projects in the future. The group will now go on to construct 6 classrooms, 12 teachers accommodation units and an admin block at Mdolomba Junior Secondary School in KwaNgwenya, gaining valuable, on-site training and experience. South African History is made as &Beyond signs Phinda land deal
17 March 2008 marked a joyous and momentous occasion at Phinda Private Game Reserve as R18 million was handed over from &Beyond to our two landlord communities surrounding the Reserve. In August 2007, &Beyond and the Makhasa and Mnqobokazi community leaders signed a groundbreaking land restitution deal which restored 9 500 hectares of the Reserve to the ancestral owners of the land. Now, as landlords, these communities will continue to share meaningfully in the benefits of conservation and ecotourism and will receive substantial, escalating rental from the Phinda land. They have engaged &Beyond to continue running the business of Phinda for the next 72 years, and the communities have in turn committed the land to wildlife in perpetuity.


















