Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa

by PHALABORWA NATURAL HERITAGE FOUNDATION
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa
Rescuing Imperiled Wildlife in South Africa

Project Report | Mar 9, 2026
March 2026 Update

By Eugene Troskie | Managing Director

PNHF Team and volunteers during a snare patrol
PNHF Team and volunteers during a snare patrol

Dear friends and supporters of PNHF,

It si time for us to share news and rerport back on what the Phalaborwa Natural Heritage Foundation (PNHF) has achieved over the past couple of months. Below are some of the successes we had since our last progres report in November 2025;

We had severe flooding in our region during January 2026, it was the worst floods ever recorder in the Phalaborwa area. Roads, bridges, electricity and water supply infrastructure was damaged or destroyed. The conditions we experienced impacted us directly and greatly reduced our ability to do our work. The flood had financial impacts on our organisation as well after vehicle damages had to be repaired and escalation of costs on rescue operation due to increased difficulty to access animals in distress.

  1. We've conducted 33 anti-poaching operations. 
  2. Patrolled over 185,6km on foot.
  3. Removed 613 illegally set poacher's snares and 1 large trap cage.
  4. Discovered 7 poaching camps.
  5. Discovered 24 animals illegally killed in snares and poisoned by poachers, these include  2 civet, 1 water mongoose, 3 spotted hyena, 2 white-tailed mongoose, 1 scrubhare, 1 bushbuck, 1 domestic cow, 6 impala, 1 waterbuck, 4 southern bush duiker and 2 kudu. 
  6. Taken 256 local community members and international volunteers out on anti-poaching operations.
  7. Successfully rescued over 30 animals. We darted and relocated 15 African Buffalo that broke out of a reserve and posed a risk of spreading disease. We darted and removed a snare from a male spotted hyena, the animal was also poisoned and went into a coma, we managed to pull it through and release it again. We darted and removed a snare from a waterbuck bull. We rescued two birds of prey, one white-faced scops owl with an injured wing that is still beig rehabilitated and one peregrine falcon that was found stunned and concussed on the ground, it was released after veterinary treatment. We rescued a variety of small creatures during the flood, a woodlands kingfisher, two laughing doves, 1 speke's hinged tortoise, 1 leopard tortoise, 1 serrated hinged terrapin and 3 flap-neck chameleons.
  8. We assisted with the arrest of two snare poachers.
  9. We hosted one conservation evening with guest speaker Jonathan Leeming on scorpion stings and first aid. We had 75 people in total attending the talk.
  10. Presented a environmental education workshop to 20 Dutch students.

The repairs to our vehicles and high costs for the wildlife rescue operations requiring helicopters for the success of the operation has nearly drained our bank account and with the GlobalGiving Little x Little fundraising campaign coming up in a few days we are pleading with our gaurdian angel donors to please support us!

The above mentioned data and statistics gathered during the past four months has contributed to the conservation of our local biodoversity in the nature reserves, parks, tribal game reserves and neighbouring communities where we conducted operations. In some areas we have noticed a decline in snaring even zero snaring in certain properties, this is a big win for us and shows that our efforts are successful. 

We would like to thank each and every one of our supporters for making this possible. 

Your continued support is greatly appreciated by us and every animal and person benefiting from our efforts.

Heap of snares belonging to two arrested poachers
Heap of snares belonging to two arrested poachers
The team loading one of the 15 relocated buffalo
The team loading one of the 15 relocated buffalo
Poisoned and snared spotted hyena that we rescued
Poisoned and snared spotted hyena that we rescued
White-faced Scops Owl with an injured wing
White-faced Scops Owl with an injured wing
Flap-neck Chameleon that was rescued from a road
Flap-neck Chameleon that was rescued from a road

Links:

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook

About Project Reports

Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.

If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can receive an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.

Sign up for updates

Organization Information

PHALABORWA NATURAL HERITAGE FOUNDATION

Location: Phalaborwa, Limpopo - South Africa
Facebook: Facebook Page
Project Leader:
Eugene Troskie
Phalaborwa , Limpopo South Africa
$56,993 raised of $60,000 goal
 
256 donations
$3,007 to go
Donate Now

Help raise money!

Support this important cause by creating a personalized fundraising page.

Start a Fundraiser

Learn more about GlobalGiving

Teenage Science Students
Vetting +
Due Diligence

Snorkeler
Our
Impact

Woman Holding a Gift Card
Give
Gift Cards

Young Girl with a Bicycle
GlobalGiving
Guarantee

Get incredible stories, promotions, and matching offers in your inbox

WARNING: Javascript is currently disabled or is not available in your browser. GlobalGiving makes extensive use of Javascript and will not function properly with Javascript disabled. Please enable Javascript and refresh this page.