Elephant Conservation Supporter

location
2 - 12 weeks  ·  Age 18 - 50+

rating  Excellent 4.8  · 
  Verified by Volunteer World
  Good response rate

Highlights

  • Experience beautiful Namibia!
  • Explore Swakopmund a great little town, safe, by the sea, surrounded by sand dunes with lots of activities to keep you entertained!
  • Work with and protect the majestic elephant! A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity!
  • Meet like-minded people and form a deep relationship!
  • There's much to do in your free time: kayaking, surfing, quad biking, dolphin tours, fishing, desert tours and much more


Especially good for

Age 18+
Singles
Couples
Families
Groups
50+

About the program

EHRA aims to conserve the desert elephants of Namibia, through practical and realistic anti-conflict solutions.

How the EHRA Volunteer Project Works

EHRA's wildlife volunteer program is structured in 2-week (11 nights) rotations, but you can repeat up to a  maximum of 12 weeks(132 nights). A volunteer group has a maximum of 14 people, of all ages and from all walks of life who join the program and come to ...

About the program

How the EHRA Volunteer Project Works

EHRA's wildlife volunteer program is structured in 2-week (11 nights) rotations, but you can repeat up to a  maximum of 12 weeks(132 nights). A volunteer group has a maximum of 14 people, of all ages and from all walks of life who join the program and come to Namibia to experience life in the African bush! Minimum age is 18 years old and there is no maximum age limit. 

Meeting Point

The meeting point is Swakopmund and we will give you help and advice on getting here. We organise your travel arrangements from the airport in Namibia's capital Windhoek, and the transfer to A La Mer Hotel or Amanpuri Travelers Lodge whichever you choose to stay at. On Sunday evening ( 18h30) there is a short briefing for all volunteers at A La Mer Hotel, which is important, because you get to meet our staff and learn what will happen the following day when the program begins. We leave Swakopmund on Monday at 12:00 noon. We then drive to EHRA's Base Camp on the Ugab River, where you will spend the night and listen to a full briefing about the volunteer program for the following week.

Week One - Building Week

On Tuesday morning the group travels to the local Namibian farm or homestead where you will spend building week, building a protection wall around the water sources or building alternative water points for the elephants. Volunteer teams live in mobile base camps in the vicinity of the homesteads and elephants. Tents are provided by EHRA this week and soon you will make the camp your home! All cooking is done over the fire and you work in pairs taking turns to be on kitchen duty, which includes providing the first cup of coffee to everyone in bed and preparing breakfast, lunch and dinner. We have great recipes which cater for all dietary restrictions.

You rise early to beat the Namibian heat and then stop around noon to travel back to camp for a traditional African siesta and lunch. In the afternoon you start working after 2:30 pm and work for a couple of hours, before it is time to head back to camp for the obligatory sundowner. Evenings are spent talking and relaxing around the camp fire and listening to the sounds of Africa.

Building walls is sweaty, hard work but each volunteer does what he or she is capable of doing, and you work as a team to complete the project. 

Base Camp

Saturday morning you pack up the camp and travel back to the EHRA Base Camp for a much deserved shower and relaxation. The next two days are yours to explore, read, take a swim in the elephant drinking dam and RELAX!

Week Two - Elephant Patrol

On Monday morning volunteer teams pack the Land Cruisers and leave on elephant patrol. This is an amazing week where you join the EHRA trackers on a (mostly) vehicle-based patrol traveling through the area to track the local herds of desert elephants. This week is your reward for all the hard work on building week.

The aim of this week is to track the elephants, record data on births, deaths and new elephants, GPS their positions and take ID shots and notes about each and every elephant. In 2014 we have started a genetics project to ascertain which bulls are the main breeding animals. This involves collecting elephant dung, which is something all volunteers will help with!

EHRA believes effective conservation management is only possible through knowing each elephant personally, through its physical features and its personality traits, as well as having accurate and up-to-date information on numbers and movements. This is particularly important when 'problem' elephants are declared. The information gathered on patrol is entered onto our online database which maps each herd's movements using Google Earth. From this we can ascertain which farms and homesteads elephants visit regularly and therefore may require protection walls. The database also holds all ID photos of the elephants.

During patrol you sleep at a new place every evening, depending on where the day's tracking has taken you. You sleep under the stars, and for many volunteers, this is one of the most magical experiences of the project, and indeed, of their gap year or career break!

It is unlikely that you will see many other humans during the week, your company being the areas wildlife!

Aside from elephants, you can expect to see giraffes, oryx, ostriches, kudu, zebra, springbok and if you are very lucky black rhino or even leopards or lions, and hundreds of different birds.

On Thursday afternoon after spending 4 days and 3 nights out, you travel back to Base Camp to spend your last night in the desert if you are with EHRA for only 2 weeks.

Friday morning you say your goodbyes and climb in the Land Cruiser for the journey back to Swakopmund. Friday nights are always a fun night out where we all eat together in one of the local restaurants.

Swakopmund

Swakopmund is a great little town, safe, by the sea, surrounded by sand dunes and with lots of activities to keep you entertained, such as skydiving, kayaking, dolphin watching and sand boarding to name only a few. There are lots of cafes, interesting shops, restaurants, a few bars and even a cinema! For anyone traveling onwards through Namibia we can also help you to plan your trip and recommend the best agents, car rentals, places to stay and to see.

If you would like to get in touch with a past volunteer to hear first hand about their experience please do let us know.



Free-time activities

Volunteers meet in the Skeleton Coast town of Swakopmund where there are many different activities including kayaking, surfing, quad biking, dolphin tours, fishing, desert tours and sand boarding on the famous dunes to name a few! During the project there is a day off in a small local town where ...

Free-time activities

Volunteers meet in the Skeleton Coast town of Swakopmund where there are many different activities including kayaking, surfing, quad biking, dolphin tours, fishing, desert tours and sand boarding on the famous dunes to name a few! During the project there is a day off in a small local town where there is a restaurant with a swimming pool and wifi. The area around our base camp is beautiful and great for short hikes.


Requirements

Requirements

Minimum Age: 18 years

In order to join the program you need to be at least 18 years old on the program start date. There might be exemptions if you can provide the permission of your legal guardian(s) or if your are accompanied by your parents.

Language Skills

You need to speak English (basic level)

Required Documents

None

Nationality Restrictions

No restrictions. Helping hands from all over the world are welcome.

Other Skills

There is no skills or experience needed

Time Commitment

Your helping hand will be required on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 08:00 - 16:30

What's Included

What's Included

Services by Elephant Human Relations Aid (EHRA)

All food, accommodation, transfers to and from base camp, equipment whilst on the project.

Accommodation

At base camp we sleep on a big wooden platform in a tree. On build week we make a mobile camp, with long drop toilets but no showers. We sleep under a tarpaulin or you can choose a tent. On patrol we sleep wild and everyone sleeps on bedrolls under the stars.

Food & Beverages

Typical breakfast is tea, coffee, porridge, cereals. Lunch is sandwiches and fruit. Evening meals are anything from Spaghetti Bolognese, Thai Curry, Roast Chickens, even apple crumble! All is cooked over the fire.

Internet Access

Limited access at the project site

What's NOT included?

What's NOT included?

Airport Pickup at Rooikop Airport

An airport pickup isn't included within the program fees either.

Flight Tickets

The nearest airport is Rooikop Airport (WVB) in Walvis Bay. We assist you to find cheap flights to Namibia. FIND CHEAP FLIGHTS

Travel Insurance

Going abroad is an adventure and it is always best to be prepared. Sudden illness or injury, cancellation or theft - a travel insurance for Namibia provides security and is a plus to have. GET A QUOTE

Vaccines

If you are intending to volunteer in Namibia you should seek medical advice before starting your social journey. Check your required vaccinations for Namibia. VACCINE CHECKER

Details on arrival

1 January - 12 January
15 January - 26 January
29 January - 9 February
12 February - 23 February
26 February - 8 March
11 March - 22 March
25 March - 5 April
8 April - 19 April
6 May - 17 May
20 May - 31 May
3 June - 14 June
17 June - 28 June
1 July - 12 July
15 July - 26 July
29 July - 9 August
12 August - 23 August
26 August - 6 September
9 September - 20 September
23 September - 4 October
7 October - 18 October
21 October - 1 November
4 November - 15 November
18 November - 29 November
2 December - 13 December
Availability
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Program fees

2 weeks (min. stay) 1,196€
4 weeks 2,317€
6 weeks 3,312€
8 weeks 4,357€
10 weeks 5,289€
12 weeks (max. stay) 5,956€
Average fees 547€/week

Program fees

547€ per week 2 - 12 weeks Age 18 - 50+

Payment methods

Visa Master Card Maestro American Express PayPal

NO CREDIT CARD FEES


Duration

2 - 12 weeks

Deposit

The deposit is simply to reserve your volunteer placement. Payments are handled by PayPal, our trusted global payment provider. If you don't have a PayPal account, you can also pay using a credit card.


Final Payment

Your final payment will be agreed with Elephant Human Relations Aid (EHRA) during the application process. Common solutions are either via bank transfer or a cash payment at the project site.


Meet your organization

Elephant Human Relations Aid (EHRA)

Excellent 4.8 rating (68 reviews)

Non-profit - founded in 2003

Verified by Volunteer World

  Good response rate

Coordinated by

Maryna

Spoken languages: English

About the project

Elephant Human Relations Aid (EHRA) provides practical solutions to the elephant-human-conflict. Helping people & elephants to live safely and in harmony in Namibia.

Meet your organization

Elephant Human Rlations Aid is a Namibian registered not for gain organisation (reg no. 21/2003/630) which has been in operation for 20 years. The aim of the organisation is to conserve the desert elephant population in Southern Damaraland, Namibia, through anti conflict measures.

In the 1980s the population of desert-adapted elephants in the Southern Kunene Region were wiped out through years of poaching and hunting. For years elephants were absent from the area. In 1998 an elephant bull led a herd back to the Ugab River. From that point on other herds followed until today where there are a total of 7 elephant herds in the Ugab and Huab River areas.

Unfortunately, the people that now live in this area are not used to coexisting with the elephants. Traditional houses have been destroyed, elephants have used man made dams and broke infrastructures such as windmills or damaged water tanks with their tusks. This leaves people without access to water and creates a misunderstanding toward the elephants.

The Elephant Humans Relations Aid project aims to address this inbalance in nature by protecting water points and educating the people about a well functioning coexistence.

Over 1250 people have been volunteers with EHRA in Namibia. The volunteer project is dirty work, but very rewarding.  You will see the difference your hard work makes to elephant conservation. Volunteers protect the water points the elephants damage and spend a week tracking and collecting data on the local herds, sleeping wild under the stars in the Namibian desert!

EHRA's wildlife volunteer program is structured in 2-week rotations, but you can repeat for a maximum of 12 weeks. A volunteer group has a maximum of 14 people, of all ages and from all walks of life who join the program and come to Namibia to experience life in the African bush! Minimum age is 17 years old and there is no maximum age limit.

68 reviews · rating4.8

Vera Zingg rating5

2024 at Elephant Conservation Supporter

I had never volunteered before, never been to Africa before - and this has been such a inspiring and life changing way to experience Namibia for the first time. I'd go back anytime to help, to live, to learn, and laugh with the crew of EHRA. Volunteering with EHRA means sleeping outdoors, cooking ...
Leila TOUIL rating5

2024 at Elephant Conservation Supporter

These 2 weeks were wonderful. The association does an amazing work helping the community and supporting the different structures of the area. It is more than seeing elephants. It is a holistic program (desertic nature discovery, elephants tracking lessons, community introduction) which helps the ...
diane slade rating5

2023 at Elephant Conservation Supporter

I would recommend volunteering with EHRA Our guides, Molly, Andreas and Herman were brilliant they know the environment and of course the Elephants. They were supportive and answered all the questions that were asked I travelled alone and met 12 other like minded, friendly, caring, funny ...
Joseph Malisov rating4.8

2021 at Elephant Conservation Supporter

I did the program for 2 weeks. The guides were caring, friendly, funny, and loved to teach volunteers about elephants and other wildlife. They show great respect for the area around them while keeping volunteers safe. The guides can likely handle any dietary restrictions, but make sure to let them ...
Graham Elliott rating4

2019 at Elephant Conservation Supporter

A really worthwhile project which aims to protect local infrastructure for villages (water towers, solar panel installations, etc.) which are often destroyed by elephants. Elephants are also feared by many local people as they can appear out of nowhere (they are very quiet when moving around) and ...
Talking about being taken out of my comfort zone...this was it! I am 70 years old and have seen a lot of the world.When a friend called me to see if I was game to go to Namibia with her, I said yes right away, but when she said for two weeks I did reconsider. Over 16 hrs flight time from New York ...

Location

Africa > Southern Africa > Namibia > Damaraland

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