We are fortunate to live in a world that is rich in natural resources and can support multiple forms of life. But we cannot take this for granted. Our planet is in urgent need of action to reverse the effects of over-exploitation of its resources. We must each play our part to ensure we and future generations live in a sustainable way. This includes respecting biodiversity and allowing wildlife to flourish and develop. Let’s enjoy being part of our natural world rather than destroy it!

Individuals can all too easily feel powerless to stop the pollution of our environment and reverse climate change. But every little helps. Together there is so much we can do to help, not only in the UK and Belgium but also elsewhere around the globe. Helping to protect and restore wildlife and nature is vital for the future of our planet. It is also good for our own wellbeing and mindfulness.

Society often places emphasis on measuring progress and success in terms of a country’s gross domestic product or an individual’s financial wealth. But if this is done at the expense of our environment, it can be to the detriment of communities and our individual health and happiness. We would like to see greater emphasis on measuring progress and success according to nature conservation efforts and people’s levels of health and happiness.

We provide information below on some of the nature and wildlife charities and good causes we support. As well as being able to donate to any of them directly should you decide to do so, some of them have online shops (for which we have included links) which you may find useful, e.g. for birthday or Christmas presents.

Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust

Durrell is an international charity, headquartered at Jersey Zoo in the Channel Islands. It is working to save species from extinction. It was established in 1959 by author and conservationist Gerald Durrell.

Durrell’s aim is for more diverse, beautiful and resilient natural landscapes in which species can thrive and people can enjoy a deeper connection with nature. It is actively involved in a wide variety of conservation projects around the world (including Brazil, the Galapagos, India, Madagascar, Mauritius, Montserrat, Saint Lucia, Indonesia and the United Kingdom).

The ROB Trust has contributed to Durrell’s conservation projects in Madagascar (some of which John and Beverley were able to visit in person in 2022). We have helped fund Durrell’s work in Montserrat (in the Caribbean) and elsewhere around the world to try to save frogs from the deadly fungal disease chytridiomycosis (chytrid). We are delighted that Durrell recently began a 100-year project to rewild an estate at Dalnacardoch in the Cairngorms National Park which we are also supporting (and were able to visit in 2024).

Durrell’s website provides more information on how you can get involved. You can also find some great gift ideas (animal adoptions, books, clothing, etc.) in their online shop.

Trees for Life

Established in 1993, Trees for Life is a charity which aims to rewild the Scottish Highlands by enabling the restoration of the globally unique Caledonian Forest which once covered much of Scotland. Its vision is of a revitalised wild forest in the Highlands, providing space for wildlife to flourish and communities to thrive. It is a member of the Scottish Rewilding Alliance which is calling on the Scottish Government to declare Scotland the world’s first “Rewilding Nation”. Trees for Life is Rewilding Europe’s preferential partner in the Affric Highlands landscape (considered further below).

The ROB Trust has contributed to a number of Trees for Life’s fundraising appeals, including:

  • to construct the wildlife trails at their flagship Dundreggan Rewilding Centre (which opened in April 2023),
  • to expand the reintroduction of red squirrels in the Scottish Highlands,
  • to support the Tree Seed Collection Project, a collaborative three-year project with Woodland Trust Scotland to enhance the availability of native trees from western Scotland, and
  • to maintain the meadows and grassland areas at Dundreggan by developing a management regime that focuses on optimising these areas for wildflowers and other meadow biodiversity (including waxcap fungi, invertebrates, a multitude of moths and other insects).

The Trees for Life website provides information on how you can support them. Why not sponsor a beaver or a red squirrel, dedicate a tree gift certificate or purchase some merchandise by visiting their online shop?

Rewilding Europe

Rewilding Europe (established in 2011) is an independent not-for-profit foundation based in the Netherlands. As a pan-European initiative, it operates at the frontline of rewilding across Europe. It is a member of the IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature – the global authority on the status of the natural world and the measures needed to safeguard it) and the Global Rewilding Alliance (which involves over 100 members working on some of the world’s largest ecosystem conservation and restoration projects). You can find information about Rewilding Europe’s supervisory board and other members of its management and central team here.  It has made considerable progress over the years, as can be seen from its Annual Reviews and regular reports. It works together with numerous partners at a European, national and local level, including the 10 large rewilding landscapes which we consider separately below. Rewilding Europe has commissioned a series of short films showcasing some of this work.

In addition, Rewilding Europe has established a European Rewilding Network (ERN) that aims to strengthen links between many different rewilding initiatives across Europe. It supports and empowers each network member with the information and tools to be more successful in their rewilding endeavours. The ERN involves about 90 initiatives across 29 countries (covering about 5 million hectares in total), as shown on their interactive map; these include 17 initiatives around the UK and Ireland, and 13 across the Benelux. Try to visit some of the ones near you. You can also learn more about some of the projects by listening to the Rewild podcast.

Rewilding Europe also helps its members promote the benefits of rewilding, raise awareness of European wild nature, and develop nature-based tourism. Some Rewilding Europe members offer excursions and trips to the rewilding landscapes considered below (and you may find sustainable travel opportunities to visit these and other rewilding areas through operators such as Exodus Travel).

Greater Côa Valley (Portugal)

Southern Carpathians (Romania)

Velebit Mountains (Croatia)

Danube Delta (Ukraine, Romania and Moldova)

Central Apennines (Italy)

Rhodope Mountains (Bulgaria)

Swedish Lapland (Sweden)

Oder Delta (Germany and Poland)

Affric Highlands (Scotland)

Iberian Highlands (Spain)

World Land Trust

Founded in 1989, the WLT is an international conservation charity. The Fund’s Patrons include Sir David Attenborough.

WLT works in partnership with established and highly respected local organisations. It is helping communities to protect and restore their land, safeguarding biodiversity and the climate for the future. You can learn more about its different projects around the world using their interactive map. Its website provides ideas on how you can get involved (and also includes an online shop).

The ROB Trust has made a donation to assist with a specific WLT Life on the Edge project; this is supporting their NGO partner, Fundación EcoMinga, in purchasing land to extend its Río Anzu and Río Zúñac reserves in Ecuador’s eastern Andes. We have also made a donation to the WLT’s general Action Fund; this helps their NGO partners around the world with habitat restoration, emergency response to wildfires, urgent land purchase opportunities and essential daily work by rangers patrolling reserves and monitoring wildlife.

Born Free Foundation

The Born Free Foundation is an animal charity that focuses on wild animal welfare and compassionate conservation. It was founded in 1984 by Virginia McKenna and Will Travers (stars of the 1966 wildlife film Born Free that tells the story of Joy and George Adamson’s rescue of a lioness cub called Elsa) and their eldest son Bill Travers.

The Foundation aims to stop the exploitation and suffering of individual animals living in captivity or in the wild. It campaigns for a future where animals and people can co-exist and where threatened and endangered species are protected for generations to come.

The ROB Trust has donated to Born Free’s conservation programmes that are making a real and tangible difference to the lives of elephants in Meru, as well as the local communities that share their habitat.

Sheldrick Wildlife Trust

The Sheldrick Wildlife Trust is one of Africa’s oldest wildlife charities (founded in 1977). It is active in the conservation, preservation and protection of wildlife across Kenya. Its projects include anti-poaching, safeguarding the natural environment, enhancing community awareness, addressing animal welfare issues, providing veterinary assistance, rescuing and hand-rearing elephant and rhino orphans (along with other species). Watch this video for a good introduction to their history and their work.

The Sheldrick Wildlife Trust is based in Nairobi, Kenya, with a field headquarters bordering Tsavo East National Park. It is separately registered as a charity in the UK (the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust) and is directly supported by Sheldrick Wildlife Trust USA (a registered 501(c)(3)). Its website provides many ideas on how you can get involved (and also includes an online shop).

The ROB Trust has donated to the Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, specifically for its habitat conservation project in Kenya’s Kibwezi Forest.

Amboseli Trust for Elephants

The Amboseli Trust for Elephants (ATE) is a not-for-profit trust registered in Kenya and the USA. Its operational focus is on Amboseli National Park and the surrounding ecosystem. It is involved in elephant conservation, management and policy-setting worldwide. Its research arm, the Amboseli Elephant Research Project (AEPR) has been studying the Amboseli elephants since 1972, making it one of the longest studied populations of free-living large mammals in the world. The African Elephant Conservation Trust (AECT) is an endowment fund established in the USA (a registered 501(c)(3)); its long-term objective is to support elephant research projects across the African continent modelled on the ATE philosophy and research methodology (including by funding the work of ATE and AERP). This involves sharing knowledge and addressing issues such as land use, wildlife education, protected area management, and the consequences of human population expansion.

The ATE website provides further information on how you can support their work.

Amboseli National Park has a special significance for The ROB Trust as it was the first place Rob visited outside Europe – while on a family holiday to Kenya in 2001 when he was just four years old. As part of a donation by the ROB Trust to ATE, one of the Amboseli elephants (born in March 2020) has been named Robin in his memory.

Orangutans and their habitats (SOCP, BOSF, RFF)

Wild orangutans live only in south-east Asia on the islands of Sumatra (in Indonesia) and Borneo (mostly in Indonesia, but also in the Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak). In Malay and Indonesian “orangutan” means person (“orang”) of the forest (“hutan”).  Since 2017 orangutans are divided into three distinct species: the Bornean orangutan, the Sumatran orangutan and the Tapanuli orangutan; they are all on the IUCN Red List of critically endangered species.

There are a number of organisations around the world doing great things to conserve and protect orangutans and/or helping others working in Sumatra and Borneo. These include Durrell (which we also support: see above), Orangutan Appeal UK which helps fund various projects in Borneo, and the Orangutan Project (part of Wildlife Conservation International) which is supporting a number of different organisations operating in Sumatra and Borneo (including those identified here).  At The ROB Trust, in 2023 at the time of International Orangutan Day (19 August) we decided to support three organisations to assist them with work they are doing locally: SOCP (in Sumatra), BOS Foundation (in Indonesian Borneo), and RFF (in Malaysian Borneo). John and Beverley were able to visit SOCP and BOS in Indonesia in 2024, including to see some of the orangutans being cared for on their sanctuary islands.

Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme

Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation

Rhino and Forest Fund

If you share our interest in wildlife and sustainable living, you can click here for other resources you might find useful.