Shamwari Photos

Pollyanna with Clare, Born Free's Shamwari centre
manager.

Pollyanna with the enclosure which the donation
from her Foundation helped to build.

'Sinbad' - one of the rescued lions in his new
home at Shamwari |
Pollyanna
visits rescued lions at Shamwari

'Majesty' by Pollyanna Pickering
At the beginning of September Pollyanna returned from a trip
to South Africa, where she was delighted to have the opportunity
to visit the Born Free Foundation's santuary at Shamwari.
Born Free has two sanctuaries in South Africa for lions and
leopards rescued from zoos, circuses and other captive facilities.
They are set within the award-winning Shamwari Wildlife Reserve
in the Eastern Cape. The first sanctuary opened in 1996 in the
south of reserve and enabled the Foundation to rehome two lions
and a leopard from their tiny cages on top of a Tenerife restaurant,
where they could only take one and a half paces in each direction.
The following year, thanks to the generosity of the family and
friends of young naturalist, Julie Ward, tragically killed in
Kenya, an education centre was built in her memory. This allows
local children to learn about their own wildlife and about the
suffering wildlife can endure in captivity. There are currently
three leopards and four lions living in the massive one-two
hectare natural habitat enclosures at the first sanctuary.
The second sanctuary is in the north of Shamwari and currently
home to one leopard and three lions in the two hectare camps.
This sanctuary and education centre was completed in 2006, thanks
to donations from generous sponsors including the The
Pollyanna Pickering Foundation, which was able to contribute
£8000.00 towards the new enclosures.
The bush enclosures at Shamwari give the lions and leopards
the space and privacy they so desperately need. Pollyanna was
delighted to meet the wonderful people working with the big
cats in their new African home, and to see the encloseures her
Foundation helped to build!
She is hoping very much to paint some of the rescued cats for
future exhibitions.

Pollyanna in the Education Centre at Shamwari
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