Wednesday, May 26, 2010

The 501 is in its first review...

Last night we sent the 501(c)(3) application packet to our CPA, Liz Williams, for review.... ahhh!   Once I get her feedback then it can be sent off to the IRS... and then we wait!  Not really, so much to do.

Can you help? We're looking for a web designer and a social media marketer... If you can help or know some one who can let me know... thanks.

Friday, May 14, 2010

End of the Week Report

- CPA secured.
- Fundraiser in place.
- IT coach meeting productive.
- Tax Exempt Application Packet moving forward nicely.

Good News:
A Celebrity gets on the anti-trafficking band wagon

Have a marvelous weekend, remember nothing can make you feel quite as good as doing something kind for someone.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Talk about a Couple with a Mission!

Several weeks ago while researching wildlife conservation and education efforts in South Africa I came across an amazing little school/rescue center with a simple and powerful concept.  As I sorted through everything I've discovered, the Daktari school kept standing out.  It was time to make contact, so over the past few days I've had the pleasure of exchanging emails with Michele Merrifield.

The road to Daktari... and a Daktari Classroom.  Yes, it is way out there in the South African Bush!


Michele and her husband Ian are the founders and operators of Daktari. Injured or orphaned wildlife, like Spikey the baby porcupine, arrive at Daktari each week as do between 6 to 8 local school children.

The children stay for 5 days.  They learn to take care of the animals and interact with them while also keeping up with their math, reading and geography lessons.  The children leave transformed, with a connection and compassion for the animals who share their world.  These children are the conservationists and wildlife advocates of the future.  Well, who needs to wait that long?

Let me share a clip from Constant's (Karongwe Game Reserve) letter to Michele and Ian regarding their impact on these young lives:

"One morning in August 08 I had a phone call from someone in our surrounding trust areas who asked me whether I could help him with a problem that he had. This person had a leopard that was busy catching some of his calves and asked for my assistance. When I asked him why he called me and he told me that his son went to Daktari and they were taught not to kill any animals unnecessarily.....
Not long after that I had a call from people in the Balloon area that had a problem with a "leopard with cubs" that was catching their goats. Nature conservation asked me to go and have a look for them. On my arrival we discovered that it was indeed a female cheetah and cubs and not a leopard as assumed. The farmer then ironically said to me that the cheetah and cubs was not a problem as his son/daughter told him that they are not as bad as always thought. Intrigued by this I asked him whether they were taught this at school and he said yes, at a special school called Daktari."

How in the world do Michele and Ian do this way out in the middle of nowhere?  Not without a great deal of hard work.  Michele tells me that volunteers from all over the world who pay for the experience of spending one, two even as long as a month with them are Daktari's mainstay.

Want to help?  Read about volunteering and enjoy an adventure that will change your life.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

A New Perspective

"Ambassadors for their kind" is what Shannon calls the birds of prey who cannot be returned to the wild.  At the Bird of Prey Sanctuary, in Kwazulu Natal South Africa, about 150 injured and wrongfully caged birds are treated, nursed back to health and released each year. 

Those that stay behind at the Sanctuary, like Jelly Bean, worm their way into the hearts of visitors like me and you just have to help.  How tragic it would be if her species disappeared!  This could readily happen without educational and conservation efforts like those of Shannon and Ben.


Get involved!  As NIKELA is in the formation stages we can use a lot of help... skills, time and money.  Email me and we'll start a conversation.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Officially Incorporated!

Today NIKELA is officially incorporated as a non-profit.  Now the paperwork for 501(c)3) status can be filed. 

NIKELA like the spring is slowly budding.  Come the summer this fledgling worldwide network of wildlife lovers funding private wildlife conservation and education efforts in South Africa will be underway.

If you are a wildlife enthusiast, have connections to South Africa and want to get get on the band wagon, let me hear from you.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

How NIKELA came to be...

Passing the half century mark created some interesting anxiety for me. Especially, when I spent the next five years abroad living, a very different life than I had imagined or planned I would.

On returning home I did some introspection and realized how blessed my life had been. When I asked myself the question, “What would I regret most if I died tomorrow?” the answer was somewhat surprising.

My biggest regret had nothing to do with my marriage or that I'd not spent enough time with my kids and their families. It wasn’t that I hadn't been a good person or a contributing citizen. It struck me that my biggest regret, if I died tomorrow, would be that I hadn't taken on the crusade to champion South Africa’s endangered wildlife.

After Russ (my husband) and my trip to South Africa in early 2009 it was hard to leave that beautiful country with so many struggles. On returning home I began stewing and mulling over what I could do. Nothing! Nothing came to me.

Then in late January of this year Rob (my son) sent me a link to Kiva. A micro-loan site with a truly global internet world concept. When I read Rob’s email I felt this was another one of those times when my life would change because of something brought to me by my son.

Things began to percolate. By early April it was time to start putting things together. Armed with but a basic concept I hit on a name, NIKELA (meaning “give to” in Zulu) I started my research and talking to people.

I have no idea how to put this all together! I’m simply driven by a desire to assist those private individuals who are diligently doing what ever they can with what ever they’ve got to make a difference in the lives of South African wildlife, today and for the future. So that’s where I am, trusting each day to be led another step closer to making it all reality.