Humans intervene in nature in a variety of ways, occupying, abusing and devastating the habitats of plants and animals, thus initiating a large-scale extinction of species. With greed and thoughtlessness, humans destroy their own livelihoods, poison groundwater, contaminate the seas, burn forests and add gases to the air that accelerate climate change.
There are still places on earth that appear to us like a paradise:
Wild animals and plants live there (almost) as in primeval times, almost undisturbed by humans.
We want to present these valuable treasures of nature to people and show that each of us can contribute to preserving this world and thus us, the "Homo Sapiens".
And because nature conservation can only work with and never against the people living in nature, we support projects that improve the living conditions of these people.
The north of Tanzania offers one of the most impressive natural spectacles on earth with the great migration of 2 million wildebeest and zebras.
When we traveled to the Serengeti for the first time in 2015, we caught our breath: a herd of maybe 15,000 wildebeest grazed on a wide plain, zebras stalked and quarreled in between, hardly noticed by the impalas standing on a hill. A cow elephant wandered leisurely with her calf through the herds of animals. The bleating of the wildebeest, the barking of the zebras, the buzzing of the brightly colored birds all around filled the air.
It must have been something like that in paradise.