
conservation
When I photograph a white rhino, I am not just making an image. I am documenting a species that was nearly wiped from the planet by poaching and habitat loss, and which survives today largely because of concerted, funded, human effort. That context matters. It should inform every decision I make in the field — from how close I push for a frame to which operators I choose to work with.
The minimum ethical standard is simple: never compromise animal welfare for a photograph. Do not push for flush shots of birds. Do not approach nesting sites. Do not remain at a sighting if the vehicle pressure is clearly causing stress. These are not restrictive rules — they are the basic cost of entry to documenting wild animals responsibly.
Every safari booking is a vote for a particular model of conservation. Lodges and conservancies that return revenue to local communities, employ local guides, and fund anti-poaching operations are materially different from those that do not. Research before you book. Ask operators directly what percentage of their fees reaches conservation programmes. The answer — or the discomfort with the question — tells you everything.
The most powerful wildlife images are those that carry context. A rhino at dawn is beautiful. A rhino at dawn with the knowledge that this individual is alive because a ranger risked his life last month to stop a poaching attempt — that is a different kind of image. Use your platform, however small, to tell that fuller story. The animals you photograph are depending on people caring enough to act.