A Visit to the Ultimate Gorilla Conservationist Dian Fossey During A Rwanda Gorilla Safari.-Rwanda Safari News
A Visit to the Ultimate Gorilla Conservationist Dian Fossey During A Rwanda Gorilla Safari.-Rwanda Safari News
A Visit to the Ultimate Gorilla Conservationist Dian Fossey During A Rwanda Gorilla Safari.
Dian’s early life
Primatologist and naturalist Dian Fossey was born on January 16, 1932, in San Francisco, California, and grew up with her mother and stepfather. Developing an affinity for animals at a young age, throughout her youth, Fossey was an avid horseback rider and an aspiring veterinarian. However, after enrolling in pre-veterinary studies at the University of California, Davis, she transferred to San Jose State College and changed her major to occupational therapy.
After graduating from San Jose in 1954, Fossey spent several months working as a hospital intern in California and then moved to Louisville, Kentucky, where she began serving as director of the Kosair Crippled Children’s Hospital’s occupational therapy department in 1955. Living on a farm on the outskirts of Louisville, Fossey spent many off-hours happily tending to the livestock. But her contentment didn’t last long. She soon became restless, longing to see other parts of the world and setting her sights on Africa.
Her Mission to Africa
In September 1963, Fossey embarked on her first trip to Africa—which cost Fossey her entire life savings at the time, as well as a bank loan—visiting Kenya, Tanzania, Zimbabwe and the Congo, among other areas
Protector of gorillas and birth of gorilla trekking
Worldly recognized for her works towards saving the gorilla species here, primatologist Dian Fossey came to Rwanda in 1967 and set up a research station at Karisoke where she studied so much about these primates and discovered that these were highly intelligent beings which were capable of loving and understanding almost as much as humans do hence demystifying the thought that these gorillas were savage animals that were only endangering the survival of people living next to them. Dian Fossey is also credited for starting the habituation process of gorilla groups which ultimately gave birth to the gorilla tracking as we know it today.
The death of a conservationist
- 1 Day Rwanda Gorilla Safari Tour
- 1 day Akagera
- 2 days Nyungwe
- 2 Days Rwanda Gorilla Trekking Safari Tour Volcanoes Park
- 3 days gorilla
- 4 Days Gorilla Safari Rwanda- Tracking-Safari Dian Fossey Tomb Tour
- 5 days gorilla & chimpanzee
Long Rwanda gorilla safaris
- 6 days gorilla safari Rwanda chimpanzee trekking safaris tour
- 8 days Rwanda adventure & classic gorilla trekking safari tour
- 8 days gorilla trekking safari Rwanda chimpanzee tracking tour
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