Ol Pejeta Conservancy (360 sq km, on the Laikipia Plateau 20 km west of Nanyuki town) is Kenya’s largest black rhinoceros sanctuary and the site of the world’s most significant ongoing extinction story — the last two northern white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum cottoni) alive on Earth, Najin (35 years old) and Fatu (25 years old), live within Ol Pejeta’s protected northern enclosure under 24-hour armed guard. Their subspecies cannot naturally reproduce — both females have reproductive challenges that prevent natural conception — making them the biological endpoints of a genetic lineage that evolved 55 million years ago and was functionally extinguished by poaching in the wild by 2008 (the last known wild northern white rhino sighting was in Garamba National Park, DRC, in 2008). A scientific consortium led by BioRescue (a German-Kenya conservation technology partnership) is pursuing IVF-based reproduction using preserved northern white rhino sperm from deceased bulls and egg donors from Najin and Fatu — a conservation intervention at the edge of current reproductive technology. Visiting Ol Pejeta and understanding this programme is one of East Africa’s most important and moving wildlife experiences. This guide covers Ol Pejeta in full for 2025.
Najin and Fatu: The Last Northern Whites
The northern white rhino enclosure at Ol Pejeta (a 700-acre fenced section in the conservancy’s northern sector) can be visited daily with a specific vehicle surcharge (USD $70/vehicle) above standard day visit fees. The guided enclosure visit (with an Ol Pejeta rhino ranger): 20–30 minutes, approaching to within 5–10 metres of both animals (they are fully accustomed to vehicles and human proximity after years of daily contact with their care team). Najin and Fatu are calm, well-adapted to their protected environment, and receive daily health monitoring including blood work and regular veterinary assessments. The BioRescue programme update (current as of 2025): the team has successfully created 30+ viable northern white rhino embryos (created by fertilising harvested eggs from Najin and Fatu with preserved sperm from the deceased bulls Sudan and Suni), currently cryopreserved awaiting the identification and preparation of southern white rhino surrogate mothers for embryo transfer. The first embryo transfers are planned for 2025–2026. The conservation approach represents the most technologically advanced extinction-prevention effort in history.
Black Rhino Population
Ol Pejeta’s black rhino population (approximately 130 individuals — the largest single protected black rhino population in Kenya) was built through decades of intensive protection from the early Sweetwaters Rhino Sanctuary programme established in the 1980s. The current black rhino density at Ol Pejeta (approximately 1 rhino per 2.7 sq km) is among the highest in Africa outside the most intensively managed South African provincial reserves. Black rhino sighting rate at Ol Pejeta on a day visit: the anti-poaching fence perimeter and road circuit make rhino encounters highly probable on any morning game drive — guides familiar with the territorial ranges of named individuals (rhino are individually ID’d at Ol Pejeta) typically find 2–4 black rhino per morning session.
Wild Dog and Other Wildlife
Ol Pejeta has one of the Laikipia Plateau’s most reliably encountered African wild dog packs — a resident pack of 6–10 individuals that roams within the conservancy’s fenced perimeter. The pack’s GPS radio-collar data is shared with Ol Pejeta guides — pack position is known in real time, giving a very high (70–80% on any 2-day stay) wild dog sighting probability. Other Ol Pejeta wildlife: lion (3–4 resident prides), cheetah (approximately 30 individuals, the highest density in Laikipia), Cape buffalo herds of 200–300, common eland, Boehm’s zebra, impala, and the conservancy’s Chimpanzee Sanctuary (a rescue facility for 35+ orphaned chimpanzees from across East and Central Africa — not part of the wild safari experience, but a separate guided sanctuary tour available for USD $20/person).
Entry and Accommodation 2025
- Day visit (non-resident): KSh 3,500 adult (approximately USD $27), KSh 10 vehicle
- Northern white rhino enclosure surcharge: USD $70/vehicle
- Sweetwaters Serena Camp: USD $200–280/night per person full-board. Inside the conservancy, full game drive access, rhino sanctuary proximity.
- The Stables: USD $130–180/night per person B&B. Converted stables accommodation, mid-range, good base for day drives.