Ol Pejeta Conservancy — 364 sq km of prime savanna in the Laikipia Plateau, 20 km west of Nanyuki (180 km north of Nairobi on the A2 highway) — is home to the most extraordinary wildlife conservation story on Earth: the last two surviving northern white rhinos, Najin and Fatu (both female), maintained under 24-hour armed guard and veterinary care, and whose eggs are the subject of an international advanced reproductive science programme attempting to save the subspecies from extinction. Beyond the northern white rhino story, Ol Pejeta is the single best location in Kenya for black rhino viewing (120 individuals, the highest density in East Africa) and provides a full Big Five wildlife experience on 364 sq km of beautifully managed savanna. This guide covers Ol Pejeta in full for 2025 visitors, including the northern white rhino programme’s current status, the black rhino viewing, and the broader Laikipia Plateau context.
The Northern White Rhino: Two Left on Earth
The northern white rhino (Ceratotherium simum cottoni) situation as of 2025: Najin (born approximately 1989, Dvur Kralove Safari Park, Czech Republic) and Fatu (born approximately 2000, Dvur Kralove) are the last two surviving individuals of the subspecies, both transferred to Ol Pejeta in December 2009 to live in a more natural climate matched to their evolutionary range. Sudan, the last surviving male, died at Ol Pejeta on March 19, 2018, at approximately 45 years of age (the oldest northern white rhino ever recorded). Sudan’s death ended any possibility of natural reproduction: Najin has hind-leg problems that prevent her carrying a pregnancy, and Fatu has uterine abnormalities that make natural implantation impossible. Both females are incapable of natural reproduction but are otherwise healthy — Fatu is 23–25 years old and expected to live another 20+ years under Ol Pejeta’s veterinary care. Their continued life is significant for one reason: they are still capable of producing eggs (oocytes) that can potentially be used in an IVF programme.
The BioRescue programme: since 2019, the BioRescue international consortium (Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Berlin; Safari Park Dvur Kralove; Ol Pejeta Conservancy; Kenya Wildlife Service; Avantea veterinary laboratory, Italy) has conducted 12 egg collection procedures from Najin and Fatu under general anaesthesia. As of 2025, 30 viable northern white rhino embryos are stored in liquid nitrogen at the Leibniz Institute in Berlin, created by fertilising Najin’s and Fatu’s eggs with cryopreserved sperm from three deceased northern white rhino males (Suni, Saut, and Angalifu, whose sperm was collected before their deaths). The next step in the programme: implanting these embryos into southern white rhino surrogate females (Ceratotherium simum simum, the southern subspecies, closely related enough to carry a northern white rhino pregnancy). Southern white rhino surrogate pregnancies are already in progress as of 2025, with the first births anticipated within the programme’s timeline. The scientific path to subspecies survival is open — but the timeline is long: even with successful surrogate births, establishing a self-sustaining wild population of northern white rhinos requires decades of successive generations before the population reaches viability. The story is not over.
Visiting Najin and Fatu
The northern white rhino experience at Ol Pejeta: a specialist visit (USD $30/person additional to the conservancy entry fee) that includes a briefing by the Ol Pejeta conservation team, a visit to the viewing area adjacent to the managed boma where Najin and Fatu spend part of their day, and the opportunity to see the two animals if they are in the accessible area. Important caveat: Najin and Fatu are not always visible from the public viewing area — they have access to a large managed pasture and may be in areas not visible from the vehicle track. The conservation team will inform visitors of the best current location and viewing probability. When visible: the encounter is affecting in a way that few wildlife experiences match — two animals representing the entirety of a species, moving slowly through the golden Laikipia grass under the shadow of Mount Kenya, under 24-hour armed guard. Photography: the viewing area allows vehicle-based photography at approximately 50–80 m distance. A 200–400mm focal length fills the frame adequately.
Black Rhino: The World’s Best Viewing
Ol Pejeta’s black rhino population (120 individuals, all black rhino — Diceros bicornis michaeli, the East African subspecies) is the largest single-conservancy black rhino population in East Africa and the most accessible for close-range vehicle viewing. The Ol Pejeta black rhino are almost completely habituated to vehicle presence — the conservancy’s intensive 24-hour anti-poaching patrols (60+ rangers covering 364 sq km) mean the rhinos are surrounded by human presence throughout their lives and have become accustomed to vehicles at close range. Morning game drives regularly encounter black rhino at 5–15 m distance, browsing on acacia branches, dust-bathing at wallows, or resting in the midday shade. The breeding programme: Ol Pejeta has produced 55+ black rhino calves since the conservancy was established in 2004, with calves born annually into the protected population. Some calves are transferred to other Kenya conservancies (Lewa, Nakuru NP) to maintain genetic diversity and expand the protected population outside Ol Pejeta.
The Full Ol Pejeta Wildlife Experience
Beyond the rhino, Ol Pejeta offers a genuinely rich Big Five and beyond experience on 364 sq km. Lion: Ol Pejeta’s lion population (approximately 30 individuals in 5 prides) provides reliable lion sightings — morning game drives encounter lion on approximately 70% of days. The Ol Pejeta lions are habituated but maintain the larger distances from vehicles than the Masai Mara equivalents; encounters are more “wild” in character, which many visitors prefer. Cheetah: resident coalitions in the open grassland, viewed on approximately 50% of morning game drives. Elephant: a resident herd of 70–80 individuals using the Ewaso Ng’iro River corridor in the northern conservancy. The Ol Pejeta elephants are big-tusked (Laikipia elephants carry some of the largest tusks in Kenya) and are encountered most reliably at the Ewaso Ng’iro water crossings in the afternoon. Sweetwaters Chimpanzee Sanctuary: the only place in Kenya where chimpanzees can be encountered — rescued chimps from across East Africa (Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda, Rwanda) that cannot be returned to the wild due to human habituation or injury. The sanctuary (additional fee included in some accommodation packages, or USD $20/person separate access) provides an encounter with approximately 40 chimps in a large fenced area. Not a wild chimp encounter, but an informative welfare-focused experience with the animals close and uncrowded.
Getting There, Accommodation and Mount Kenya Combination 2025
- From Nairobi: 180 km north on the A2 via Thika, Karatina, Nanyuki (2.5–3 hours in normal traffic). Good tarmac throughout. Self-drive is straightforward.
- Fly-in: Safarilink and AirKenya operate daily flights from Nairobi Wilson Airport to Nanyuki (30 minutes, USD $90–120 one way). Ground transfer from Nanyuki to Ol Pejeta: 30 minutes by arranged conservancy vehicle (included in most lodge packages) or Uber/taxi (USD $15–20).
- Entry fee: USD $70/person/day (Kenya Wildlife Service gazetted conservancy fee). Vehicle fee additional (KSh 600/vehicle/day). Northern white rhino visit: USD $30/person additional.
- Accommodation inside Ol Pejeta: Sweetwaters Serena Camp (USD $250–400/night full board — 39 tents, good rhino viewing from the camp perimeter), Ol Pejeta Bush Camp (USD $200–350/night, smaller and more intimate), Kicheche Bush Camp (USD $400–600/night, one of Kenya’s best value small luxury camps). Day-visit accommodation available in Nanyuki town (20 km) at more moderate prices.
- Mount Kenya combination: Ol Pejeta is 20 km from Nanyuki and 30 km from Mount Kenya’s Sirimon Gate. The 2-night Ol Pejeta + 2-night Mount Kenya circuit (Point Lenana summit bid at 4,985 m) is the definitive Laikipia Plateau itinerary and covers wildlife, conservation, and mountain adventure in 4 days from Nairobi.