
Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary: Uganda’s Haven of Hope on Lake Victoria
November 6, 2025On October 1, 2025, the world lost a giant of wildlife conservation. Jane Goodall, aged 91, passed away of natural causes while on tour in the United States.For millions, she was more than a scientist she was a bridge between humanity and nature, reminding us that we share our world with other intelligent, feeling beings.
At Traford Safaris, her life’s work resonates deeply with our mission: bringing travellers face-to-face with wild animals, in ways that honour their dignity and support their habitats. As we remember Dr Goodall, we also reflect on how safari travel can help carry her legacy forward.
A Trailblazer Among Chimps
Dr Goodall’s journey began in Tanzania’s Gombe Stream National Park in the 1960s, where she immersed herself with wild chimpanzees. Her observations changed science forever she documented tool-use, emotional lives, social bonding, and personalities in chimp communities.By showing that chimps had depth, intelligence, and feeling, she helped tens of millions of people to view animals with new respect.
Beyond Research: Building a Movement
In 1977 she founded the Jane Goodall Institute (JGI). What began as chimpanzee field work grew into global conservation, education, and youth-empowerment initiatives. program mobilised young people in more than 60 countries to take action for animals, people, and the environment.
Her message was clear: caring for wildlife means caring for humanity and vice-versa. She treated the natural world and people as intimately connected.
Why Her Legacy Matters for Safari Travel
For us at Traford Safaris, Dr Goodall’s legacy underpins everything we do:
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We believe in ethical wildlife encounters: The animals we meet are not props they are individuals with lives of their own.
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We commit to conservation tourism: Your safari fees support habitats, rangers, communities just as she advised.
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We promote education and respect: Travel isn’t just seeing; it’s learning how to live more kindly and sustainably on our planet.
When you trek gorillas in Uganda or Rwanda, or visit chimpanzee sanctuaries, you’re part of the story she helped script.
A Life of Service, Hope and Action
Even into her 90s, Dr Goodall travelled the world, speaking passionately about climate change, habitat protection, and the need for collective hope. “Every day we live, we make an impact,” she said. Her honours were many including the U.S. Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2025.
Her story invites each of us to ask: What difference will I make?
Moving Forward: How Travelers Can Honour Her Work
Here are a few ways your safari with Traford Safaris can honour Dr Goodall’s memory:
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Choose wildlife experiences that are ethical and community-supporting.
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Learn about each animal’s story: the gorilla family, the chimp group, the habitat’s threats and triumphs.
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Support local communities they defend the forests and grasslands that enable wildlife to flourish.
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Leave the ground better than you found it: minimal waste, no disturbance, genuine reverence.
Conclusion
Jane Goodall once wrote: “What you do makes a difference, and you have to decide what kind of difference you want to make.” Her life was the living answer to that question.
At Traford Safaris, we honour her by guiding travellers into wild places responsibly, changing lives for animals and people. As we mourn her passing, we celebrate her legacy and invite you to join us in continuing the journey she began.
🌿 Ready to travel with purpose and respect? Connect with us and let’s create a safari that honours Jane Goodall’s vision for the wild, for the animals, for the future.




