September 22

Celebrating World Rhino Day – Rhino Africa Style

0  comments

September 22, 2016

Rhino Africa has always marched to the beat of our own drum, a wonderfully rhythmic African drum. So when it came to celebrating World Rhino Day this year we thought we’d do something a little bit different, that would involve everyone at Rhino Africa and was fun while also creating awareness about the day itself.World Rhino Day saw us at Art JammingWe decided to pool our creative talent and paint a team mural, a 9 metre x 6 metre work of art of a rhino with her baby. With each rhino responsible for their own square, we gathered after work over the course of a week, poured some wine, pumped some music and let the magic flow, or not. Some of them an 8-year-old would have scorned, but generally they came out surprisingly well.Painting together for World Rhino DayWearing rhino onesies on World Rhino DayThe next step was to bring it all together. We snuck out over lunch one day, the entire office marching en masse to the nearby Company’s Garden to assemble what we were now calling, ‘The Biggest Rhino Painting in All the World’. The pieces all looked fairly similar to one another so for the important process of assembling we called on a select group of Rhinos to lead the way. They dressed as rhinos. A rhino in a rhino. Rhinoception. I think it came together better than we could ever have imagined. I’ll leave it up to the video to show you exactly how it all played out…


As David says in the video, ‘Every piece of our puzzle is important to build something truly great. This little project is a perfect example that when we work together we can do amazing things and that not even the sky is the limit.’

And check out our exciting first 360 degree video here. Drag your mouse to move around the camera!


Happy World Rhino Day 2016! Group photo in Company's Garden for World Rhino Day


Tags


You May Also Like

How a Kwandwe Safari Changes Lives

How a Kwandwe Safari Changes Lives

Our Top African Travel Trends for 2024

Our Top African Travel Trends for 2024

About the author 

Matthew Sterne

Matt discovered a passion for writing in the six years he spent travelling abroad. He worked for a turtle sanctuary in Nicaragua, in an ice cream factory in Norway and on a camel safari in India. He was a door-to-door lightbulb-exchanger in Australia, a pub crawl guide in Amsterdam and a journalist in Colombia. Now, he writes and travels with us.

{"email":"Email address invalid","url":"Website address invalid","required":"Required field missing"}
>