World Veterinary Day may have passed, but the work it recognises continues every single day at Cango Wildlife. Veterinary care sits quietly at the centre of everything, supporting each animal, guiding every decision, and ensuring that those in our care receive the attention they deserve. It is not always visible to visitors, but it is always present. This year, we took a moment to reflect on the people behind that care. Dr...
Cango Strengthens Welfare Standards Through National Professional Development
Johannesburg Zoo recently hosted South Africa’s first comprehensive animal behavioural management workshop in partnership with Wild Welfare and Wild Welfare US. The four day programme brought together more than sixty animal care professionals from across the country, including our own Jenna Lowe, Assistant Animal Curator, and Siyabonga Dlamini, an Animal Caretaker.
This milestone training centred on progressive animal welfare principles, ethical decision making, enrichment development and positive reinforcement training. Delegates explored how empathy and modern training methods support healthier, more natural behavioural outcomes, reflecting global best practice in captive wildlife care.
For Jenna, the experience was both motivating and professionally enriching. She explained that the programme focused on welfare foundations, animal training and enrichment, and that delegates were placed into groups to generate ideas, problem solve and share knowledge. In her words, “We had the opportunity to work together, share our experience and challenge our thinking around how and why we care for animals the way we do”. She added that the workshop reinforced the importance of empathy as the starting point for excellent animal care and reminded her that ongoing learning is essential for a facility that wants to lead in modern conservation and welfare standards.
Siyabonga described the workshop as a turning point in how he views daily animal care. He spoke about how caretakers sometimes fall into routine and explained, you clean, feed and close, but animals do not live in a checklist. They live through emotion, sensation and experience. For him, the workshop highlighted that animal care is not about convenience, it is about understanding behaviour and feeling, and making decisions that support emotional wellbeing. He shared that one message stayed with him strongly: apathy holds us back, but empathy moves everything forward. He returned eager to translate this learning into everyday practice, saying, “I know these training ideas, but hearing them explained in a new way opened my mind and changed how I think. I am excited to start applying what we learned here at Cango”.
The programme included hands on training sessions, enrichment construction skills and a unique learning exercise where participants experienced training from the perspective of the animal. This deepened their appreciation for timing, clarity, patience and trust, which are essential for positive reinforcement training and ethical behaviour shaping.
This opportunity reflects Cango Wildlife's commitment to continuous professional development and evidence based welfare practice. As a facility known for putting animal welfare first, we remain dedicated to staying current with global best practice and advancing our knowledge in a rapidly evolving field. Workshops like this strengthen our existing foundation of premium care and ensure that our team remains informed, skilled and forward thinking in modern conservation work.
We are proud of Jenna and Siyabonga for representing our team with passion and professionalism. Their learning supports the advanced standard of care already provided at our facility and helps us continue to lead with empathy, science and purpose.
Further Reading
Mother’s Day is often marked with flowers, gifts, and quiet moments of appreciation. This year at Cango Wildlife, it becomes something more. A two day celebration, on 09 and 10 May, dedicated not only to human mothers, but to every form of motherhood we are privileged to witness. Because care is not limited to one species. Across the facility, motherhood takes many shapes. It is seen in the quiet watchfulness of a...
In Oudtshoorn, wildlife is part of daily life. And when that life crosses into homes, schools, or businesses, there is often one person people call first - Mornay Thysse. For years, Mornay has been the steady hand in moments of panic. Safely removing and relocating snakes, protecting both people and wildlife with calm, skill, and respect for the animals he works with. His role is not always easy. It is often urgent,...










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