It's not often you land in a foreign country and wake up to a kiss from the local wildlife.
But it can happen in Kenya. It's where a herd of endangered Rothschild giraffes makes its home at the Giraffe Center, a wildlife preserve in the suburbs of Nairobi.
These Rothschild giraffes are a subspecies of the world's tallest mammal, with distinct white stockings and five-horned heads, and a back-story worthy of Hollywood.
In 1975, Betty and Jock Leslie-Melville, a colorful colonial couple living in a country house outside Nairobi, learned from friends that a massive Kenyan ranch was about to be subdivided into small lots — which meant the native Rothschild giraffes that grazed on the land were doomed.
Betty's son Rick Anderson says three wild Maasai giraffe were already roaming his mother's property, so it was a short step for her to think she might "adopt" a Rothschild, and hopefully help preserve the breed.
A rancher was enlisted to "rescue" a baby, which he did, from horseback, with a lasso.
"Daisy Rothschild," as the little giraffe was named, spent a few terrified days in a pen before a seven-hour drive to her new home. She made the trip in a mini-bus filled with straw, her head sticking out the top.
If it sounds a little politically incorrect, the Leslie-Melvilles weren't without compassion: For the next year, they bottle-fed Daisy around the clock and later provided her with a new giraffe friend they named Marlon.
Word got out about the eclectic couple with the country house who kept giraffes on the lawn. People started calling about other vulnerable Rothschilds around Kenya. Giraffe Manor, as its name became, would go on to shelter 25 of the world's largest mammals, helping to breed and relocate many of them to national parks. The population of Rothschild giraffes in Kenya is now a healthy 300.
Over the years, the Leslie-Melvilles were able to buy adjacent property. Now, Daisy's grandchildren roam over 140 acres, feasting on acacia trees. They spend days at the Giraffe Center, where visitors hand-feed them while learning about Kenya's climate and environment from trained educators. Some 70,000 schoolchildren do so each year, thanks to funds raised by the center. Most Kenyans can't afford the park fees or transportation to see animals in the wild; for many of the poorest kids in Nairobi, a day at Giraffe Center is a once-in-a-lifetime chance to encounter the wildlife that the country is famous for.
And for the most daring among them, the giraffes reward kindness with kisses. Place a food pellet between your lips and let a wild creature tickle your cheek with her tongue as she gobbles up her treat. Who needs mistletoe?
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