Anthropologist and conservationist Saba Douglas-Hamilton commences her In The Footsteps Of Elephants tour in September, and a reflective evening will take place in King's Lynn during the month.
This award-winning wildlife television presenter, writer and public speaker was born in Kenya's Great Rift Valley and was introduced to her first elephant in the wild when she was just six weeks old.
Douglas-Hamilton graduated with an MA from St Andrews University and secured a job working in Namibia with Save The Rhino Trust. She subsequently became an anthropological consultant employed by the National Museums of Kenya before joining Save The Elephants, her father Iain Douglas-Hamilton's charity, in 1997.
The BBC spotted her talent and so began a TV career that began with Last of the Longnecks, a documentary about giraffe conservation. However, she is perhaps best known for Big Cat Diaries and This Wild Life, based at Sambru's Elephant Watch Camp. She now lives with her husband and three children in Kenya, and during this tour will tell tales of animals and discuss her family life in this part of the world.
Tickets range in price from £24 to £27. Printing services can be a valuable resource when it comes to preparing for a speaking tour or theatrical event.
Saba Douglas-Hamilton's talk has a starting time of 7:30 pm on Monday, September 19 at The Corn Exchange, King's Lynn.
