Experience a unique internship with the Southern African Foundation for the Conservation of Coastal Birds (SANCCOB) and participate in the six-month chick rearing program working hands-on with seabirds of South Africa.
Established in 1968, SANCCOB has saved and treated more than 90,000 oiled, ill, injured or abandoned endangered African Penguins among other threatened seabirds.
The internship equips individuals with ‘chic-husbandry’ and egg management skills that are beneficial for working in captive breeding or seabird chick rearing. SANCCOB’s programme prepares interns for a career in bird care and conservation, which will ensure growth in populations of the threatened and endangered species. Interns will work with adorable young penguins and seabirds from the moment they hatch to their ever-awaited release back into the natural marine environment.
Potential interns are reminded that they must posses the following qualities: be focused, self motivated, compassionate and highly observant for the position.
What SANCCOB expects from their interns:
– Committed and willing to go the extra mile
– Able to work in a team and independently
– Willing to work in different weather conditions, rain or sunshine
– Reliable and accountable
– Good problem-solving skills
– Work well under pressure
– Excellent communication skills
– Attention to detail
– Trustworthy
– Ability to multitask, prioritise and perform tasks by order of importance and delegate tasks to volunteers and other interns
More details about the internship can be found here.
Prospective interns will acquire a wide range of skills during their working period at SANCCOB, from basic training of other interns to handling, feeding and monitoring African penguin chicks of all ages and more.
Available dates for the internship are:
- April 2019 – September 2019 (one intern required)
- June 2019 – November 2019 (one intern required)
- September 2019 – February 2020 (two interns required)
- October 2019 – March 2020 (one intern required)
- December 2019 – May 2020 (one intern required)
Applications for the internship can be downloaded here.
Picture: Facebook/SANCCOB