What Clean Water Makes Possible?
How reliable water access is transforming daily life for Maasai communities in Amboseli.
More Than Water
Reliable access to clean water has the power to transform daily life for Maasai communities in Amboseli. This community-led project is working to establish a solar-powered borehole that will provide safe water for households, livestock, wildlife, and local businesses. Once in place, the borehole will reduce the time and risk involved in water collection while laying the foundation for improved health, education, woman empowerment enterprises, and long-term community wellbeing.
Water as the Starting Point
The planned borehole is designed to serve more than 1,500 community members and over 1000 animals, forming the backbone of a broader development vision. By creating reliable water access, the project aims to reclaim time for women and girls, improve safety, support local livelihoods, and reduce pressure on surrounding wildlife and natural habitats.

Building Resilience From the Ground Up
This project is designed to go beyond infrastructure. With water as the foundation, the borehole will enable future community-led initiatives focused on education, women’s enterprise, food security, and environmental protection — supporting long-term resilience for generations to come.
The Challenge This Project Responds To
In this region of Amboseli, access to clean and reliable water is a daily challenge. Families often travel long distances to collect water, sometimes bringing them into close contact with elephants and other wildlife. These risks, combined with time lost and unreliable water sources, affect health, safety, and livelihoods. This borehole project was created to address these challenges and support safer, more sustainable access to water for the community.

Healthy Water, Healthy Herds, Strong Communities
For the Maasai people, water is the foundation of life, culture, and livelihood. As pastoralists, the wellbeing of the community is closely tied to the health of their livestock. Cattle are central to Maasai identity, representing wealth, tradition, and social connection. When water sources are clean and reliable, cattle remain strong and productive—supporting families, providing food, and sustaining generations of Maasai culture.
Clean water also benefits the wider ecosystem. Livestock and wildlife often share the same water sources across the savanna, meaning that improving water quality helps animals, people, and nature thrive together. For the Maasai, caring for water is caring for their cattle, their land, and their future—because when the animals are healthy, the community is strong.
Life in the Community Today
These images reflect daily life in the community the borehole project is designed to support — the people, landscapes, and realities that shape the need for reliable water access.





A Vision for Safe Water and Stronger Community
While the Life in the Community Today shows the challenges this community faces today, the Maasai Mammas Borehole Project is designed to transform daily life through reliable, community-owned water infrastructure.





