In cooperation with the local community, the NOLORAMATA identifies and allocates sensitive areas for wildlife that are in danger of disappearing due to lack of pasture, for example wildebeest that use the area as the critical wet season calving area. A key strategy developed in cooperation with the community is rotational grazing. We establish grazing plans where larger areas are left each year without grazing during the growing (wet) season to allow enough pasture (rotational grazing). By using the natural method of burning fire (controlled fire burning), the organization works with the community to adopt a cycle of fire (rotational burning) to clear and kill invasive weeds to allow productive natural grassland for livestock and wild animals.