What is Jane doing now?
At any moment, the most likely place to find Jane Goodall is on an airplane. “Dr. Jane,” as many children call her, spends most of her time carrying her message of conservation and individual action all around the world. She travels an incredible amount of the time, giving lectures, visiting schools and meeting young people involved in her Roots & Shoots global youth program. She is not able to spend much time at the Gombe Stream Research Centre, site of almost 40 years of study on wild chimpanzees. The time Dr. Jane is able to spend there with the chimps is precious to her. When Dr. Jane is not on the road or at Gombe, she spends time at her home in Bournemouth, England which she shares with her younger sister, Judy.
At any moment, the most likely place to find Jane Goodall is on an airplane. “Dr. Jane,” as many children call her, spends most of her time carrying her message of conservation and individual action all around the world. She travels an incredible amount of the time, giving lectures, visiting schools and community groups and meeting young people involved in her Roots & Shoots global youth program. She is not able to spend much time at the Gombe Stream Research Centre, site of almost 40 years of study on wild chimpanzees. The time Jane is able to spend there with the chimps is precious to her.