I used to live my life for the summers.
Growing up in a maritime New England town, summer was always the “best” season. The warm weather and sandy coastline brought tourists from all over, and my teenage friends and I spent those months playing baseball, mowing lawns, and bringing Dunkin iced coffees to our favorite beaches. Even though I moved to a big city and academics took over, I still wanted to live my life in a permanent state of summer vacation and I developed this dream of expatriating to the tropics and staying there. As a naive young biologist, my plan was to track wild primates through jungles all morning and end each day with a bottle of rum in a hammock overlooking some turquoise lagoon. (Don’t ask me how I planned to fund that kind of lifestyle.)
In an unexpected turn of events, I now reside in an arid place far from the ocean where the summers are short, windy and dry. I’ve grown to respect the other seasons and, for some reason, I can now see the beauty in even the most frigid, gloomy, foggy, damp, and dusty landscapes. The Pacific Northwest is a natural marvel; it’s truly a wonder that the snow-capped Cascades can exist so close to the mossy forests of the Olympic coast, the dusty shrub-steppe of the Columbia plateau, and the wind-blown grasslands of the Palouse. Out here, there’s no such thing as perfect weather; there is just weather, and you better have the right gear for it.
Now, the central region of Washington state is transitioning from a cool and wet spring into a dry and hazy summer. Yesterday was the official solstice, but we have had golden sunlight well into the evenings for the whole month of June. The cattle are grazing heartily on the prairie grasses and make daily pilgrimages back to their watering hole before finding some afternoon shade below the pines. Jamie and the gang have been taking advantage of the extra daylight to go on more group patrols out in their grassy enclosure, and Willy B and his friends have been napping in the Courtyard and sunbathing in the outdoor chute.
I sometimes wonder if, in some abstract way, the summer months have a similar effect on the chimpanzees as they had on adolescent me. As I watch them chase each other around the Hill, harvest wild greens, sunbathe in the Greenhouse and slurp down chunks of avocado and watermelon, it’s easy to forget just how much the chimps also enjoy crunching on icicles, taking in the crisp fall breeze and napping on rainy days. Like true residents of the Pacific Northwest, they can make the most of any season and aren’t deterred by a little precipitation. Although they may not have the same sentimental attachment to summer that I once had, I hope that their entire sanctuary experience gives them a similar sense of freedom, with their only objective being to do whatever they feel like doing within the confines of their sheltered home. Since they’ve just celebrated the twelfth anniversary of their retirement to sanctuary, they have now had 4,392 consecutive days of vacation. That’s a whole lot o’ summer.
Of course, there are those who generally prefer the comforts of the indoors and the word “vacation” just means that they don’t need to get out of bed. To these individuals, the seasonal changes really don’t seem to matter too much and just seem to flow around them. The chief of these stoic couch-potatoes is Negra. “The Queen” will occasionally venture out to participate in an outdoor forage, but she generally has the same low-key itinerary each day, rain or shine. Today, she napped in the Greenhouse under a pile of fleece blankets while the other chimps engaged in summer fun out on the Hill. Happy four-thousand, three-hundred and ninety-second day of summer break, Neggie.
nah, Anthony, it’s too humid, already, even though the heat isn’t really here yet. And beach space is limited. I think a chimpy summer is the better choice!
Great pic of Nutmeg (if a steer could have a Tinder profile, that would be his pic, lol)….and Neggie, too. She looks like she’s either thinking deep thoughts, or checking to see if the breakfast tray has peanuts on it.
My parents were complaining about the crowds heading to the beaches! I’m content with my chimpy plans instead.
As for Nutmeg, maybe I’ll make him a Tinder. What would his ideal first date consist of?
well, you know him better than I, so tell us!
“Single steer seeks heifer who likes eating green stuff, mooing, alfafa, and eating green stuff”?
I’m 4 blocks up the hill from 1st beach here, but haven’t been yet. Wrappong up spring semester, starting on fall. Going with the hiking group to Sachuest tomorrow for little 5k walk and chat after, our first social distancing activity.
I *did* make it back to the newly reopened Brenton Point for takeout Indian and the sunset with a neighbour last Saturday. Stunning pics
Anthony, As a retired English teacher, you get an “A” for your essay!
It was a pleasure reading such an excellent article. Keep up the good work!
Negra in this pic looks like sculptor Rodin’s The Thinker, well, except for her addition of the blankets! What an expression she has on her face! Thank you, Anthony, for this lovely long musing and great pics of the herd.
Cheers, Marya!
Enjoyed your post Anthony. Here’s to 4,393 and onward. It is funny how the chimps have adapted to the seasons, enjoying everything from icicles to sweet spring grass to tomatoes picked fresh from the garden. It appears even the cows are adjusting to everything WA has to offer. And Neggie, she’s pondering a how to install a Night Bag Dispenser in the chimp house.
oh, I KNEW that was it! 😛
Anthony … thank you for this post which is rich in image invoking descriptions. I grew up in So. Ca. where all seasons were pretty much the same. People say it’s wonderful but I always thought it was boring. Living in Spokane now I am thrilled every season with the changes in sensory and visual stimuli…. I bet the bovines and chimps feel the same. Thank you as always for a grand post and pics.
we believe you and the folks in Hawaii, Judy….it’s just that every year when January rolls around, we feel the need to test that theory ourselves!