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Archives for February 2022

Rayneception

February 21, 2022 by Anthony

For weeks now, I’ve been bringing my camera with me when I walk between the two new greenhouses (Oakwood and Riverview) in hopes of catching someone looking through the canvas flaps that separate those areas from the indoor playrooms. The concept formed when I saw Rayne pause there a while back and thought the rectangular doorway framed her face nicely. Sadly, I did not have my camera with me at the time, but Rayney had already inspired (or incepted?) the idea into my mind.

This afternoon, Rayne unknowingly made me a happy photographer. (I’d say she made me a happy caregiver, but she does that everyday regardless.) I was walking by the greenhouses and trawling for blog material when she popped her head out to see what I was up to. Rayne calmly paused in the doorway, gently lifted the curtains, and peered out into the greenhouses to see if there was any activity worthy of her time. I cheerfully snapped a few shots, excited that my vision for a composition had actually manifested itself into a real photo. I might need to do a little editing to make the image look the way I think it should, but Rayne clearly did most of the work here.

As I was transferring the image file to the desktop computer we use for blogging, I found some other photos of Rayne that I don’t remember sharing here before. I hope her tender, inquisitive demeanor comes through in the photos!

 

Filed Under: Caregivers, portrait, Rayne Tagged With: animal rights, Animal Welfare, chimp, chimpanzee, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, chimpanzees, northwest, Sanctuary

A Sunday kind of Sunday

February 20, 2022 by Katelyn

While winter and spring dance together outside the chimp house today, the chimpanzees have been quiet and easeful inside. (I am quite sure I’ve jinxed things with that statement, but too late now). We arrived this morning to sunny skies only to have a brief snowstorm blow in in time for breakfast. By lunch ice cold winds pushed the storm southward at which point our raptor neighbors seemed to joyfully fill the sky. Two pairs of bald eagles, two pairs of red-tailed hawks, and a pair of ravens, all swirled together above the chimp house, their calls as piercing as the cold. Eventually two pairs of blue-jays joined in with their calls of mimicry. I just ran outside to fetch snow snacks for Missy and I see the next storm heading this way. The seven have been adamant we collect as many snow snacks as possible from the dwindling supply.

The chimpanzees have taken this all in stride, enjoying their sunny windows and greenhouses when they can, and curling into their blanket nests when the sun disappears.

Dora, Lucky and Cy! I had a couple of photos in which Lucky and Cy had chins raised in tandem, looking particularly tough, but little do people know it’s the tiny, cute lady in the back who is the tough one! Dora, much like her neighbor, Foxie, is definitely of the tiny, but fierce variety when she takes a mind to be. That said, she has been very playful today. She has a really endearing behavior of gently shaking her head at us in greeting (bobblehead-style), which moves throughout her whole body when she’s particularly happy.

After breakfast everyone decided to curl up and rest as the snow came down. Gordo decided to see what all the hullabaloo about Cy’s magazines is:

Heart-melter, Cy:

Resting head to head on the bench with Cy was his sister, Lucky:

Rayne (who spent most of the morning choosing to wear a silky scarf as a skirt):

Not everyone had time to lie around though. Miss Honey B was a blur, zooming in and out of the playroom and greenhouse while the humans took turns chasing along from outside the building:

As I type this, we can see sweet Annie in the cameras as she tries to see into the kitchen to see what’s for dinner, madly stomping her feet. That’s Annie-speak for, “I’m hungry! It’s dinnertime!”

Filed Under: Cy, Dora, Gordo, Honey B, Lucky, Rayne, Sanctuary

Why Them?

February 19, 2022 by Diana

There’s an image from the news last month that I can’t get out of my mind. I’m betting many of you saw it too. It was a photograph, shared in this New York Times article, among many other publications, of wooden crates strewn across a highway, some of them upright, some of them on their sides. There are stickers on the crates that say “Live Animals” and “Do Not Tip”.

We know from the reporting that these crates held cynomolgus macaques, often referred to as “cynos” by caretakers in biomedical laboratories, and commonly called both crab-eating and long-tailed macaques. We know that there were around 100 monkeys on the truck that crashed in Pennsylvania and that they were being transported from John F. Kennedy airport to an undisclosed biomedical facility. The main headline was that several of the monkeys “escaped” when the truck crashed, and that the public was asked to stay away from the area and avoid contact with the monkeys.

We also know that these macaques were shipped from Mauritius to JFK. Mauritius is a small island country in the Indian Ocean, off the eastern coast of Africa, 500 miles east of Madagascar. From my brief background searching, I found that Mauritius is a beautiful island with an interesting political and economic history that has resulted in a diverse religious and ethnic population, with many of the human residents decedents of indentured servants used to farm sugar plantations. Like a lot of the world, it was under the control of different European nations over the years and is now independently governed.

Macaques are not native to the island. They were thought to have been brought there in the 1600s by sailors. Wild populations of these macaques now thrive on the island and are considered to be an invasive species. Starting a few decades ago, wild macaques were captured and captive-breeding programs began specifically to export their offspring to biomedical laboratories primarily in the United States and the U.K. Mauritius supplies as many as 10,000 cynomolgus macaques per year to U.S. laboratories.

More recently, and controversially, laboratories are being developed on the island to do research there rather than only relying on the export of the monkeys to labs in other countries. If you type “Mauritius monkeys” into any search engine, you will find a lot of information about the monkey trade there and the animal activism that has resulted from that trade.

It’s still difficult for me to cognitively comprehend the scale of biomedical research using non-human primates. It is estimated that there are around 75,000 monkeys used each year in biomedical research, including breeding programs and holding facilities, in the United States alone.

Even those of us who know a little bit about biomedical research on monkeys are rarely confronted with the reality of all of this primate research. The crates that were tossed from the transport truck during the accident and the monkeys who got out of their crates to briefly roam Pennsylvania, I imagine in a terrified mental state, were a tiny reminder of all the individual lives that are sacrificed for biomedical testing.

Of course the news cycle is quick, and I doubt many people who read the original headlines are still thinking about those monkeys or the tens of thousands of their kind they represent.

You might be wondering at this point what happened to the escapees. Some of the stories I saw just mentioned that they were “accounted for” within a few days, though the Associated Press expanded upon that and said that three were “euthanized” once they were found. Further reporting specified that the macaques were shot with firearms.

The airline that initially shipped the monkeys, Kenya Airways, has since publicly stated that they are ending their contract with the undisclosed company that had the monkeys shipped to the U.S. Perhaps the CEO of Kenya Airways, like me, can’t get that image of those crates in the highway out of his mind.

We at Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest have plans for the future that include building and caring for monkeys, perhaps monkeys that are now part of biomedical research. It’s very unlikely that the sanctuary community will ever be large enough or have the funds to retire all monkeys from biomedical testing, and there are currently no restrictions on “euthanizing” non-chimpanzee primates for purely management or financial reasons (chimpanzees hold a unique place in the biomedical research field for this practice of not being killed when they are no longer useful).

I often think about the chimpanzees who lived their entire lives in laboratories. The ones who were part of the system long before sanctuaries existed, and the ones who are still part of the system because they have been deemed ineligible for retirement.

There’s no just reason for particular chimpanzees to have been given the opportunity of a different kind of life in a sanctuary while others were not, and the same will hold true for monkeys.

Here’s the tiny bit of hope, though:

We will keep working for those chimpanzees still in laboratories. We will continue to try to give the chimpanzees in our care a true sanctuary life. We will continue to share their beautiful faces and personalities with you, like these photos I took today of brother and sister Cy and Lucky:

Cy
Lucky

And you will continue to remind others that their lives are important.

There are some monkeys that are being retired from biomedical testing to other sanctuaries now. One day we will join them in providing a home for monkeys. It won’t be all the monkeys who deserve retirement, but for those who come here, we will give them a true sanctuary life and we will share their beautiful faces and personalities with you. Because their lives are important too.

Some day in the future, I can’t even begin to imagine when, but some day, there will be a celebration for the last monkeys in biomedical research in the U.S. going to their sanctuary home.

Filed Under: Chimpanzees in Biomedical Research, Cy, Lucky, Sanctuary Tagged With: biomedical research, biomedical testing, chimp, chimpanzee, chimps, cynomolgus macaques, escaped monkey, hope, macaque, mauritius, monkey retirement, photo, portrait, Primates

Day Bags

February 18, 2022 by Anna

Recently, due to a presumed supply chain issue, we ran out of primate chow and have been unable to order more (for the time being).  Primate chow is a fortified biscuit that the chimps enjoy at the end of their breakfast and lunch meal services. It is a treasured final course for most of the chimpanzees so we needed to come up with a few temporary substitutions that would satisfy some expectant people that are HIGHLY familiar with our meal routine. Enter “Day Bags.” Day bags are similar to night bags (popcorn, peanuts and seeds -minus the dried fruit) and seem to please even the most avid chow enthusiast.

*Bonus footage at the end of this video of a beautiful sun filled adventure around Young’s Hill!

Filed Under: Food, Gordo, Sanctuary Tagged With: Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Sanctuary

Thank you, Trisha!

February 18, 2022 by Katelyn

Thank you so much, Trisha McQuade, for sponsoring a day of sanctuary and for sharing your love of the chimpanzees and their days and adventures. All of which you help make possible for them! We truly appreciate you being here.

“I look to the blogs every day. I enjoy all of it. It’s so rewarding to see the groups interactions both good and bad. Yet, I feel as if I am a superfan of all of them. Recently, the video with Cy jumping because the cattle photo in the book was very surprising. He reads so many magazines that reaction was unexpected. Willy B’s exploration to the outside and walking on the grass is heartwarming. I am looking forward to the spring when then he starts to explore and eager to see if others join the journey. Of course, snake alert! I think there was one with Jamie tossing the snake is a classic. I am sponsoring a day for me and my chimp family to enjoy. A thought for my day…Dreams of warm weather or nightmares of snakes? 🙂 Old photos? Old videos? Stay Safe and thank you for all your time and efforts.”

Cy:

Willy B:

Annie, Jamie and Foxie, searching for a snake:

Jamie, on patrol:

It’s safe to say we, too, are dreaming of spring and ready to kick up our heels, Missy-style:

Missy running

Filed Under: Courtyard, Cy, Sanctuary, Sponsor-a-day, Willy B, Young's Hill

The Wednesday Weigh-In

February 17, 2022 by J.B.

In our house we have a weekly event known as the “Wednesday Weigh-In”, in which we pick up our pup, Benny, and stand with him on a scale in the kitchen. It began as part of an effort to put pounds on an underweight rescue dog and, after getting a bit carried away, now serves to help take off an extra pound or two. We all agree that putting weight on a dog was way more fun.

Keeping track of the chimps’ weights is every bit as important, if not more so, not just for overall health but also because with a moment’s notice we may have to administer medications that, for safety reasons, must be carefully dosed by weight. In the chimps’ case, however, weight must be measured remotely, because when it comes time for Cy to require anesthesia, I am not going to be the one standing on a scale with him in my arms.

We were a little behind on getting a scale installed in the new playrooms but it’s finally in and it has been officially tested for durability by Gordo and Dora and given a multi-point inspection by our resident mechanic, Rayne. Everyone but Lucky took part in yesterday’s Wednesday Weigh-In, and that’s because Lucky is the only chimp in her group that we currently have on a diet and the universe sometimes likes to play jokes on us. I’m sure she’ll get the hang of it soon enough, especially with a little positive reinforcement training.

In case you’re wondering, we record weight in kilograms because most medications are dosed in milligrams per kilogram (“migs per kig” if you want to talk like the cool kids).

Filed Under: Cy, Dora, Gordo, Rayne, Terry, Veterinary Care Tagged With: chimpanzee, health, measurement, northwest, remote, rescue, Sanctuary, scale, weigh, weight

For Mr. B and Mr. E.B.J.

February 17, 2022 by Katelyn

Many thanks to Tobin, friend of the chimpanzees and bovines, and a name you may recognize here among the comments of our wonderful daily blog community, for sponsoring a day of sanctuary today!

“In honor of Burrito, as well as to commemorate my grandfather, Everett B. Jeffries, who was born on this day in 1897.

Five years ago at this time, despondent about the malevolent policies emanating from my nation’s leadership – and their deleterious efforts upon the ecosystem – I went online, looking for signs of resistance and hope. In my wandering, by some miracle I came upon a video which bore the caption: ‘Rescued Chimpanzee Plays with Caregiver.’

Cognizant of how endangered – and abused – great ape species are, I was not certain that I could bear to inquire into the context of this chimpanzee’s rescue from human mistreatment. And yet, I pressed the arrow on the computer screen onto the caption, and in an instant, my life changed. I had learned about a great spirit with the curious name of Burrito.

Like many human primates who encounter Burrito – either in person or through the medium of the internet – I was immediately smitten by him. I had to know more about this freckle-faced, wooden block-chewing, tug-of-war player. Soon I learned that this charming man resided with six other chimpanzees in the Cascade Mountains. As with Burrito, I reacted with awe at learning about his neighbors who had been rescued and given sanctuary in the Cascade foothills. For the next three months, I read everything that I could find about great apes.

Which leads me to my grandfather. The more photographs and videos that I saw of Burrito, the more he seemed to remind me of some human primate in my past. Learning that only 1.24% of genetic material – and five million years of evolutionary history – separate Pan troglodytes from Homo sapiens, I began to discern some remarkable similarities between my immediate ancestor and my distant cousin in the evolutionary tree.

Granted there are numerous contrasts between the two: unlike Burrito, my grandfather was not given to brachiating amongst the rafters of his barn. Likewise, he didn’t display at the Sunday dinner table (i.e. the video from 9.9.2018).

However, they share some commonalities: similar facial structures and hairstyles, a passion for fine dining (in particular, sweet potatoes and squash), and similar throaty laughs. Both Burrito and my grandfather lived and worked in rural environs and shared a household with strong-willed women (my grandmother and in Burrito’s case, Jamie).

Although the internet was not in wide-scale use during my grandfather’s lifetime, I have no doubt that he would have found the daily record of the sanctuary’s website a source of interest. And I am given to speculate, he would have viewed the video of 5.21.2017 and, watching Burrito and Annie play, recalled his courtship of my grandmother.”

We are so glad to know of the connection and joy Burrito and his friends and neighbors have brought to your life, Tobin! Thank you for sharing your heartfelt tribute to the unique being-ness of two special primates.

Jamie and Burrito:

Burrito and Annie:

Filed Under: Burrito, Sanctuary, Sponsor-a-day

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