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Archives for December 2022

To See a Mountain Covered With a Quilt of Snow…

December 4, 2022 by Grace

Snow, snow, snow, snow, snooooow!

Ready, set, name that movie! 🙂

If you guessed White Christmas, you would be right. Every year that I have been alive my family has watched White Christmas on Thanksgiving night. The songs tend to stick in my head throughout the month of December and today, as the snow really started to come down, I was hearing the “Snow” song on repeat. Since it’s been super cold out all day and there was no sign of the sun coming out, we decided to bring the snow in for the chimps. Check out the video for more!

A still of Jamie from today’s video:

Lucky, being her sweet self:

 

 

Filed Under: Annie, Burrito, Chimpanzee, Foxie, Jamie, Latest Videos, Missy, Most Viewed Videos, Rayne, Sanctuary Tagged With: chimp enrichment, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest

Silly Burrito Chimpanzee

December 3, 2022 by Sofia Castro-Loza

Burrito Chimpanzee was extra silly today! Wherever we looked Burrito was engaged in play by himself, with his chimp friends, or with his caregivers and chimp house volunteers.

On the video, Burrito can be seen playing with a giant Kong. This is one of Burrito’s favorite enrichment items and thanks to one of our wonderful donors, Anne M., his group will be getting more! This item was featured on our Comfort & Joy Auction that had items for humans and items for the chimps available and we are very grateful for everyone that participated on the most exciting bidding war we’ve had in a while!

Filed Under: Latest Videos

What is it like to be a chimpanzee?

December 2, 2022 by J.B.

Can we ever know what it’s like to experience the world the way a chimpanzee does? A good starting point would be to assume that their subjective experience is much like our own. After all, our two species diverged a mere 7 million years ago – the blink of an eye in evolutionary terms. It’s certainly a better place to begin than the pre-Darwinian view that nonhuman animals (a phrase which itself would have been redundant at best prior to Darwin) are devoid of conscious experience altogether. And yet it likely fails to do justice to the unique sensory and cognitive world that chimpanzees inhabit.

In the early 20th century, a German biologist by the name of Jacob von Uexküll coined the term umwelt  – “self-world” – to describe the subjective world in which each species exists. An animal’s umwelt is the combination of their unique sensory experience, their morphology, their natural environment, and the things that are biologically important to them. It is reality as they perceive it. A tick, he explains, lacks eyes and ears but finds its way through the world sensing light through its skin and the butyric acid secreted by potential mammalian hosts. Bats “see” the world around them using ultrasonic echoes and ultraviolet vision. We may exist alongside ticks and bats but we inhabit different umwelten because each of our species evolved its own set of tools to make sense of the world around them in ways that are biologically relevant. Because we are each different, the world is different to each of us.

As far as we know, chimpanzees don’t employ active echolocation like bats or sense the sweaty chemical signature of other mammals with a specialized sensory organ like ticks. Their sensory perception, unsurprisingly, appears to be tuned quite similarly to our own. And yet they possess a variety of unique physiological, cognitive, and social faculties that must undoubtedly lead to a subjective experience that is uniquely theirs.

Merkwelt –  The Perceptual Sphere

Take working memory, for example. Researchers in Japan tested chimpanzees’ ability to recall the position of nine Arabic numerals after they were flashed on a screen and then masked with solid squares. To perform the test correctly, the chimpanzees would have to recall the position of each number and then touch the masked squares in ascending order. With exposure of only a fifth of a second, the chimps had an 80 percent accuracy rate. Adult humans only managed to reach 40 percent. With training, humans’ performance improved but only in tests with up to five numbers.

It is theorized that the chimps possess a greater capacity for eidetic imagery. Similar to what we call photographic memory, it is when an image persists in the mind’s eye after a brief exposure. For how long can chimps recall these images? Take a look at what happens when a chimpanzee is distracted in the middle of a session.

Why would chimpanzees possess such an ability? Perhaps it confers an advantage when living in large, dynamic social groups. Or maybe it aids in foraging or hunting. Perhaps it’s common to many other animals, including our own recent ancestors, and humans merely lost it in an evolutionary tradeoff.

But more importantly, how does it influence the way chimpanzees experience the world? Does their perceptual world somehow linger in a way ours does not? Might the near past feel less “past” to them in some way?

Wirkwelt – The Motor Sphere

Our physiology affects the way we experience the world in ways that go beyond sensory perception. For example, a chimpanzee’s world is far more vertically-oriented than our own. Long, slender fingers with tiny thumbs make it easier to grasp when climbing while powerful arm and leg muscles made up of proportionally greater amounts of “fast twitch” fibers make even the most harrowing acrobatic feats possible with a graceful nonchalance.

They are still just as bound by the laws of gravity, and, unlike birds, their opportunities to move vertically are limited to the available objects that they can use to climb, such as trees, vines, and the like. But watch them play or fight and you will realize that they are nowhere near as earth-bound as we are. What does it feel like for not just your perception of the world to be three-dimensional but also your unfettered ability to move through it?

Sozialwelt?

Some propose that the concept of umwelt should be broadened to include an animal’s social sphere and that assumptions about what chimpanzees perceive as right or wrong may hinder our ability to understand them:

[W]e wanted to explore morality in non-human primates. In our set-up, that implied presenting “good” and “bad” experimenters to chimpanzees and let them choose among them. Interestingly, we had no homogeneous general results, however young males consistently chose the bad experimenter. Revisiting the underlying social meaning of the actions we have presented, we realized that we had defined “bad experimenter” as someone entering in a room and hitting a third individual whereas “good experimenter” was someone interrupting the fight and consoling the victim. Mostly all humans would have agreed with these actions being bad and good, respectively. However, would not it be possible that young males could have perceived the bad experimenter as good because during adolescence juveniles show preference for potential allies in future fights (a strong individual that hits others)?

While this interpretation is debatable, anyone that has spent time around male teenage chimpanzees and lived to tell about it should at least acknowledge its plausibility. What is right and what is wrong are no doubt influenced by both the needs and the structure of the social group, and thus the species. One of the hardest parts about being a caregiver to animals like chimpanzees is trying to avoid substituting our own morality for theirs.

The philosopher Thomas Nagel famously approached the problem of consciousness by asking “What is it like to be a bat?” Similar to von Uexküll, his thesis was that consciousness is the subjective experience of an animal which cannot be captured by descriptions of physiology and behavior. I can imagine what it would be like to hang upside-down with my eyes closed, but then I am only imagining what it would be like for me to do bat-like things. The actual subjective experience of a bat is inaccessible to me.

The point of all this is not that we shouldn’t try to understand what it is like to be a chimpanzee. On the contrary, it is our responsibility to try, for that is the only way we can attempt to meet their needs. But a little humility is warranted. As with the tests of working memory, it is all too easy to slip into comparisons about performance – to pity other animals’ deficiencies or marvel at their “superhuman” abilities. Instead, we should strive to view these examples as windows into other strange, rich, and wonderful worlds, equally suited but in ways all their own. “All animals, from the simplest to the most complex,” von Uexküll wrote, “are fitted into their unique worlds with equal completeness.” Only when we acknowledge this fact can we attempt to see the world through their eyes.

Filed Under: Intelligence, Sanctuary Tagged With: chimpanzee, northwest, perception, rescue, Sanctuary, thomas nagel, umwelt

Happy Birthday, Eric!

December 2, 2022 by Katelyn

Many thanks to Eric Dodge, a long-time supporter of the chimpanzees, for sponsoring this day of sanctuary as a way to celebrate his birthday, and so much more.

“To CSNW and staff, for giving my people choices. It is not only my birthday, but a day to celebrate all the improvements and expansions at CSNW over the years. It is really awesome to see the chimps choices being made more numerous. Going from the choice of “Do I chose to go a few feet to the left or right? Maybe a few feet forward or backward?”. To the numerous choices of indoor or outdoors, this room or that room, read or play, stay in my nest (yes my Queen this means you Negra) or roam around, walk on the ground or climb on the structures. the choice of “Oh look, it’s a tree! how high dare I climb before the staff have heart attacks?”. Even the choice of hollering out alert barks and pant-hooting at the neighboring “troop”, kind of like we do in the wild. Just without the actual fisticuffs over territory. So many choices to celebrate. Just celebrate them all.”

“So many choices to celebrate. Just celebrate them all.” I just love that so much. Thanks so much for always holding the chimpanzees in your heart, Eric, and helping to make so many choices possible for them. We hope you have a wonderful birthday and we appreciate you including the chimpanzees and all of us in your special day in such a thoughtful way. Happy Birthday!

Missy!

Jamie:

Missy, Foxie, Jamie:

Negra:

Annie:

Jody, Foxie and Annie:

Filed Under: Sanctuary, Sponsor-a-day

Today is for Marya!

December 1, 2022 by Katelyn

Many thanks to Pamela Roberson for sponsoring a day of sanctuary for the chimpanzees in honor of dear friend of the sanctuary, Marya Barey!

“In honor of Marya Barey; friendship, compassion, and the Ugandan chimp stolen from his mother who gently groomed my fingernails while crossing Turkey 1972 – a feeling imprinted in my mind and heart to this day.”

Pamela thank you for choosing to celebrate Marya in this way and choosing to make a difference in the lives of the chimpanzees.

Marya, we are so happy to have the opportunity to celebrate you and your wonderful heart! You help make so much possible in the chimpanzees’ lives and we’re immensely grateful to you. Have a beautiful day!

Foxie:

Missy, Jamie and Foxie:

Willy B:

Honey B:

Jamie:

Negra:

Filed Under: Sanctuary, Sponsor-a-day

December celebrations!

December 1, 2022 by Katelyn

Happy Birthday, December-born friends!

I had to scan the calendar and check it twice 😉 to make sure I was actually seeing that there are no chimpanzee or bovine birthday twins sharing the month of December with you! Here at the sanctuary, that is.

I’m a fan of the written and spoken word, but often there’s nothing that speaks truer than true than what can only be felt in our hearts. We hope you always feel down to your bones how immeasurably grateful we are to each of you for all you bring, all you share, and all you make possible in the lives of those who call the sanctuary home. For just being here. For just being you. We celebrate you every single day.

Of course we have no shortage of celebrations this time of year (or ever!), including the winter solstice, Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, New Year’s Eve, and all manner of ways in which we choose to celebrate and honor what we hold dear, in our own way, or not. This time of year comes with all the feels, doesn’t it? Joy, stress, anticipation, dread, magic, sorrow, and wonder, all stuffed into a huge rumpled bag we find ourselves hefty overhead with the bursting hearts and strength of ten Grinches on some days, to dragging it behind while it bumps into our backsides on other days. But because of each of your hearts, no matter what is or isn’t happening in our individual and collective lives, sixteen chimpanzees, four bovines, and one barn cat get to live in a world of wonder, adventure, comfort, friendship, love, and choices, through every season, through every day.

Beautiful Lucky under the Christmas lights:

Some of these photos go waaay back, but when this time of year rolls around there are a handful that always come to my mind and bring a smile to my face, every one full of some kind of wonder. I hope they bring that to you all as well.

Foxie and the faux fireplace!:

Missy used to choose to throw on a sock or two as a sure sign she was ready to play. She chooses to don them less frequently now, but just look at her wonderful little runner’s legs!:

Dear Jody, potato in one hand, Hawaiian roll in the other, a woman after my own heart. Her face!:

We’re often asked how the chimpanzees react to the snow and cold typical of our winters here in the Washington Cascades. Does Annie’s group miss the more easeful days of warmer weather and the freedom in exploring every inch of Young’s Hill? Probably. But are they incredibly courageous, resilient, intelligent and curious beings? Unbelievably so!

Enrichment comes in endless forms. While we cannot keep all of their outdoor habitat snow-free, we do our best to keep paths to many of the structures shoveled and lined with straw and I can tell you they don’t hesitate to go out. More than anyone else I know, the chimpanzees seem to embrace whatever comes their way. We can’t wait to see what Cy’s group chooses to do when their outdoor habitat, The Bray, is complete (it’s so close!!…but, an intermission for winter!).

Jamie and Annie improving upon the humans’ shoveling one year:

Annie!:

Missy, Annie, Jamie, and Jody during a past winter before the recent Young’s Hill expansion:

Negra (yep, you read that correctly, Negra!), Missy, Annie, Foxie and Jamie (with shovel in hand 🙂 ) heading up the hill together:

Jamie during one of last year’s icicle harvests:

It’s taken a bit of time, naturally, for Willy B’s group to see the benefits of snow, but much to our delight (as we keep sharing this photo!) this year they seem to have decided it’s acceptable snack material. (And if you missed this gem of a blog post starring the Ice Bandit, I will leave it right here):

This will be Willy B’s group’s first winter holiday season celebrating together as nine! We are unspeakably proud of the courage, patience and kindness these nine individuals have shown as they continue to navigate their newish lives here together. Like any group of people living together, it’s not without it’s chimpanzee-style bumps, but the friendships and personalities we seeing blooming are the best gifts we could hope for for them.

I have to say, through all the gratitude and relief felt in seeing these nine individuals safe in their new lives here, I don’t think it was ever far from any of our minds that there were still so many other chimpanzees awaiting their own sanctuary homes after the former Wildlife Waystation (where all nine of Willy B’s group spent the majority of their lives) unexpectedly closed in 2019. But through the continued support of so many, the Chimpanzees in Need campaign led by NAPSA (North American Primate Sanctuary Alliance) is, quite incredibly, looking toward being able to place the final two chimpanzees remaining there, Amber and Mousse, in their new home at Chimp Haven in Louisiana, right behind 8 others who recently arrived.

Everyone. Home. What a profound relief it will be. And as all these individuals look toward their new lives, we send special thoughts and thanks to everyone, but especially their caregivers, who have stayed with them, dedicated to keeping them safe and well all these many years and whose hearts must be feeling so much.

Handsome Cy:

The love that is “Mora” (besties, Mave and Dora):

Lucky, Dora, and Rayne:

Honey B and her beloved Wolf blankets:

Honey B, surrounded by her new family, including Gordo, Rayne and Terry:

Betsy, her son, Nutmeg, Meredith and her mama, Honey:

Barn Kitty:

Last, but not remotely least, while we may not have any residents here at the sanctuary celebrating a December birthday, there is a very special person who resides at Save the Chimps in Florida who will be celebrating her birthday on December 21st. I have a special beat in my heart for the chimpanzees’ children and I always marvel at how much they often resemble one another, but at just-so-angles, these two in particular always fill me with awe. This is Foxie’s daughter, beautiful Angie (the 1st), who will be turning 35. Happy Birthday, Angie!:

Her mama, Foxie!:

Happy birthdays! Happy holidays! Merry winter (or summer as the case may be)! And even (or especially) an all hail the Grinch!

There is wonder to be found everywhere. As one of my favorite poets and current US Poet Laureate, Ada Limón, wrote in her beautiful poem, The Last Thing, “I can’t help it. I will never get over making everything such a big deal.”

Burrito feet:

Filed Under: Sanctuary, Thanks

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