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Archives for August 2024

Happy Birthday, Ben Bradshaw!

August 15, 2024 by Katelyn

Thanks so much to long-time friend of the sanctuary, Laura Bradshaw, for sponsoring a day of sanctuary for all the amazing individuals who call the sanctuary home in celebration of her son, Ben, on his birthday!

“Happy Birthday to my son Ben on August 15th. He’s a big fan of ALL of the primates, bovines, canines and felines who live and work at CSNW. The blog is a great part of our day as we catch up with individuals we’ve come to know and care about.”

We love this message! Thank you so much for following the chimpanzees’ (and their neighbors’) lives, but also for including them in your own. Ben, we hope you have the best birthday!

Willy B:

Jamie:

Missy and Burrito:

Missy and Burrito chimpanzees playing

Betsy:

Honey B:

Gordo:

Filed Under: Sanctuary, Sponsor-a-day

Pre-lunch Shenanigans

August 14, 2024 by Kelsi

Working with chimps can be a little loud and even overstimulating at times. That is why when there are quiet moments or sweet interactions, they mustn’t go unnoticed. Those moments can fill our cup up! Jamie’s side of the building has been pretty calm today, while Cy’s side has been making quite the ruckus for some of the morning. It did make for great “TV” for Burrito, but tension on one side can often cause tension on the other. However, Burrito’s side has been pretty easygoing. Jamie has even let individuals like Foxie and Annie have their fruit this morning. The best part of the day so far has been watching Burrito and Missy get so excited for their lunch forage that they had to play and laugh it out, even Jamie and Foxie decided to groom! My cup definitely got filled today :).

Negra watching her noisy neighbors on the Bray in the morning:

Filed Under: Burrito, Foxie, Jamie, Latest Videos, Negra, Play, Sanctuary Tagged With: Burrito, chimp sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, forage, Foxie, Jamie, Missy, Negra, Sanctuary

Happy Birthday, (human) Terry, Foxie and Missy!

August 14, 2024 by Katelyn

Our many thanks to Mike Stockdale for sponsoring today in celebration of Terry Stockdale and Foxie and Missy, her August birthday twins! :

“I would like to sponsor August 14 as a day of sanctuary in honor of my wife Terry’s birthday and for the two birthday chimps…Foxie and Missy who share August birthdays. I also want to say hello to Burrito who makes me smile every day.”

Thank you, Mike and Terry, for always including the chimpanzees in the special days of your lives. We appreciate you! Have a wonderful and happy day, Terry!

In case you missed it, we celebrated Foxie’s 48th birthday on the 8th with watermelon bowls and soooo many dolls! And on the 23rd we’ll be celebrating Missy turning 49 with her annual tomato fest (if you’re new here, Missy is wildly mad for all the tomatoes)!

Missy:

Foxie and Missy:

Foxie:

Missy and Fox:

Classic Burrito!:

Filed Under: Foxie, Missy, Sanctuary, Sponsor-a-day

Gals Who Groom

August 13, 2024 by Ellen Brady-McGaughey

Grooming is an important part of chimpanzee life. It serves many functions, from forming, building, and maintaining social bonds, to helping ease tensions and facilitating reconciliation following a fight among the group. It is a part of everyday life.

Terry grooms Cy

Cy grooms Rayne’s lips (through the caging, although the door is open!)

As caregivers, we exist within the social sphere of the chimpanzees in our care (as Diana discussed in her blog earlier this week). We each have different relationships with each chimpanzee, which have developed and grown over time. Some chimpanzees are quick to accept new human friends (like Burrito and Terry), while others are less interested in the new person, and more interested in making sure that new person knows where they stand (at the very bottom!).

(I am taking advantage of my momentary mention of Burrito to share this somewhat blurry but very sweet picture of a sleepy Burrito from today!)

Grooming helps us forge and grow relationships with the chimpanzees in our care, and occurs when a chimpanzees invites us to join them for a grooming session. Sometimes this invitation comes in the form of a chimp pressing their back to the caging to be scratched with a tool or rubbed with our knuckle. Other times it may look like Cy poking his finger out of the caging making a raspberry sound, requesting to groom your elbow. One of my personal favorite invitations is when Honey B sticks out her very small thumb to request to groom you. Many grooming sessions have served as mile-markers for me in my personal relationships with different chimpanzees, such as the first time I felt comfortable allowing Honey B to groom the back of my hand, when Rayne initiated a lengthy grooming session with me for the very first time, the first time Lucky genuinely wanted to groom me (without any stabby fingers) or when Jamie first presented me with a chopstick to groom her with. In today’s blog video, I wanted to share a couple such special moments with you all.

And for those keeping up with Willy B’s recent injury and return to his group, check out J.B.’s blog  from yesterday about his reintroduction if you missed it!

Filed Under: Burrito, Caregivers, Cy, Friendship, Grooming, Honey B, Jamie, Lucky, Rayne, Terry, Willy B Tagged With: Grooming, Honey B, Jamie

Reintroductions

August 12, 2024 by J.B.

We’ve spent a lot of time on this blog discussing group formation, or introductions, so you probably know by now that they are at once the greatest and most terrifying activity you can take part in as a chimpanzee caregiver. While I wouldn’t put them in the same category, reintroductions can be a bit of a roller coaster, too. Reintros occur any time a group is reformed after a period apart. This is commonly due to medical isolation of one or more members but it can also occur if a group is moved to a new facility or if an institution practices fission-fusion management, wherein individuals are routinely moved between groups  (I dislike the use of the term fission-fusion in the captive context but I don’t get to make the rules). Most reintroductions are fairly easy, as the group members have already worked out their relationships. But if a group is separated immediately after a bad conflict for the purpose of treating injuries, they may need to be reintroduced more carefully—even from scratch—lest they immediately pick up where they left off. Whether or not the participants had a chance to reconcile in those cases can make a big difference.

Regardless of the reason for separation, some chimps do not reintro quietly. Males, in particular, seem to fear that everyone forgot who they were while they were gone. REMEMBER ME? THAT’S RIGHT, I AM STILL LARGE AND MAKE LOUD SOUNDS! DO NOT MISTAKE MY ABSENCE FOR WEAKNESS, FOR I HAVE REMAINED STRONG THIS WHOLE TIME AND HAVE COME TO RECLAIM MY POSITION! I pick on the males, of course, but only because their behavior is so familiar. In reality, chimps do sometimes have good reason to fear that the social order changed while they were away and they are right to test the waters when they return.

Willy B has been separated from his group a number of times over the last two years so we felt confident letting him meet the whole group at once, but given his, uh, peculiarities, you can’t help but get a few butterflies as you watch him reestablish himself.

It’s nice to see how the group tolerates him, and even comforts him when he needs it, despite his frequent awkward jerkiness. Willy B remains a special project for CSNW, one that occupies a lot of our collective brain power and dominates the discussion at most every staff meeting. What to do about Willy B? While we’re still searching for the right answer, I’m glad that his group mates are able to extend a little sympathy now and again to a guy that could really use some.

Filed Under: Chimpanzee Behavior, Display, Introductions, Introductions, Latest Videos, Willy B Tagged With: chimpanzee, display, dominance, group formation, introductions, northwest, reintroductions, rescue, Sanctuary

Where are the humans in the hierarchy?

August 11, 2024 by Diana

Today, former staff member Anthony gave away a morning off to volunteer. If you were a fan of Anthony and his blog writing while he was on staff, you know that he had a certain fondness for Honey B, and she certainly reciprocates the sentiment – she’s always excited to receive a visit from her old friend.

Honey B is a chimpanzee who is very demonstrative – you can tell when she’s happy and you can definitely tell when she is mad.

I was sharing a story with Anthony about something that happened just the other day. I was sitting outside of the caregiver house where J.B. and I live when J.B. went up to see the chimpanzees for the first time after being away for two weeks. The house is not far from the chimp house, but it’s not right next door either. I’m not great at estimating distances, but I would say if were in in a city, the two buildings would be about a half a block away. When I heard an excited (and very loud) pant hoot coming from the chimp house, I knew exactly who was emitting the sound and why. Honey B had spotted J.B. and they were greeting each other as though they had been apart for a year.

This story led to Anthony and I talking about Honey B, Honey B’s preference for men, and the hazing that she does with some people, the results of which look like this:

For reference, if you don’t remember or haven’t seen the above photo before, that would be Krissy adorned with a mouthful of breakfast smoothie, care of benevolent Ms. B.

J.B. and I were trained that the humans who care for chimpanzees in captivity should consider themselves at the bottom of the chimpanzees’ hierarchy and should act accordingly, with proper deference and subservience. We have carried through a similar philosophy to Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest. However, you can read this blog post from several years ago about the complications of trying to place dominance in a linear line. Considering the social primates that chimpanzees are, an interesting question to ponder is what they themselves perceive in terms of the status of the humans within their social sphere, both in relation to themselves and amongst the humans as our own separate troop.

Honey B is known, probably even for a casual blog reader, for her mischievousness and her ability to state, in no uncertain terms, that she very much does, indeed, have a level of power over the lowly humans who look after her. I know from experience with chimpanzees I have known previously that it can be quite humbling to be put in this position, a mere peon relegated to the outer circle of affection. In truth, though I am not of her favored gender and are therefore not greeted with the same level of exuberance, Honey B seems to have placed me in her personal hierarchy above those who regularly receive her ire (THANK YOU, HONEY B!).

Honey B is not the only chimpanzee at the sanctuary who treats humans differently based on what appears to be either an internally-decided or an externally-perceived ranking. For those of us who knew Lucky when she first came to Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, we couldn’t have envisioned a chimpanzee with such a demeanor sweeter than hers.

As soon as we began training new staff and volunteers, however, another side of sweet Lucky came out that was quite a surprise. When I asked Krissy (the most recent trainee on door shifting) how she would describe this side of Lucky, Krissy replied, “out for blood.”

Lucky will jump at the mesh towards those who she deems below her. She will try to poke them, and she will vocalize her unhappiness if they do something displeasing to her, which is almost always the caregiver attempting to do something quite nice, like give her some food.

I don’t begrudge this side of Lucky or any other chimpanzee. I bet Krissy will be moving up in the ranks as soon as another poor human initiate comes along that is more deserving of Lucky’s scorn, and Krissy and Lucky’s relationship will be all the more precious for it.

As for Honey B, I’m not willing to wager.

 

Filed Under: Friendship, Lucky, portrait Tagged With: hierarchy, Lucky, staff, sweet, training

Happy Birthday, Erin Yuhas!

August 11, 2024 by Katelyn

We are sending out our thanks to Maureen McHorney for sponsoring a day of sanctuary in celebration of her daughter, Erin Yuhas, on her birthday!

“Happy Birthday, Erin!”

Maureen and Erin have been long-time supporters of our chimpanzee families and we truly appreciate all they do to help provide the chimpanzees with the lives they deserve.

Erin, all of us here hope you have a magically beautiful day!

Bubs!

Annie:

Jamie:

Dora:

Mave (and Dora’s foot 🙂 ): :

Filed Under: Sanctuary, Sponsor-a-day

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