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Diana

James and the Giant Beet

July 12, 2014 by Diana

Ok – the title of this post was maybe a bit of a stretch to reference James and the Giant Peach.

I do use the nickname James for Jamie, but, as you’ll see in the photos below, it wasn’t really a giant beet, plus one of the photos is of Missy’s hand, but still – pretty great photos of a pretty great chimpanzee REALLY enjoying the beets that volunteer Patti brought.

It is in the high 90s today, so most of the chimpanzees quickly foraged for their lunch on Young’s Hill and brought their haul into the cooler greenhouse to enjoy, though Jamie made multiple trips to make sure she had found all of the beets.

Jamie admiring beet

Jamie looking away eating beet

Jamie eating beet in profile

Jamie getting all she can out of a beet

 

Missy’s hand:

Missy hand holding beet

 

back to Jamie:

Jamie in doorway eating beet

Jamie enjoying beet

Jamie close up eating beet

Filed Under: Food, Jamie, Sanctuary Tagged With: chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, eating, Food, james and the giant peach, Jamie, northwest, retirement, Sanctuary, shelter, vegetables

Treats

July 5, 2014 by Diana

This weekend marked the start of our summer visitor program. During the guided observation of the chimpanzees, while the chimpanzees foraged for their lunch, I found myself talking a lot about food with our guests.

One thing that we discussed was how easy it is as a caregiver to want to give the chimpanzees “exciting” food all of the time. Chimpanzees, much like humans, love food. Witnessing their excitement as they see food being presented and hearing their food grunts and squeaks is incredibly rewarding.

We made the very conscious decision before the chimpanzees came to the sanctuary that we would not give them processed sugar and we would avoid food with added salt. In the last few years, we’ve even gone further, and rarely give them processed foods of any kind (with exceptions for certain holiday parties, like 4th of July, Thanksgiving, and Christmas, and their primate biscuits). Their diet therefore is almost entirely fresh produce with some seeds and nuts, peanut butter, air-popped popcorn, and a small amount of commercial “primate chow.”

The result of our somewhat strict rules on food is that the chimpanzees remain extremely excited about fresh produce. We hear food grunts and squeaks everyday over fruits and vegetables, even produce that they get on a frequent basis like apples and tomatoes.

If we had decided that it was okay to give the chimpanzees things like cookies, cake, pizza, ice cream, and all of those foods that we humans tend to have a love / hate relationship with, the chimpanzees would have grown accustomed to that diet and might look down their (rather flat) noses at lettuce, kale, cucumbers, radishes, and all of the produce they truly love now.

We recognize that we are responsible for the health of the chimpanzees, and we try to ensure that we are doing everything we can in the way of preventative health care, which means providing a healthy diet and opportunities for exercise.

We’re very happy that something like a single fresh raspberry, picked from the bushes right outside of the greenhouse and still warm from the sun, is a huge treat for Foxie (pictured below) and for all of the chimpanzees:

Foxie eating a raspberry

raspberries on vine

bowl of rasperries

 

Today Jamie savored the broccoli that was spread on the hill as part of the lunch forage, bringing it into the greenhouse to slowly eat:

Jamie with broccoli

Jamie eating broccoli floret

 

Dinner tonight included lettuce, watermelon (a special summer treat), and peppers:

dinner tray

 

Jody in particular likes to supplement the diet we provide with plants that she picks herself, including this bamboo that she brought into the playroom this afternoon and ate the leaves, one by one:

jody with bamboo

Our friend Zarin, who has written guest blog posts about her work at the Kibale National Park in Uganda, shared research they did that examined the nutritional profile of food that the chimpanzees in Kibale eat. One interesting thing they found was that even ripe fruit that the chimpanzees eat in the wild at that field site contain about the same amount of natural sugars as the carrots found in grocery stores and gardens here.

This information led us to serve more vegetables and less fruit to the Cle Elum Seven, and we now often sneak veggies into the chimps’ morning fruit smoothie. No doubt our policies will continue to adapt as we learn more, and hopefully the result will be healthy, happy, and long-lived chimpanzees.

Filed Under: Food, Foxie, Jamie, Jody, Sanctuary Tagged With: chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, diet, Food, forage, fruit, health, northwest, Sanctuary

Freedom

July 3, 2014 by Diana

Freedom is a tough concept. You recognize it more by it’s absence than it’s presence, and it’s easier to describe when comparing one situation with another. Yet most people agree that freedom is one of the most important aspects of life for individuals and for groups.

It’s clear that the chimpanzees lacked even the basic freedoms when they were in the laboratory. And it’s clear that the sanctuary has provided them with immense freedoms, like the freedom to chose how and when you want your day to end, like Katelyn wrote about Jamie on the blog yesterday.

One of the things that really struck me about Monday, when Jamie decided to extend the day, was the choice that Annie made to stay in the greenhouse. While all of the other chimpanzees (minus Jamie, of course) were inside the building in their nests, Annie decided to camp out. She didn’t seem the least bit concerned about what Jamie was doing, she was just making her own decision.

This morning, as volunteers Denice and Sandra were finishing the daily cleaning of the front rooms, I grabbed the camera and headed to the greenhouse. Though it was windy, I was expecting to find several chimpanzees out there. Instead, I found just Annie. And this is how I found her:

Annie sleeping in her nest

 

Just like the other night, she was perfectly relaxed, nesting comfortably, with no one else around.

Annie sleeping arm under head

 

I think each day the chimpanzees are discovering more and more of the freedoms afforded by a life in sanctuary. It’s such a beautiful experience to be able to both witness and share this process.

Annie holding her foot

 

It’s especially poignant with Annie, because she was so anxious when she first arrived at the sanctuary. Her confidence just seems to keep growing and growing.

web_Annie_lay_eyes_open_nest_platform_gh_dg_IMG_0997

Tomorrow we will have a party for the chimps in celebration of the United States’ Independence Day, but, just like everyday, we will also be celebrating the independence of seven chimpanzees and welcoming, as each day passes, their discoveries of what freedom in a sanctuary means to them.

Filed Under: Annie, Chimpanzee Behavior, Sanctuary Tagged With: 4th of july, chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, freedom, independence, laboratory, northwest, Sanctuary, sleeping

Chimpanzee Feet

June 28, 2014 by Diana

Because a few people commented that they liked the photo of Annie’s hand posted on the blog a couple of weeks ago, I thought I’d post some chimpanzee feet photos I took recently. Like many of you, I really love chimp feet, in part because of their opposable big toe (obviously).

Missy has very petite feet. I often ask to see her feet and she sticks her toes through the caging to tickle my hand:

Missy feet on caging

 

Annie frequently holds her feet together when she’s relaxing:

Annie holding feet together

 

Foxie sometimes sits with her legs wide apart and her feet pointed in. Of course she has a troll nearbyf. Her right foot looks like it’s missing the small toe, but it’s just tucked underneath her foot.

Foxie feet

 

Here’s one of Annie’s hand (she has long, slender fingers), and Jamie’s sturdy feet.

Annie hand, Jamie feet

Filed Under: Annie, Foxie, Jamie, Missy Tagged With: chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, feet, foot, opposable, photo, rescue, Sanctuary, toe

Missy Chimpanzee on the Move

June 21, 2014 by Diana

It is such an incredible joy to see Missy on Young’s Hill using all of the structures for climbing and leaping and balancing and just sitting up high. She does not waste any opportunity to get the most out of the chance to move and explore.

J.B.’s description of Missy as, “a spring that was coiled up for decades, just waiting to be released” remains perfect. Just see for yourself in the photos that J.B. took this morning during a forage on the hill. Go, Missy, Go!

Missy climbing

Missy climbing post

Missy leaping

Missy balancing on fire hose

Missy balancing on fire hose back turned

MIssy eating lettuce

Missy eating lettuce top of cabin

 

 

Filed Under: Missy, Sanctuary, Young's Hill Tagged With: chimp, chimpanzee, climb, csnw, forage, leap, rescue, retirement, Sanctuary, shelter

Annie Chimpanzee Close-Up

June 14, 2014 by Diana

Annie gets more beautiful with each year that passes at the sanctuary. She is also more likely to be in a quiet moment where she doesn’t mind her human friends taking photos, so I was able to get a few very close-up photos of her beauty this afternoon. Which photo below is your favorite?

Annie in greenhouse

Annie eyes

Annie right

Annie left

Annie mouth

Annie hand

Annie looking down

Filed Under: Annie Tagged With: Annie, beauty, chimp, chimpanzee, close up, csnw, photo, rescue, Sanctuary, shelter

Everybody Nest Now

June 7, 2014 by Diana

I recorded several clips of happy nesting today. Like wadging, which was the subject of yesterday’s blog post, nesting is a fundamental behavior for chimpanzees both in the wild and in captivity, which is why we make sure that the chimps always have lots of materials (blankets and straw are favorites) so they can choose to create their beds no matter where they are. Watch the video below!

Filed Under: Annie, Jody, Missy, Nesting, Play, Sanctuary Tagged With: bed, behavior, blankets, chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, Enrichment, nest, Nesting, northest, Play, Sanctuary

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