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J.B.

Who’s in charge?

January 15, 2016 by J.B.

One of the first things you realize when you begin working with chimps is that you are not in charge. We humans may have larger brains, but believe me, the chimps are just not that impressed.

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On a good day, they graciously allow us into their world as friends or playmates. On a bad day, we are unwilling participants (usually the victim) in their constantly unfolding social dramas. But most of the time we are merely spectators, forced to watch impotently from the sidelines.

Fights are a good example of this. If you’ve worked with chimps for a while, you can forget what it was like to witness your first fight – the piercing screams, bodies leaping and rolling and flailing across the enclosure, the huge canine teeth bared for all to see. The first time you see it, you wonder if anyone will come out alive. But after a while, you get used to it, and you start to differentiate between regular squabbles and the more serious fights based on the tenor of the screams alone. You get so immune to it, in fact, that during minor fights you don’t even bother looking up from your computer until you notice a new volunteer breaking out in tears and wondering how a group of people so heartless and unsympathetic could have ever been placed in charge of a sanctuary.

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The thing is, even if we wanted to intervene in a fight, there’s not a whole lot we could do. When chimps are fighting, they are intensely focused on the task at hand. When the potential for a life-threatening fight is high, as the case may be during social introductions, caregivers might try to break up a fight by spraying the chimps with a hose or firing a CO2 extinguisher into the air with the hope that the noise will distract them just long enough to get them separated. But most of the time, all we can do is stand by and assess the damage.

We often joke that it’s the chimps that run the sanctuary, not us, but there’s more than a bit of truth to that idea. Within these walls, we have no choice sometimes but to play by their rules.

Filed Under: Chimpanzee Behavior Tagged With: caregiving, chimpanzee, fights, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary

Older, wiser…

January 8, 2016 by J.B.

Older, yes. Wiser? That’s debatable. More mature? Definitely not.

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Filed Under: Burrito Tagged With: birthday, Burrito, chimpanzee, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary

Always playing

December 26, 2015 by J.B.

Missy and Annie continued to spread holiday cheer throughout the sanctuary this morning.

Filed Under: Annie, Missy, Play Tagged With: Annie, chimpanzee, Missy, northwest, Play, rescue, Sanctuary, wrestle

A Christmas Miracle

December 25, 2015 by J.B.

It was almost a year without Christmas.

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OK, that’s not true – but Christmas was nearly delayed by a few days. The Cascade Mountains here in Washington received more snow in the last week than in all of last winter. Interstate 90, the only direct route between the sanctuary and Seattle, was closed for days due to avalanches in the mountain pass, and many of our volunteers were stuck on the other side. Thankfully, the highway was reopened last night and volunteer Patti was able to make it over this morning with the chimps’ Christmas dinner.

I don’t know if that qualifies as a Christmas miracle, but the support we’ve been receiving over the last month has certainly been miraculous. Packages have been arriving for weeks from generous donors, some long time supporters of the Cle Elum Seven and some who just discovered the sanctuary through stories about Foxie and her dolls in the UK, Germany, and Australia. You can guess what our newest supporters sent for Foxie! And our dedicated volunteers have been braving some treacherous conditions on the pass to reach the sanctuary. We are so grateful to everyone that helped make this a special holiday season for the chimps.

This Christmas was filled with great food, lots of boots and dolls, and a few surprises as well. Check out the video to see for yourself!

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays from all of us at Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest.

Filed Under: Party, Thanks Tagged With: book, chimpanzee, christmas, dolls, dora, Food, Jamie, northwest, Party, rescue, Sanctuary, snake, troll

The right ones

December 18, 2015 by J.B.

After the playroom is cleaned each morning, we put out a basket full of enrichment. We try to ensure that the chimps are given an assortment of their favorite things. Trolls and Doras have to be included to keep Foxie happy, and for Jamie there must be cowboy boots.

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But we can’t always predict which pair she’ll want. Her obsessions can be fleeting. One day the whole universe revolves around a particular pair; the next day they’re old news. It’s hard to keep up. Sometimes it seems that she’s not even sure which pair sits at the top of her list.

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But you can tell when she’s found the right ones. She lets out a low moan of approval, similar to the groans and sighs we humans emit when we settle into the couch with a drink in hand or climb into a warm bed at the end of a long day. It’s a sign of contentedness, an expression of comfortable familiarity.

Whatever else might happen, at least at that moment everything is right with the world.

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Filed Under: Boots, Jamie Tagged With: boots, chimpanzee, Jamie, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary

Don’t let go, Missy!

December 11, 2015 by J.B.

Annie sure has a lot of trust in her friend Missy.

Filed Under: Annie, Missy, Play Tagged With: Annie, chimpanzee, Missy, northwest, Play, rescue, Sanctuary

The power of personality

December 4, 2015 by J.B.

It’s amazing how much influence one individual can have.

Years ago, Diana and I both worked as caregivers at the Fauna Foundation in Quebec, where we had the privilege of getting to know a chimpanzee named Billy Jo. Billy was unbelievably charismatic. He was physically imposing, but behind all that size and strength was an extremely tender, insecure, and emotionally fragile guy. He loved his human friends, and in many ways he seemed to feel more at home with humans than with his fellow chimps.

After Diana and I moved back to the U.S., we would return frequently to visit our human and chimp friends in Quebec. And each time we pulled up the driveway to the chimp house, Billy Jo would lead the loudest cheering section you’ve ever heard. It felt like returning to a ticker tape parade in downtown Manhattan. All of the chimps would be pant hooting and jumping up and down, and as we walked in, Billy would be waiting with his big, toothless grin. He would always insist on grooming, but his excitement made it hard for him to sit still. Even as his entire body convulsed with intense breathy panting (a rapid inhale/exhale that chimps sometimes use as a greeting), he managed to have the most delicate touch. I remember trying to breathy pant along with him as he gently groomed my wrist, only to give up when I felt myself starting to pass out from hyperventilation.

Billy passed away in 2006, and during our next visit to see our Canadian chimp friends, we pulled up the driveway expecting the usual cheers from the welcoming committee. But that time there was nothing. No pant hoots. No screaming. No one perched at the window waiting for us to come in. Just a friendly hello. It’s not that the rest of our old friends weren’t happy to see us, but without Billy Jo’s cheerleading, it was a more subdued, and in many ways more appropriate, greeting. We weren’t rock stars after all. But Billy Jo could make you feel that way, and his enthusiasm was contagious.

Billy Jo showed us how a single chimpanzee can transform an entire sanctuary. Here at CSNW, the award for most influential chimp would have to go to Jamie.

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About a hundred times each day, we all find ourselves thinking: Where is Jamie? Will Jamie get jealous if I play with Foxie? How can we keep Jamie from getting bored today? How can we stop Jamie from taking apart the facility today? Does Jamie need to go on another walk around the hill? Do you think she will come in tonight after dinner? Are these the boots she wants? What is that in her hand? Uh oh…

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Caring for Jamie is an incredible challenge. She has to be in control at all times. She controls the other chimps in her family through brute force as well as psychological manipulation. I’ll never forget the way she would steal food from the other chimps when they first arrived at the sanctuary. Instead of taking food out of their hands, she would let out a completely spontaneous and utterly gratuitous scream. The others chimps would drop their food and run around in a state of panic and confusion. Burrito, in typical guy fasion, would begin to display and the girls would try desperately to stay out of his way. Just as the situation reached peak chaos, Jamie would calmly begin to pick up all the food that the others had dropped. She made it look so easy.

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Jamie keeps the staff and volunteers under her thumb by spitting and throwing sand or feces when she is displeased. And it doesn’t take much to elicit her displeasure. We usually try to extinguish a chimp’s spitting behavior by ignoring it. Being spit on is not that bad really – a mouthful of water can even be refreshing on a hot day – so it’s not hard to stifle a reaction. But you can’t ignore having feces thrown at you, as Jamie knows all too well. Feces is a chimpanzee’s trump card. Despite their reputation, very few chimps actually throw feces, and the few that do aren’t stupid or belligerent – just the opposite, in fact. They’ve got us figured out.

Jamie intense

At the heart of Jamie’s desire for control of her surroundings is her unwillingness to submit to captivity. She knows that she doesn’t deserve to be imprisoned, no matter how nice the jail or how noble the intentions of the wardens. Jamie has never seen the forests of equatorial Africa. And due to her upbringing in the entertainment industry, she exhibits an uncanny understanding of and affinity for human behavior. But she remains wild in the deepest sense of the word. Untamed. Uninhibited.

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It’s hard to imagine what this sanctuary would have been like without Jamie, because she’s the reason for almost everything we do. Life would be easier, I’m sure. There would probably be fewer fights. And I think that the staff would love being able to go home on time each night. But I know we would all be worse off for never having known her. Because Jamie is the embodiment of the fighting spirit. She rules her two-acre empire, but that’s not enough for her, so she’s found a way to extend her influence beyond the bounds of her enclosure. The staff, volunteers, and visitors all submit to her authority. She occupies our thoughts day and night, and commands a combination of fear, respect, awe, and, of course, love from everyone she meets.

That is the power of personality.

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Filed Under: Chimpanzee Behavior, Intelligence, Jamie, Sanctuary Tagged With: chimpanzee, Jamie, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary

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