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Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest

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animal rescue

The Chimps Take Manhattan!

August 21, 2013 by Katelyn

As most of us have mentioned this week, providing the chimpanzees (especially Jamie!) with an enriching and stimulating environment can be challenging. Thanks to Donna and Doreen’s sponsorship of today, we decided to use the theme of the “Big Apple.” It’s always fun to see how each of the chimpanzees choose to engage with new enrichment. Debbie and volunteer Deb spent a lot of time constructing a cardboard box version of the New York City skyline and we even made a Dora of Liberty statue on “Ellis Island” (aka the turtle wading pool). After scattering dried apples still warm from the dehydrator (courtesy of volunteer, Patty) about like confetti for the chimps’ forage in Times Square, the scene was set. Mind you, it’s sometimes difficult to say whether the chimpanzees or the humans are more enriched by these endeavors.

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Foxie “hearts” NY:

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Jody and Annie checking out the Dora of Liberty statue:

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As you can imagine, the chimps not only took Manhattan, but quickly toppled it. Here’s Jamie inspecting the ruins:

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And Jody found “Ellis Island” to be the perfect nesting spot (after getting that pesky Dora of Liberty out of the way):

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Donna and Doreen, thanks again for sponsoring the day in honor of Foxie’s birthday month and your anniversary in the Big Apple!

And tomorrow is the last day to vote for your favorite chimpanzee artist! Get your votes in now and help make a real difference for the winning chimpanzee and their sanctuary family and home!

 

Filed Under: Annie, Art, Caregivers, Chimpanzee Behavior, Enrichment, Foxie, Jamie, Jody, Sponsor-a-day, Volunteers Tagged With: animal protection, animal rescue, Animal Welfare, Annie, chimpanzee rescue, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, Foxie, Jamie, Jody, primate rescue, Sanctuary, Sponsor-a-day

A blog retrospective of Jamie

August 20, 2013 by Debbie

People often ask me who my favorite chimpanzee is. I don’t really like trying to pick one—and to be honest, I can’t. Each of the Cle Elum Seven are unique and awesome in their own way and I love them all. But I would say that I have the best relationship with Jamie. Sometimes, there are just different people that you “click” with a little more than others.

So, I wouldn’t want to say that Jamie is my favorite, but I definitely find that we spend more time together. Perhaps this is because Jamie is more human-oriented than the other chimps, and so we end up liking the same things. We also happen to share a birthday, which I think is pretty cool.

She likes to check out all of the caregivers’ shoes and boots, and we are more than happy to oblige. She loves to write and draw and use tools. I was thinking today about all the interesting and awesome things Jamie does on a day-to-day basis and what we have featured on our blog over the years, so I decided to compile a “best of” list.

As Katelyn described yesterday, Jamie occasionally likes to wear scarves or other clothing accessories. I love this blog post from awhile ago called “How to ruin a perfectly good scarf.” Fashion is important to Jamie, but sometimes playing can take precedence.

Speaking of playing, Foxie and Jamie are pretty great friends. Foxie is a total goof! Here’s a video from awhile ago of the two of them wrestling in a giant box:

I like this post from just a few months after the chimps arrived. We were still learning about all their personalities, and this captures Jamie’s fairly well.

Jamie also really likes to help us clean up. She will sometimes sit and watch us clean, as if she’s evaluating our work. As the Boss of the sanctuary, I suppose that is her job!

She’s also really good about testing out new things and making sure we’ve done things up to her standards. You could say she’s in charge of the quality control department at CSNW. She loves to also take new things apart using tools!

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Probably one of the highlights of our day is when Jamie asks to go on a walk around the hill. This is the post where J.B. explains how we came to realize this is also Jamie’s highlight of the day!

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I also really love remembering the day we gave a ukulele to Jamie. She was thrilled! She treated it just like any of her other projects—investigate every possible piece of it!

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It is sometimes hard to describe Jamie, and maybe that just speaks to her uniqueness. I love this blog where Diana explains that Jamie is, well, a complicated chimpanzee.

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jamie on the rock

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Finally, as we all know, Jamie is an artist. Here’s some retrospective posts on a few of her artistic endeavors:

jamie-artist-1

Jamie’s an artist! (June 21, 2008)

Jamie’s paintings (August 20, 2008)

Scribbling (September 9, 2008)

Jamie’s dexterity (April 1, 2009)

Jamie, the artiste (November 10, 2010)

Art (August 24, 2011)

Jamie’s letter to you (March 22, 2012)

Jamie’s artistic side (January 11, 2013)

Lend your vote to support Jamie’s wonderful mixed-media art in the HSUS Art Contest going on now until Thursday. You are permitted to vote once per day, so please keep voting for Jamie!

web Jamie in grass YH day 2 IMG_9688

Filed Under: Enrichment, Jamie, Play, Sanctuary Tagged With: animal protection, animal rescue, chimp enrichment, chimp sanctuary, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, csnw, Enrichment, Jamie, primate protection, primate rescue, Sanctuary

Jamie’s creative expression

August 19, 2013 by Katelyn

Like most artists, Jamie chooses to express her creative mind in a variety of ways. Jamie spent the first nine years of her life living with a human as a “pet” and being used in the entertainment industry. While we know virtually nothing about this time in Jamie’s life, she often chooses to engage in human oriented activities, most likely as a result of her unnatural childhood. For example, today Jamie chose to arrive for lunch wearing a red bandana tied around her neck (which she untied and re-adjusted half way through her meal). While we certainly do not advocate for chimpanzees being dressed in clothing, here at CSNW we do try to offer a variety of enrichment (including clothing) to accommodate their individuals interests. If the chimpanzees want to wear things, tear them up, play tug-o-war, make a nest with them, or ignore them, it’s their choice. Choice being the key word here. We recognize that each of the chimpanzees have unnatural histories which have influenced their individual interests and that plays a key role in developing individualized enrichment to keep their intelligent minds active.

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Notice the perfect knot Jamie incorporated into her bandana!

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Jamie chooses to wear clothing less and less since arriving at the sanctuary. While we want Jamie and her family to be able to engage in whatever interests them, it also thrills us to see their unique “chimpanzee-ness” coming out more and more. For Jamie, that sometimes still means wearing a bandana to lunch, patrolling the perimeter of Young’s Hill with her cowgirl boot, and occasionally drawing and painting when there is no “business” to take care of as Boss of the sanctuary. And that’s what sanctuary is all about, choices and the ability to express one’s self as one wants. And the art of expressing herself as she wants is something Jamie is a true artist at.

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If you haven’t cast your vote for Jamie’s artwork yet in the Humane Society’s chimpanzee-only art contest, please do so now! It’s a wonderful way to help our artist-in-residence and her chimpanzee family!

Filed Under: Art, Enrichment, Fundraising, Jamie, Sanctuary Tagged With: advocacy, animal protection, animal rescue, Animal Welfare, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, csnw, Enrichment, Fundraising, Jamie, Sanctuary

Meet the Chimpanzees of Kanyawara

August 15, 2013 by Debbie

Most of our advocacy work focuses on issues close to home, like the entertainment industry, apes as pets, and biomedical research. As caregivers for the Cle Elum Seven, our expertise at CSNW lies in the plight of captive chimpanzees. We see the Cle Elum Seven as ambassadors for other chimpanzees that still are used in research or entertainment and deserve better.

We also see them as ambassadors for wild chimpanzees. They never got to experience the love from their mother, learning how to forage and use tools, and living in a large group of other wild chimpanzees. Though sadly, chimpanzees in the wild have problems of their own. Some are being hunted for their meat to be sold on the black market, some are losing their homes to human encroachment, and some are fighting for their lives after being caught—but not killed, by a snare trap.

Our guest blogger project aims at raising more awareness about these issues from the perspective of those that work in that environment, analogous to the CSNW staff’s expertise with chimpanzees in captivity. Dr. Zarin Machanda works in the Kibale National Park in Uganda, and we are thrilled to have her stories of her experience working with chimpanzees in the wild, just as we tell stories about the Cle Elum Seven. Here’s her introduction to the chimpanzees of Kanyawara.

—

Hi everyone! My name is Zarin Machanda and I’m going to do a few guest blog posts over here this summer. I know JB and Diana from when I volunteered at the Fauna Foundation. I have a very distinct memory of JB with a torn up t-shirt after an encounter with a grumpy ostrich! I’m still not sure what happened, but I think the ostrich won.

I left Montreal for Harvard where I have been studying wild chimpanzees in Uganda for the last 10 years. I’ll describe my research in another post but my main interest is understanding how and why social relationships develop. Today, I want to tell you about our field site and introduce you to some of our amazing chimpanzees. Many of the photos here were taken by Ronan Donavan, a friend and photographer who worked in Uganda for many months.

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Satellite image of Kibale National Park with the Kanyawara chimpanzee community range in the northwest sector. Image courtesy of Google Maps.

I work for the Kibale Chimpanzee Project, a long-term research project studying the Kanyawara community of chimpanzees. They live in Kibale National Park in Uganda, a beautiful equatorial rainforest that is home to over 250 species of trees, over 325 species of birds and over 60 species of mammals, including 13 species of primates. This is one of the densest and most diverse populations of primates anywhere in the world and includes approximately 1500 wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii).

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The canopy of Kibale National Park with the Rwenzori Mountains in the background. Photo courtesy of Ronan Donavan.

Every day, our field assistants and researchers enter the forest to follow the chimps and collect data on their behavior. We don’t have any physical contact with them—we just observe them, take notes about what they do, and collect samples of their urine and feces for later analysis. How do you collect urine from a chimp? Well you’ll have to come back later to find out!

All of our chimpanzees are given names and we can recognize them just as easily as we can tell each other apart. Every chimp research site has a different philosophy for naming chimps—some pick philosophers, others like jazz musicians but we like to name our individuals after important world figures and world events. For example, in the year 2000, we named a chimp Tuke (pronounced Two-kay)—get it?

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The Kanyawara chimpanzees feeding on figs. Photo courtesy of Ronan Donavan.

I wish I could tell you about all 53 of our chimps because each one is special in their own way, but I’ve chosen just a few for you to meet: Lanjo, Outamba, Max, Tsunami, and Tembo.

Lanjo was born in 1995. He is quite large for his age and he’s recognizable because his hair is light brown compared to the more typical black hair of the other chimps. He is not only handsome, but he is also loved by all the researchers and field assistants. Our alpha male, Kakama, recently passed away and we have been taking bets on who is going to take over. My money is on Lanjo although some other folks favor Eslom. Interestingly, these two couldn’t be more different—while Eslom is likely to display, chase everyone and generally cause chaos wherever he goes, Lanjo is as cool as a cucumber and just watches it all happen. That’s the kind of alpha that I would want and I have a feeling most of chimps would prefer cool over crazy! It’s going to be an interesting couple of months in our community since we know that changes in the hierarchy really shake up relationships among the males. Individuals jockey for position and need to figure out which of their friends will be most useful to them as they vie for dominance. Fingers and toes crossed for Lanjo, although Kakama will be greatly missed.

lanjo

Lanjo showing off his muscles for the camera. Photo courtesy of Ronan Donavan.

Outamba is a high ranking female and is recognizable because of her narrow mouth and prominent brow. We think she is about 34 although it’s hard to know her exact age because females transfer into new communities during adolescence and we make educated guesses about their age. Outamba is Kanyawara’s baby-making machine! She has had 5 infants in 15 years—that’s one baby every 3 years compared to the average female who generally has one baby every 5-6 years. It’s even more impressive that all of Outamba’s babies have survived, so she’s not just making babies quickly but she’s doing a great job of taking care of them too. We think she is such a successful mother because as a high-ranking female, she has access to the areas of the highest quality food. For mammals, more food means more babies and higher infant survival rates—so Outamba must be eating well.

outamba

Outamba carrying her youngest daughter Gola on her back. Photo courtesy of Ronan Donavan.

Max is one of our shy individuals and we don’t see him very often because he prefers to stay near his mother in a remote part of the Kanyawara range. This is unusual for an adolescent male because as he grows up he should spend more time with the adult trying to integrate into the male dominance hierarchy. Max’s odd behavior most likely stems from the fact that he lost both of his feet to wire snares set by poachers when he was younger. I’ll write more about these snares and our conservation efforts in another post, but they affect our young chimps more often than adults because these guys barrel through the forest without looking where they are going. Another reminder that baby chimpanzees and baby humans are very similar. Despite these injuries, Max is a trooper! He can still climb trees like a champ and has survived for a number of years without his feet.

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Max sitting in a tree. He lost both his feet to wire snares. Photo courtesy of Ronan Donavan.

Tsunami was born in January of 2005. Her mother is Tongo and she is Lanjo’s younger sister. Right now, her face is still pink with a few dark freckles but this will change as she gets older and her face darkens. Like our other young chimps, Tsunami likes playing with objects such as rocks and sticks and she will even carry these things around for days. She is often seen playing with and trying to carry her siblings. In 2011, tragedy struck when Tsunami’s baby sister, Teddy, died after accidentally falling out of a tree. Tongo couldn’t carry the body and had to leave it on the ground but Tsunami stayed with Teddy and even tried carrying her—it was heartbreaking. I think Tsunami is going to make a great mom when she grows up—she certainly has a good role model in Tongo and she is one amazing big sister.

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Tsunami, one of our juvenile females. Photo courtesy of Ronan Donavan.

At 1.5 years, Tembo is one of our youngest chimpanzees. We gave him the Swahili word for elephant as a name, because he was born the same day that elephants came to camp and knocked over a tree. Tembo is a special guy because he is not only the son of Tenkere but also the grandson of Outamba. Since female chimpanzees are supposed to transfer to new communities at adolescence, it’s unusual to have maternal grandmothers in a group. We’re not sure why Tenkere decided to stay but it is likely that it’s because she also has access to high quality food like her mom, which she may not have as a new immigrant to another community. Not leaving may end up being a poor choice because Tenkere is genetically related to many of the males in the group. We’ll have to keep an eye on Tembo and get DNA samples from him to do a paternity test. But, so far he seems healthy and playful and he has quite a family looking out for him. I’m hoping he lives up to his name—big and strong and able to knock over trees.

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(Left) Newborn Tembo lying with his mother Tenkere. Even as a newborn he had sideburns just like his mother. (Right) Tembo at 1.5 years of age. Photos courtesy of Andrew Bernard and Melissa Emery Thompson, respectively.

Well that’s all for now. Next time, I’ll describe a little bit more about my research and some of the other projects that we are working on. In the meantime, please check out our website for more news from the field.

Filed Under: Advocacy, Free-living chimps Tagged With: advocacy, animal protection, animal rescue, animal rights, Animal Welfare, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, free-living chimps, kanyawara, kibale chimpanzee project, kibale national park, wild chimpanzees, wild chimps, zarin machanda

Chimpanzee teeth

July 30, 2013 by Debbie

Apes (humans included) all have the same dentition pattern, which is a fancy way of saying we have the same number of teeth, and in the same order, across the board. We also have baby teeth, or “milk teeth,” that we loose when the adult teeth come in.

One difference between our dentition is that though non-human apes have canines in the same place as humans, their canines are much larger than ours. What we know about diet probably doesn’t explain why they would have almost carnivore-sized canines. All apes eat mostly fruit, leaves, and other plant items as well as the occasional small mammal meat in the case of chimps. Still, even that small amount of meat wouldn’t be the reason for why non-human apes have such large canines.

What other purpose can teeth serve if not to chew up food? Threat. Certainly large canines are quite intimidating, and can serve as a warning to enemies to stay back, or else you could get bit and boy—it’ll hurt!

In these photos you’ll see the large canines I’m referring to—the chimps are only yawning, but you can see just how intimidating their teeth can be. Just another reason why chimpanzees do not make good pets!

Foxie:

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Negra:

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Burrito:

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Jamie:

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Filed Under: Burrito, Chimpanzee Behavior, Foxie, Jamie, Negra, Sanctuary Tagged With: animal protection, animal rescue, animal rights, Animal Welfare, Burrito, chimp, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, csnw, Foxie, Jamie, Negra, primate protection, primate rescue, Sanctuary

In gratitude

July 24, 2013 by Katelyn

As the Office Manager and a Caregiver for CSNW, I have the wonderful opportunity to not only work with all of you, our amazing supporters, but to see the direct results of all of your contributions toward caring for the chimpanzees. Each and every one of you play a part in this. Whether it is through donations, volunteering your time, sending troll dolls, cowgirl boots, and a myriad of other enrichment items, following the blog, “liking” us on Facebook, participating in our events and campaigns, sharing your love for the chimpanzees and helping to educate others, or just sending us good thoughts, it all counts, it all makes a difference. You add to the collective consciousness of how special the chimpanzees are and what issues both captive and free-living chimps are facing. You are helping to create hope for their future. And you renew my faith in the human spirit every day.

Because of each of you, the chimps are able to have good friends…

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good food…

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and choices.

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Thank you for enabling us to do the work that we do and most importantly for providing the chimpanzees with a home full of the joys, comforts, and love they so deserve. We couldn’t do it without all of you. On behalf of all of the primates here at CSNW, thank you and please know how much each of you are appreciated!

 

 

 

Filed Under: Burrito, Caregivers, Chimpanzees in Biomedical Research, Enrichment, Food, Foxie, Free-living chimps, Jamie, Sanctuary, Thanks Tagged With: animal protection, animal rescue, Animal Welfare, Burrito, chimpanzee, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, Foxie, Jamie, Sanctuary

Jacky

July 23, 2013 by Debbie

As part of our guest blogger series, here is a post by Dr. Sheri Speede. Sheri founded In Defense of Animals-Africa (IDA-Africa), after working as Northwest Director of In Defense of Animals. While working for IDA, she helped advocate for companion, farm, and research animals in the US. After a couple of trips to Cameroon, her focus shifted to providing sanctuary for chimpanzees in Africa who had been part of the illegal pet trade or were bushmeat orphans. In addition to founding IDA-Africa, she also opened Sanaga-Yong Chimpanzee Rescue Center in Cameroon. You might recall that J.B. posted a blog a couple of weeks ago about life and death. He mentioned a very moving story of how the Sanaga-Yong chimpanzees grieved after the passing of one of the residents, Dorothy.

CSNW has had a long-time connection with Sheri and IDA-Africa, and we will always be grateful for her advice on the electric fencing during the development of Young’s Hill!

Here, Dr. Speede tells the story of Jacky.

—

All but one of our 73 chimpanzee residents at Sanaga-Yong Chimpanzee Rescue Center in Cameroon’s Mbargue Forest were born to free-living mothers. Each was orphaned as a nursing infant when a poacher killed his/her mother to supply the illegal bushmeat trade. Working with the government of Cameroon, we rescued some of the orphans from hunters and dealers while they were still infants. Others suffered decades of abuse on chains or in small cages before we reached them. Resilience and capacity for emotional recovery seem to vary among individual chimpanzees as much as these life-defining qualities do among humans.

Although I am equally committed to each of our 73 chimpanzees, the gentleness coupled with profound inner strength of some individuals have inspired my deepest respect and admiration. One awe-inspiring chimpanzee who has touched me deeply is Jacky. He lived in a small cage at a hotel, first taken in as a tourist attraction, for over 30 years. When I met him in 1997 Jacky was furious and dangerous. Local people called him the “mad chimpanzee,” meaning he was crazy, and it wasn’t difficult to see how he had earned that reputation. He refused to make eye contact with us, and his various forms of stereotypy, while heart wrenching, did make him appear lost to the sane world. In one of his most disturbing and frequent manifestations, he placed one open hand in his mouth while rapidly and forcefully pounding the top of his head with his other fisted hand. He abused himself like this frequently and for minutes at a time, causing the top of his head to be bald. Anyone who accidentally veered too close to his cage paid a high price for the mistake. With lightning speed and certain intent Jacky could grab hapless hands, pull them into his cage, and with a single bite inflict irreversible damage.

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Jacky in his cage at Atlantic Beach Hotel, where he lived for 30 years. Photo © Sheri Speede.

After we finally succeeded in bringing Jacky to Sanaga-Yong Chimpanzee Rescue Center in 1999, he soon stopped his self-abuse. I cautiously kept my distance from him until one day he initiated a change in our relationship. After watching me care for the wound of another chimpanzee, he turned to present me with a laceration on his own back that needed care, and we became friends. While these changes in his temperament were remarkable, his rapidly evolving relationships with other chimpanzees at the sanctuary were most amazing, and his capacity for leadership that survived so many years of deprivation seemed nothing short of miraculous. He formed an alliance with adult female Nama (who had been shackled by a chain at another hotel for 16 years), and together they led a social group of chimpanzees for ten years. Under the gentle and just leadership of this powerful duo, we were able to introduce many young orphans, eventually expanding their social group to twenty-six.

Eventually, a younger, stronger male persistently challenged Jacky, and after a struggle for dominance that lasted many months, he eventually pant-grunted his submission and handed over the reins of leadership about three years ago. Today Jacky is a respected elder, and although he is no longer the alpha male, we still call the group “Jacky’s group.” Without a lot of responsibility, he spends his days playing and avoiding conflict, which seems a form of contented retirement.

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Jacky at Sanaga-Yong Chimpanzee Rescue Center. Photo: Carol Yarrow.

Sheri has written about Jacky and other chimpanzees in her book Kindred Beings, which will be published by HarperCollins in September 2013.

Filed Under: Advocacy, Free-living chimps, Sanctuary Tagged With: advocacy, animal protection, animal rescue, animal rights, Animal Welfare, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, ida africa, jacky, primate protection, primate rescue, sanaga-yong, Sanctuary, sheri speede

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