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Bray

Scenes From the Day

May 11, 2026 by J.B. 4 Comments

And what a beautiful day it has been. It’s 75 degrees and sunny, the grass is lush and green, the wild balsamroot and lupine are flowering, and our Greenhouse fig tree has produced fruit! One fruit, to be exact. What’s the best way to cut a fig into 16 equal portions?

Annie spent the afternoon keeping Negra company, though after a raucous morning of being bullied by Burrito, Annie was just as much a beneficiary of the arrangement.

The chimps largely tuned out the construction activity next door, despite the train of semis dumping loads of boulders for a retaining wall throughout the day. I thought that George would be more concerned about all the noise and the people, but he’s taking it all in stride so far (playing with Dora in the Front Rooms as I write this).

 

Filed Under: Latest Videos, The Bray Tagged With: Bray, chimpanzee, george, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary, spring

Spring in the Chute and Bray

May 7, 2026 by Dusty Cavaliere 10 Comments

We’ve been having some lovely weather in the Pacific Northwest this past week which means we all want to spend time outside. Come see who’s enjoying the chute and the Bray!

Filed Under: Cy, Dora, George, Honey B, Mave, Rayne, Sanctuary, Terry, The Bray Tagged With: Bray, chimpanzee sanctuary, chute, Cy, dora, george, Honey B, Mave, Rayne, spring, Terry

Happenings

April 27, 2026 by J.B.

Work is finally underway on our new staff, volunteer, and visitor building. I’m excited about this project for several reasons. Selfishly, I’m looking forward to having the master bedroom of our house back after 18 long years of using it as the sanctuary’s main office. In the very early days, the office could only be accessed through our kitchen and dining area. As awkward as that was for Diana and me, it was even worse for the other staff who had to get past our often aggressive Chow Chow, Honey B (for more on the seemingly coincidental fact that we once had a dog named Honey B, click here). We used to leave a bag of bread by the door so that people coming in could throw crumbs and distract her while running to safety in the office. It seemed like a major upgrade when we had another sliding glass door installed.

As for the sanctuary, I’m looking forward to all this new building will provide to our current staff and volunteers—more work areas, real offices, a locker room with separate laundry facilities, and a kitchen and break room—as well as what it will provide to our summer visitors and student interns who come to learn about chimps, caregiving, and the work of sanctuaries like ours. But beyond that, it will also provide a foundation for future growth—for the staff and volunteers that will one day (hopefully soon) be caring for rescued monkeys on these same grounds. After all, there are only so many people I want working out of our bedroom.

This groundbreaking is bittersweet, however, since it requires saying goodbye to a historic barn on the sanctuary grounds. This barn is over 100 years old, which at first didn’t seem that old to this New Englander. But it is downright ancient for Cle Elum, which was at that time inhabited largely by pioneer homesteaders and not the wealthy gentleman farmers of my native Connecticut. These barns were made of the trees that once stood in their place, likely by the same people that farmed the land.

Several years ago, I got interested in the history of the canyon in which the sanctuary sits, and the people that used to live here—people like Big John Taylor and his business partner, known to the locals here as Indian Charlie, who used to turn sheep out on the hills in the late 19th century. The sanctuary’s pastures were said to have been filled with the teepees of the people from present-day Yakima who worked for them in the summers. Big John Taylor’s wife, whose name I don’t know, ran something of a mess hall for the folks that loaded logs down a flume and into the Yakima River. In the process of permitting a new driveway for the sanctuary, I was once sent the original blueprints for our road, Highway 10, which used to be the only road across the state to Seattle. And I was delighted to discover that where the bottom of our driveway currently sits, there was once a train stop and a dance hall. It really was the wild west.

The manger for the cows, including Sparky, Blacky, Little One, Toots, Baldy, and Maud:

The barn was one of the last buildings standing from that era. Unfortunately, it spent the last 100 years sinking into the ground as its log foundation rotted away. As an example of how much it has sunk, the left side of the barn used to house draft horses—these days, I hit my head going through that door. Often. The right side has sloped so much that you feel drunk walking through it. And there’s a good chance that the whole thing is one strong gust of wind or one heavy snowfall away from returning to the earth entirely.

Saddle racks and stalls for the draft horses:

So the barn must go. But we are salvaging the wood so that it can live on in some other form. And I am spending the bulk of this blog post writing to you about a barn instead of about chimps because I feel like we owe it at least that much.

Workers remove siding from the back of the barn:

 

Filed Under: Construction, Latest Videos, Mave, Negra, The Bray, Willy B Tagged With: barn, Bray, chimpanzee, Mave, Negra, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary

Ellen’s New Boots

April 18, 2026 by Krissy Brasfield

There are several chimpanzees at Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest that love a cool pair of shoes, or a new pair of boots.  Some of the usual suspects include Terry, Lucky, and of course Jamie!

Recently, caregiver Ellen got some new work boots.  Guess who couldn’t wait to see them in action?

Filed Under: Boots, Caregivers, Chimpanzee, Grooming, Honey B, Play, The Bray Tagged With: boots, Bray, chase, Honey B, Play

The Full Bray

March 30, 2026 by J.B.

She did it again! This time with no hesitation at all. And not just the top of the hill but the Full Bray. Now Mave has explored every inch of the Bray and has climbed every structure (if only to lay down immediately—hey, she deserves a rest!).

Filed Under: Latest Videos, Mave, The Bray Tagged With: Bray, chimpanzee, Courage, Mave, northwest, outside, rescue, Sanctuary

Morning with Negra and Afternoon on the Bray

March 23, 2026 by J.B.

Due to her mobility issues, Negra has been camping out by herself overnight in the front rooms. Just as she would do in her favorite spot on the playroom catwalk, she’s been building comfortable nests with her fleece blankets and pulling one blanket over herself to block out the outside world. When we come to work in the morning, she’s…not quite ready for the day to begin. But that’s nothing a little amateur tap dancing can’t take care of.

Our deer herds have been gathering lately into a mega-herd of as many as 40 individuals. Lucky took an interest when some members of this herd strolled by the Bray this afternoon.

My day began with George and Dora tickling, wrestling, and laughing in the front rooms. Later in the afternoon, George was in demand again out on the Bray. Gordo is so happy to have a new buddy!

Filed Under: George, Latest Videos, Negra, Nesting, The Bray, Wildlife Tagged With: Bray, chimpanzee, george, Negra, Nesting, northwest, Play, rescue, Sanctuary, soft grunt

Mave Conquers the Bray

March 16, 2026 by J.B.

I could tell that Mave was working up to something big. For months, she’d wait to catch my eye and then shuffle swiftly (this is Mave’s fastest speed) towards the Bray. And as soon as she’d exit the chute, she’d make a beeline straight up the hill. I would join her on the other side of the fence, but to be honest, I’d kind of given up on the idea that she’d make it to the top. She just couldn’t get past that one spot.

But never underestimate Mave, or any chimpanzee for that matter. Maybe now she’ll teach her friend, Dora, to appreciate all the Bray has to offer.

Filed Under: Latest Videos, Mave, The Bray Tagged With: brave, Bray, chimpanzee, habitat, Mave, northwest, outdoors, rescue, Sanctuary

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Cle Elum, WA 98922
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509-699-0728
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EIN: 68-0552915

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