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building

New Things Outside!

May 19, 2024 by Diana

As Sabrina mentioned yesterday, we’ve had a crew of folks out yesterday and part of today making some wonderful enhancements to the outdoor habitats on both sides – Young’s Hill for the original group and The Bray for the group of nine from Wildlife Waystation.

The motivated crew was led by none other than the founder of Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Keith LaChappelle! Huge thanks go to Keith and everyone who accompanied him for all the work they got done!

Enhancements included planting trees along newly-installed irrigation lines, finishing and adding cool fire hose “roofs” to the new climbing platforms, and creating more resting areas. They had the opportunity to see the chimpanzees enjoy the new additions when we set out a forage for both groups.

Another thanks goes to Chad for taking all of the photos below, saving the day for the blog.

Foxie:

Burrito:

Jamie and Burrito exploring one of the now finished and fire hose – adorned climbing structures:

Annie next to some of the newly planted trees:

Jamie:

This photo doesn’t show off the new enhancements, but it does show off Missy’s athletic dismount from the treat rock. Not bad for nearly 49!

I love this shot of Lucky that Chad got:

Mave is continuing her bravery and adventured out for the forage too:

Terry looking handsome with new trees behind him:

Gordo with a red pepper under the new roof of a structure:

You can never go wrong by finishing with a Gordo close-up:

Filed Under: Chimpanzee, Construction, Cy, Food, Forage, Gordo, Jamie, Lucky, Mave, Missy, The Bray, Young's Hill Tagged With: Bray, building, Construction, forage, founder, irrigation, keith, planting

They Always Do

December 12, 2022 by Anthony

Winter here on the eastern slopes of the Cascades can be difficult. We go to work in the dark and return home in the same. The wind stings, the cold air bites. Thick mats of snow and ice cover the landscape. Wintry conditions turn scenic drives across the mountain passes into foggy, wet, anxiety-inducing ordeals.

Yet, we carry on.

We play in the snow with friends, take our vitamin D supplements, struggle to keep our houseplants alive, finally read the books we bought in a frenzy over the summer, stay in touch with friends and family, exercise in some loud building under fluorescent lighting, and make the most of the relatively warm days when we get them.

Eventually, the days start feeling longer again. The wind stings a little less, the temperatures rise a little. The snow melts to reveal the wet dirt underneath. We begin to make plans for the coming weeks without worries of getting stranded, spinning out, or missing a flight. One day at a time. Suddenly, we find ourselves standing in an elk-trodden meadow of balsamroot and lupine watching the spring thunderstorms roll by.

From last week into this past weekend, the chimpanzees have had quite a bit of drama and it’s been a challenge to navigate. But, as Diana and Jenna pointed out in their respective blog posts, there has also been a lot of rest, recovery, and reconciliation going on. Chimps are great at filling the intervals between conflicts with productive, calming activities: building nests, grooming companions, playing chase with caregivers, foraging on some greens you found on the Hill, etc. Perhaps the best way to get you and your loved ones through hard times is just to give someone a breathy pant, eat an icicle, pile up some blankets, take a nap, and move forward. As someone told me recently, why worry about the whole necklace when you can just keep putting beads on the string?

Cy’s group, the chimpanzees who have been fighting the most frequently lately, have actually been relatively peaceful for much of their tenure as an integrated social group. It wasn’t always that way; we can all remember last spring when their union was so new and fragile that we gave them nonstop supervision, around the clock, for weeks on end. If you had visited me in the foyer one of those nights and told me those new relationships would continue to grow and thrive for six months before enduring a rough patch like this one, I would have been ecstatic.

Yes, there are tough times that seem like they will never end…

…but they always do.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The distant glow of sunrise over the Chimp House front entrance at 4:44am on June 23, 2022. It wasn’t an unusually important day, but I have this photo from my overnight shift that I have never posted here before. I looked back at my notes from that morning. The chimps slept relatively peacefully after a string of tumultuous nights.

Dr. Erin watching the chimpanzees via the security cameras:

Gordo taking a moment to relax today in the playroom:

The hallway between the Lupine and Marmot Mountain playrooms after a day of cleaning:

Jamie peering down from atop a platform (where she had made a humongous nest):

The shovel that now lives outside the greenhouse door (which keeps getting blocked in with ice).

Filed Under: Chimpanzee Behavior, Fights, Introductions, Sanctuary Tagged With: building, conflict, drama, fights, foyer, growth, improvements, overnights, progress, relationships, snow, tension, Willy B, winter

The VIP Lounge

November 7, 2022 by Anthony

The chimpanzees spend more time resting and socializing in the heated indoor areas as the weather gets wetter and colder.

We’ve recently been focusing much of our content on the chimps’ outdoor enclosures, especially Young’s Hill and The Bray. Large outdoor habitats are irreplaceable because they provide chimpanzees with unique opportunities to engage in “natural” behaviors such as climbing, foraging, and patrolling as a group. The greenhouse-type enclosures, including the new Riverview and Oakwood Greenhouses, also have certain characteristics that the chimps can take full advantage of at their leisure.

Even so, chimpanzees living in sanctuary also need clean, climate-controlled, enriched indoor spaces. These are locations where they can be cozy, entertained and secure, regardless of the conditions outside. It would be easy to look at the artificial interiors and think that these enclosures are inferior to the outdoor ones, but the chimpanzees don’t seem to think so. Instead, the residents seem to utilize the various spaces differently so that together they provide one expansive, complex, multi-functional home.

Sofia highlighted the indoor front rooms in her September post “Back to Front Room 7” and Anna wrote about them again in last week’s post “Small space, big fun“. I thought it might be fun to share some additional video clips of the chimpanzees enjoying that same space today!

Filed Under: Chimpanzee, Enrichment, Grooming, Latest Videos, Play Tagged With: building, chimps, Cy, dora, enclosure, front rooms, Gordo, Grooming, Honey B, lounging, Lucky, Mave, Nesting, Play, Rayne, relaxing, Sanctuary, slinky, Terry

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