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chimpanzee sanctuary

Blankets and Nests Type of Day

October 5, 2021 by Sofia Castro-Loza

As part of today’s daytime enrichment we pre-made nests for the three groups of chimpanzees. They are clearly capable of making their own nests with the special modifications to meet each of their personal needs, therefore our pre-made nests might not be up to their standards. We won’t get offended if some rearranging and redecorating occurs, if anything it makes for good enrichment. For example, Jamie likes to incorporate boots and books to hers so tomorrow morning we might see some boot or book additions in them. In the wild their night nests are complex and are made by arranging tree branches and lining them with leaves, while their daytime nests are usually closer to the ground and less time consuming. Just in case, we made some in all areas of the enclosures to allow the chimps to pick and choose where they want to rest, after alterations are made. We mostly used blankets and different fabrics to design them today but other days we provide the chimps different materials to make their evening or daytime resting nests like paper, plant material, clothing, silk scarves, etc.

Last week was busy with introductions so as caregivers were making nests in the different enclosures, some had the same thought I had: let’s just lay down here for a bit.

Caregivers Kelsi and Sam testing out some nests in the front rooms.

What do you guys think about this pre-made nest?

This morning I saw Negra nesting while enjoying squash browse that Dr. Erin brought yesterday.

Jamie on one of the pre-made nests caregivers prepared today in the green house.

Annie nesting in the greenhouse. Note how she is holding her hand and foot.

Missy and Jody on the greenhouse platform, Jody arranging blankets for her nest.

Enjoy some extras:

Burrito sitting peacefully on the platform of the greenhouse. Don’t be fooled, this guy does not let us skip our daily cardio.

Foxie in the greenhouse looking straight at the camera.

Honey B chilling in the playroom.

Missy looking towards the hill on this chilly and cloudy day.

Dora about to eat the raisin she successfully retrieved from the raisin board using a chopstick.

Rayne carrying around a chopstick after going through most of the raisin board enrichment.

PS. Check out our Amazon wish-list for a list of books for this years Jamieween celebration!

Filed Under: Annie, Burrito, Caregivers, Dora, Enrichment, Foxie, Honey B, Jamie, Jody, Missy, Negra, Nesting, Rayne Tagged With: chimp enrichment, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Foxie, Honey B, Jamie, Missy, Negra, Nesting

Micro/Macro

October 4, 2021 by Anthony

Photographing chimpanzees is challenging.

To help us create images worthy of sharing with our followers, the sanctuary has a small collection of donated cameras and lenses (some of which were items on our Amazon Wish List). Unlike those versatile zoom and prime lenses, macro lenses are specialized for close-up photography and are currently absent from our regular kit. In order to play around with one at work and in the field, I personally rented a compatible one from an online retailer and brought it to the sanctuary for a couple days.

Macro lenses are functionally unique because they can zoom in on things close to the lens, yielding a final image that is literally larger than life. This practice is generally known as “macro-photography” and gives the associated lenses their descriptive name. (Perplexingly, “micro” and “macro” lenses are the same thing; Nikon uses the former prefix for their lenses while Canon and Sony employ the latter).

A macro image of Lucky’s fingernails
A close-up of Lucky’s face, focused on her left eye. The scale is larger than 1:1, making this a true “macro” image.

If this is a topic that piques your interest, I highly recommend going to Instagram’s feed for the popular hashtag: #macrophotography. Some of the most common subjects include insects, eyes, flowers, mushrooms, water droplets, and food items.

Conveniently, most macro lenses also take sharp portraits of larger subjects (even though many of these are technically not “macro” images).

I have included some of the portraits I opportunistically captured of the chimps with the borrowed macro lens. I hope you all enjoy them!

Cy
Dora
Gordo
Lucky
Rayne
Terry
Willy B
Cy
Dora
Lucky
Terry’s fingers holding a chopstick
Lucky

Filed Under: Art, Cy, Dora, Gordo, Lucky, Rayne, Terry, Willy B Tagged With: Animal Welfare, chimp, chimpanzee, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, chimpanzees, macro, macrophotography, photography, primate rescue, Sanctuary

Deep Breaths

October 2, 2021 by Diana

It’s been a stressful week. Intros are tough! They can be exhilarating and heartwarming, but there’s a whole lot of anxiety that permeates almost every moment for the staff. Our colleague Jen Feuerstein left last evening, with some suggested next steps for us. When the staff is all back together, we will regroup and make some plans. We don’t need to come to any particular point on a certain timeline, so we can move forward at our own pace and play things by ear. All in all the process so far has been a success with some promising potential.

We know that some chimpanzees need more experience with intros, so we’ll be doing some more one-on-one meet and greets. In particular, Terry, Gordo, and Dora haven’t been as easy to set up for intros, so we’ll be making a concerted effort to give them some more opportunities.

Cy participated in all of the intros throughout this last week and so far is proving himself to be a well-balanced leader who doesn’t provoke easily. Willy B REALLY likes Cy, which is perhaps  cause for some uncertainty and concern with Terry and Gordo, so having Willy B get to know the other boys better is one of our goals.

Somewhat to our surprise, as J.B. mentioned earlier in the week, Mave has not been the gentle mediator that we saw her to be when we attempted the intros with the original group of seven. She’s more obviously nervous, sometimes holding back and sometimes acting gruffly. We did see her interpersonal savvy come forward on Thursday when she comforted Terry, so perhaps she is good a understanding when her particular skills are most needed.

The stand-out happy surprise so far is Honey B. In his notes to everyone yesterday about the intros and her role in them, J.B. referred to Honey B as a “total professional.” She is reading the other chimps and not pushing them too much, but still trying to engage with them when she can. She has been staying out of the way during the big displays and most of the conflicts. It could all change the next time we involve her in an introduction, but, so far we all feel quite proud of her.

We have lots and lots of observations and stories, but I wanted to share two small anecdotes from the week that were amusing to me and illustrate the complicated nature of chimpanzees, and then share a few photos from today’s beautiful and much more relaxed fall day!

 

First story – My overnight sleepover with Honey B, Willy B, Cy, and Lucky on Monday night was not very restful for anyone.

Every few hours, Cy and Willy B would erupt in loud and boisterous displays, which were echoed (or perhaps in reaction to) displaying from chimpanzees in other parts of the building. Displaying is a normal part of being a chimpanzee. Male chimpanzees in particular frequently display, and it would seem that they equate the amount of commotion contained within their displays with their individual power. It’s serious business.

In captivity, there’s a lot of pounding and shaking of caging, raking objects across the floor, punching and back-hand-thumping benches and doors, and of course pant-hooting. While displays are perfectly normal, they certainly can and do lead to conflict. Adrenaline rises as the displays become more exuberant, and subordinate chimpanzees often take a thumping from the displayer, which can result in screaming and further escalation. Or if males are in competition, a display can be the working-up to a direct act of aggression.

Lucky and Honey B deftly navigated their shared rooms while Cy and Willy B showed off, smartly staying out of their way, without appearing overly anxious. I can’t say that I shared their seeming lack of anxiety.

Here’s the funny bit of the story – a few times during these very raucous bouts of displaying, with Cy an impressive illustration of the power and force of male chimpanzee-ness, he would rather suddenly stop, sit down, and flip through the pages of a magazine. And then, a few minutes later, resume his displaying again.

Willy B and Cy didn’t direct their displays at one another, and the four generally didn’t interact much during the night, but the next morning Cy and Willy B were grooming and Lucky and Honey B were playing, then they peacefully separated back to their original groups at breakfast. We’re definitely counting that as a successful overnight.

Second story – on Thursday afternoon, the Cy-Terry-Mave-Willy B “quad” ended with Willy B chasing off Terry, who screamed for some time, even after he was safely separated. This screaming caught the ear of Jamie’s group in the adjacent playroom and their displaying in response led to a conflict within that group. It lasted several minutes, with the chimps running from playroom to front rooms to greenhouse on the old side of the building.

After several loud minutes, I watched Foxie suddenly embrace Jamie from behind, which calmed Jamie. We see Foxie jump in to calm members of her group frequently during tense situations. Like Mave, we have sometimes referred to Foxie as the mediator of her group. So, “little Foxie the mediator” is what I thought I was witnessing. However, a few minutes later, when the staff who had been watching that conflict from different areas got together to compare notes, I learned that just minutes prior to Foxie embracing Jamie, she had pushed Jamie off a ledge in the greenhouse. So, perhaps what I witnessed was not a brave act of mediation but more a desperate apology. Either way, that hug and a subsequent approach of Missy to Jamie, is what ended the argument.

Chimpanzees, like humans, and like most beings, cannot be summed up with a few words. Their personalities and interactions with one another are constantly in development and ever complicated. It makes them lovable, fascinating, and, at times such as when you are bringing strangers together, cause for anxiety and all sorts of surprises.

On to the photos from today! What a perfect autumn day it was. Young’s Hill was aglow and the chimpanzees looked fantastic against the backdrop of the golden grass.

Jody:

Foxie:

Negra:

Jamie:

 

Filed Under: Chimpanzee Behavior, Cy, Dispaying, Display, Fights, Foxie, Honey B, Introductions, Introductions, Jamie, Jody, Lucky, Mave, Negra, Sanctuary, Terry, Willy B, Young's Hill Tagged With: animal protection, animal rights, Animal Welfare, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, chimpanzees, primate rescue, Sanctuary, young's hill

Lunch with Cy

September 30, 2021 by Kelsi

The other day Cy decided he didn’t want to have his lunch in the playroom, he wanted to eat in the front rooms. I can’t blame him, the front rooms have the best people watching and Cy likes people! We put all his lunch in the food chute and he enjoyed it at his leisure. Part of lunch with Cy is just sitting with him and from time to time he will put a finger out to touch the back of your hand. After lunch, it was back to reading magazines!

We just started adding Jamieween enrichment onto the wish-list today! If we are out of Jamieween items by the time you get on the wish-list we have lots of other things we need.

As for intros today, here is a photo of Terry, Cy, Mave, and Willy B all grooming on one small bench. And yes they had larger benches and other rooms, but they all wanted to be on this tiny bench together :).

Filed Under: Cy, Food, Friendship, Introductions, Latest Videos, Lucky, Mave, Sanctuary, Terry, Willy B Tagged With: chimpanzee, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, chimpanzees, Cy, Food, Lucky, Mave, Sanctuary, Terry, Willy B

What A Day Pt. II

September 28, 2021 by Chad de Bree

Today was another day! Yesterday, Cy, Lucky, Willy B, and Honey B met all together and even had a sleepover together. Overall, the sleepover went well. So today we decide to let Rayne and Mave partake the meetings. There were some ups and downs with the six(!) chimpanzees. We ultimately decided to just let them meet at the mesh for today. I wasn’t able to get enough photos or footage to piece together a video of today’s meetings… however… caregiver Sam was ever so gracious enough to allow me to share the video she was working on of the meetings that took place on Sunday!

Along with Sam’s video, please enjoy some of the photos I was able to take before introductions. I was not able to choose between some, so I had some other caregivers help chose which ones to use, but the consensus was to post two of each.

Though virtually the same, small little nuances make each photo different!

Jamie enjoying today’s browse of rose hips:

Picking at the rose hips
Enjoying the rose hips

Mave in her Greenhouse:

A straight shot of Mave looking at the camera
The addition of the lip bite

And one final photo of Lucky!

Filed Under: Cy, Gordo, Honey B, Introductions, Jamie, Lucky, Mave, Sanctuary, Willy B Tagged With: animal rescue, chimp, chimp sanctuary, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, chimpanzees, chimps, csnw, Sanctuary

The Storm Before the Calm

September 25, 2021 by Diana

Last night I heard a new take on a familiar phrase while watching PBS NewsHour. Jonathan Capeheart, while referring to something political, said the phrase, in a very deliberate way, “The storm before the calm.”

I often get phrases or little bits of lyrics in my head that repeat without me even realizing it, and “the storm before the calm” has been with me all day.

Earlier this week, I was describing chimpanzees to someone as being either very quiet and mellow or loud and explosive. Of course they have in-between states too, but chimpanzees do often seem to have a dual way of being that can flip in an instant.

What I like about the inversion of that familiar phrase about storms and calms is its fundamental truth. We can worry about the storms when things are calm, but, during storms, we can also try to appreciate that calm is sure to follow.

Like most days with chimpanzees, there were a few stormy moments, but for the most part, things were very calm.

Jody in her favorite spot:

image: Jody

Jody, poolside:

Burrito and Missy grooming a calm Jamie:

Filed Under: Jamie, Jody, Missy, Sanctuary Tagged With: animal protection, animal rescue, animal rights, Animal Welfare, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, jonathan capehart, newshour, pbs, Sanctuary

Give Them Smoulder

September 22, 2021 by Kelsi

I think we can all agree that Willy B is one handsome chimp, Jody might even use the word hunk! This morning we changed up the routine and let Willy B’s group out onto the Courtyard first. Willy B seemed pretty excited because he went straight to door W which leads right out to the Courtyard and waited for me to give him access. Willy B spent the whole morning out there! The sun was so warm, he decided to lay down on the boardwalk and bask in it. While relaxing on the boardwalk I snapped a few photos of Willy B, I mean look at him! He has this almost smouldering or brooding look.

 

Filed Under: Sanctuary, Willy B, Young's Hill Tagged With: chimp, chimp sanctuary, chimpanzee, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, chimpanzees, Sanctuary, Willy B

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