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chimpanzee

Take Action: Trunk Monkey Ads

November 24, 2015 by Diana

Take Action Tuesday banner

 

Today, we’re asking for your help. We’ve reached out to the Suburban Auto Group multiple times over the years about their “Trunk Monkey” ads using chimpanzees who were abused during their years in entertainment.

 

web_chimp-driving-car-trunk-monkey-no-sign copy     No Trunk Monkey

 

Instead of listening to our concerns, retiring the old and tired campaign, and coming up with more creative advertising, the car dealership outside of Portland, Oregon keeps bringing the Trunk Monkey ads back.

Please help us in continuing to reach out to them today by learning more and sending a polite email to Erinn Sowle, Suburban Auto Group’s general manager, via this page.

Thank you for speaking out and sharing the action alert with your contacts. Your voice makes a difference!

 

Filed Under: Advocacy, Apes in Entertainment Tagged With: action alert, ad, advertisement, chimp, chimpanzee, entertainment, eyes on apes, suburban auto group, trunk monkey, video

Burrito’s Tug-of-War Massage

November 23, 2015 by Whitney

Today before lunch Burrito and staff caregiver J.B. played a nice long game of tug-of-war with a scarf. Burrito will often wrap the scarf around various parts of his body during this game so the caregiver can give him a little massage. Today he wanted to focus on his upper back and arms.

Filed Under: Sanctuary Tagged With: Animal Welfare, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, csnw, Sanctuary

Why are the Chimps in Cages?

November 21, 2015 by Diana

You may have heard that Foxie has become a bit of a celebrity due to this The Dodo article and a follow up story and video on the Huffington Post.

Publicity for the sanctuary is so wonderful! New amazing people with gigantic hearts find out about the work we do and all of the chimpanzees in our care, and the world overall becomes a better place with more like-minded people connecting with causes that speak to them.

And then there are the comments on the internet…

As a general rule, it’s a bit disheartening to read internet comments, no matter the subject, but when people are commenting on something so close to your heart and making assumptions that are wildly inaccurate, it can sting.

However, it can also be somewhat enlightening.

One theme to the comments of late has been questioning why Foxie is “still in a cage.”

Here’s the truth about keeping chimpanzees in captivity – you have to put measures in place to contain them in order to keep them and the humans safe. And captive facilities, whether labs or zoos or sanctuaries, utilize concrete and steel to some extent.

Below is a photo of the type of cage that most of the chimpanzees living at Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest spent years and years living in while in laboratories:

cage outside

Jody in buckshire cage

 

This is their sanctuary home now (the building and the hill inside the electrical fence):

chimp house

 

I am here to tell you right now that some of the enclosures at the sanctuary are primarily caging.

 

The next few photos are of the greenhouse, which is the chimpanzees’ favorite area year round. It is basically a large cage.

The greenhouse was the chimpanzees’ original “outdoor” area, and was caging that was open to the elements. Greenhouse panels were added to make it a usable space year round. Here are the panels going up:

greenhouse construction

And here is what it looks like in the winter. It’s pretty toasty in there when there’s even a little bit of sun to heat things up.

greenhouse in snow

 

The greenhouse is an incredibly usable space – chimpanzees, being strong and dexterous and having opposable toes, can easily climb up the walls, and the ceiling is made up of bars where they can hang from and brachiate, whether just to get across the room, when absconding with a prize, during play, or just for fun. I wish all enclosures could be as usable.

jamie with pinata in legs

Jamie and Missy brachiate

Burrito brachiating

The caging also allows caregivers to directly interact with and serve the chimpanzees (unlike other methods of containment that we also use at the sanctuary such as electric fencing and bullet-proof / chimp-proof glass).

serve vitamin

 

Caging is also handy for hanging food puzzles, like this raisin board that Jamie enjoyed tonight:

Jamie with food puzzle

 

But take another look at that photo above of Jamie with her raisin board.

If you didn’t know that this:

Jamie and Missy on patrol

and this:

Jamie on shakey bridge

and this:

Jamie look into distance

was also a part of Jamie’s everyday existence, what would you think?

 

We considered this when we started the blog before the chimpanzees arrived. Would we avoid posting photos of the chimpanzees behind bars, or play sessions that were filmed in the smaller front room area? We decided we would share it all, with the idea that those who were truly concerned or curious would look into things further, find out more, and then, of course, fall in love with the chimpanzees.

And for those who simply made an assumption about the sanctuary and never delved further, well, maybe they weren’t our “target audience.”

So, for those who are reading this, thank you. Thank you for taking the time to learn and wonder and question and care.

Anyone who works at Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest will tell you that our ultimate goal is to put ourselves out of business. We don’t like the fact that there is a need for sanctuaries for chimpanzees. We don’t like the fact that there are chimpanzees in captivity anywhere.

We don’t want our chimpanzee friends to be living behind bars – we want them to be wild and free in their native habitat. But that is not possible. As we explain on our FAQ page, there are many reasons why captive chimpanzees in North America cannot be released into the wild, but one of the most significant reasons is that chimpanzees rely heavily on cultural knowledge for survival in the wild. Having been raised in captivity, the chimpanzees at CSNW lack the most basic skills for survival such as finding and procuring food and protecting themselves from the dangers of their environment.

We wish that Foxie had been born in Africa into a huge and thriving population of chimpanzees. We wish that she had children and grandchildren that surrounded her and enriched her life. But she was born in a laboratory. And that is tragic.

What we get to do, though, is tell the other side of her story. The story about her falling in love with troll dolls, and being the 98-pound mediator within her group of chimpanzees, and playing wild games of wrestle and troll keep-away with Jamie.

Some of this is done on the other side of steel caging, and we will continue to show those moments.

Burrito and Foxie

Filed Under: Featured Post, Foxie, Jamie, Sanctuary, Trolls Tagged With: biomedical research, cage, caging, chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, doll, Foxie, northwest, Sanctuary, troll, troll doll

Early morning treats

November 20, 2015 by J.B.

Each year, when the first cold spell hits, the chimps remind us that there is, in fact, a small upside to winter. Early morning frost lingers in the shadows on Young’s Hill, which the chimps rush to lick from every surface before it vanishes.

web_Missy_lick_frost_beam_YH_jb_IMG_0654

Tire swings hide thin layers of ice on the inside.

web_Burrito_grab_ice_tire_YH_jb_IMG_0668

web_Burrito_grab_ice_tire_YH_jb_IMG_0670

web_Burrito_walk_away_with_ice_YH_jb_IMG_0672

The chimps gather all of the icy treats they can find and head off to their favorite spots to enjoy them. Some return to the greenhouse.

web_Jody_bipedal_ice_Burrito_YH_jb_IMG_0685

Others carry their spoils to the tops the climbing structures.

web_Missy_Annie_Foxie_tower_ice_YH_jb_IMG_0676

These late fall mornings might be cold, but at least they bring snacks.

web_Burrito_close_up_ice_YH_jb_IMG_0695

Filed Under: Sanctuary, Young's Hill Tagged With: chimpanzee, frost, ice, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary, treats, young's hill

The Warriors

November 19, 2015 by Elizabeth

Jamie and Negra are similar in many ways. Jamie, the youngest female at the sanctuary, is the undisputed leader. She rules through a combination of well-considered political strategy and fierce determination.

web_Jamie_portrait_studio_look_at_camera_FR4_ek_IMG_6556

Negra, the eldest chimpanzee at the sanctuary, is the grandma of the group, but she’s the grandma you don’t mess with.

web_Negra_portrait_studio_look_at_camera_FR4_ek_IMG_6538

Jamie and Negra never hesitate to keep their caregivers in line. Both have little patience for (what they consider) incompetence, and they will speak up if someone’s behavior does not live up to their standards. There is something a little demoralizing about displeasing one of them.

The decades Jamie and Negra spent in research labs, being used and abused by humans, could easily have killed their spirits. Many lab chimps give in and give up, and you can’t blame them. We’re so happy that Jamie and Negra have enough fight left in them to keep us on our toes.

Filed Under: Jamie, Negra, Sanctuary Tagged With: Animal Welfare, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, Jamie, Negra, Sanctuary

An Enduring Love

November 16, 2015 by Elizabeth

Over seven years after meeting and falling in love with her first troll doll, Foxie is still so intensely enamored with these strange little dolls that she carries one everywhere. Today she laid down to rest in the playroom and spent several minutes gazing at her doll before closing her eyes.

web_Foxie_lie_on_floor_gaze_at_troll_doll_enrichment_PR_ek_IMG_6585

web_Foxie_lie_on_floor_sleep_troll_doll_enrichment_PR_ek_IMG_6584

Filed Under: Dolls, Enrichment, Foxie, Sanctuary, Trolls Tagged With: Animal Welfare, chimp enrichment, chimpanzee, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, Foxie, Sanctuary, troll

Negra’s Favorite Thing

November 14, 2015 by Diana

One thing that’s quite clear about the Cle Elum Seven chimpanzees is that they are each unique individuals with different tastes, activity levels, and habits.

Though for most of their lives they didn’t have these things, it’s hard to fathom Foxie without her troll and Dora dolls, Jamie without her boots, and Negra without her blankets, which she puts over her head and shoulders – something she’s done from her first day in sanctuary.

Today I tried (fairly unsuccessfully) to get a photo of Negra as she lay on the heated catwalk with a Halloween blanket wrapped around her. Here’s the best photo I got:

Negra under boo blanket

 

As I was watching her, she got up suddenly. Curious about the suddenness of her motion, I followed her. She traveled down from the catwalk, across the playroom, and into the front rooms, then went out into the greenhouse.

Negra in motion

 

She was clearly on a mission, and was still moving quickly as she climbed up to the top of the platform in the greenhouse.

Negra climb structure

 

And this was the result of her mission:

Negra under blanket

 

Apparently she knew of another blanket with her name on it.

Because she seemed to be in a black and white mood today, here is a black and white photo of Negra after she got the blanket just how she wanted it:

Negra b&w under blanket

Long live Queen Negra. We hope she has many more years and many more blankets in her future.

 

Filed Under: Negra, Nesting, Sanctuary Tagged With: blanket, chimp, chimpanzee, Negra, Nesting, northest, rescue, Sanctuary, shelter

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Cle Elum, WA 98922
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