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csnw

Green Toys!

November 27, 2013 by Katelyn

And our thankfulness continues! If you saw the blog yesterday, you’ll know that the chimpanzees received many wonderful new gifts from some of our amazing supporters! Well, today the chimpanzees also received new toys from Green Toys! In addition to the ongoing challenge we (and Enrichment Coordinator, Debbie) have of finding things that are new and interesting for the chimpanzees’ active minds (particularly Jamie’s!), as you can imagine, the life as an item of chimpanzee enrichment is not an easy one. So after receiving a variety of Green Toys from our amazing supporters via our Wishlist, we were pretty excited to learn that they are chimp-tested and caregiver-approved! Green Toys are not only environmentally friendly but can take a licking from the chimps and remain relatively unscathed.

Here is Jamie checking out a new dump truck:

web_jamie_hold_green_toys_dump_truck_enrichment_PR_dm_IMG_6595

Jamie giving the “bite test” to a submarine as Foxie (who is still loving her new French Dora doll from yesterday!) comes to check things out:

web_jamie_green_toys_submarine_foxie_french_dora_enrichment_PR_dm_IMG_6525

And Jamie checking out a new airplane (and I am pretty sure thinking she could fly one):

web_jamie_hold_green_toys_airplane_enrichment_PR_dm_IMG_6654

Missy enjoying some orange “tea” in the tea set:

web_missy_forage_enrichment_green_toys_cup_PR_dm_IMG_6603

Missy:

web_missy_relaxed_face_green_toys_enrichment_PR_dm_IMG_6581

Foxie:

web_Foxie_bite_green_toys_keys_dm_IMG_6659

Thank you so much Green Toys for the chimpanzees’ gifts! And also for making great toys which just happen to be great chimpanzee enrichment!

Filed Under: Enrichment, Foxie, Jamie, Missy, Sanctuary, Thanks Tagged With: animal protection, animal rescue, animal rights, Animal Welfare, chimp enrichment, chimp sanctuary, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, csnw, Enrichment, Foxie, Jamie, Missy, primate protection, primate rescue, Sanctuary

Quiet Contemplation

November 25, 2013 by Lisa

Every day in sanctuary is a gift of life, a freedom, a privilege of choice that otherwise wouldn’t have been available to these chimpanzees. One of my greatest joys as a caregiver is, in fact, the moment I am not needed. Although I love to interact with the chimpanzees whenever we have the opportunity and am willing to don a boot and travel around Young’s Hill at Jamie’s inclination, I also appreciate the self-contained moments when my company is superfluous. I love knowing that these chimpanzees are so comfortable in their home, so secure in their sanctuary, that they can enjoy raucous company or quiet contemplation as they wish.

Jody next to the stairs in the playroom:
web_Jody_sit_profile_PR_ek_IMG_6395

Foxie sitting in the door to the greenhouse:
web_Foxie_sit_in_door_d_leg_up_GH_ek_IMG_3540

Missy in silhouette on the catwalk in the playroom:
web_missy_look_at_camera_catwalk_window_PR_IMG_5952

Burrito on the wooden platform in the greenhouse:
web_Burrito_sit_hands_crossed_GH_ek_IMG_6260

Filed Under: Burrito, Foxie, Jody, Missy, Sanctuary Tagged With: Burrito, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, csnw, Foxie, Jody, Missy, Sanctuary

A Story of Play in 20+ Photos

November 23, 2013 by Diana

Missy and Foxie were having a pretty good time in the greenhouse while the humans were cleaning the playroom today. I took  so many photos that I decided to try something new –  see the full visual story of their play session in the small photos below.

Foxie with Dora, sitting next to Missy
with Dora, sitting next to Missy
with Dora, sitting next to Missy
with Dora, sitting next to Missy
with Dora, sitting next to Missy
with Dora, sitting next to Missy
with Dora, sitting next to Missy
with Dora, sitting next to Missy
with Dora, sitting next to Missy
Missy chase Foxie
Missy chase Foxie
Missy chase Foxie
Missy chase Foxie
Missy chase Foxie
Missy chase Foxie
Missy chase Foxie
Missy chase Foxie
Missy chase Foxie
Missy chase Foxie
Missy chase Foxie
Missy chase Foxie
Missy chase Foxie
Missy chase Foxie
Foxie with Dora, hanging
Missy climbing hose

Filed Under: Chimpanzee Behavior, Foxie, Missy, Play Tagged With: behavior, chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, northwest, photo, Play, playface, primate, Sanctuary, slideshow

Levi’s birthday

November 23, 2013 by Debbie

We love to throw parties for the chimps’ birthdays at the sanctuary. After over five years at CSNW, we’ve really seen how the chimps are “aging backwards” with each passing birthday—which is just all the more reason to celebrate! For five out of the seven, we celebrate an honorary birthday because we don’t know their actual birth dates, either because they were captured in the wild, or because their records are so scarce.

We commemorate Jody’s honorary birthday every year on Mother’s Day because she had nine babies in the lab in nearly as many years, more than any of the other females at Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest.

One of Jody’s children, Levi, was born this day 30 years ago. He is now the same age as Burrito.

I’d love to say that we will be celebrating today in his honor, but Levi is not in a sanctuary. He is still living in a laboratory. Levi was one of the small group transferred from Alamogordo Primate Facility in New Mexico, to Texas Biomed in San Antonio a few years ago.

This was the only note written in Jody’s record, on his day of birth “11/23/83 — Delivered healthy infant male #88… removed and taken to nursery (Levi).”

Levi didn’t have the opportunity to grow up with his mother, and there is more and more evidence that points to how important it is for chimpanzees to be with their mothers. A recent study looked at a group of free-living male chimpanzees who were separated from their mothers, and 87% of the sample group died earlier than the expected lifespan.

Levi is still alive, but it’s unlikely that his birthday will be any different than any of the last 29 birthdays that he has lived in laboratories.

Levi and the approximately 866 other chimpanzees still in research in this country deserve to be in sanctuary.

As many of you know, the NIH announced that they are planning to retire about 300 of their chimpanzees. Just this week congress passed an amendment to the Chimp Act which increases the spending cap on federal sanctuary support, and it’s currently on the President’s desk waiting to be signed. This is a good step in the right direction, but we still have a lot of work ahead of us.

Be sure to subscribe to the Eyes on Apes Take Action Alerts to be notified when we need to voice our support for the release of chimpanzees still imprisoned in laboratories.

Levi:

Levi

Jody in the lab:

eb crop jody hand out buckshire cage IMG_0816

Jody in sanctuary:

web Jody best new blankets nest playroom IMG_2376

web Jody droopy lip grass yh IMG_8648

web Jody hold onions Annie's birthday Young's Hill YH IMG_7283

web Jody eat flower green grass YH IMG_3414

web ed Jody eat nut food first day exploring youngs hill IMG_0181

Filed Under: Advocacy, Chimpanzees in Biomedical Research, Jody, Sanctuary Tagged With: advocacy, animal protection, animal rescue, animal rights, Animal Welfare, chimp rescue, chimp sanctuary, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, csnw, Jody, primate protection, primate rescue, rescue, Sanctuary

Eye gaze

November 22, 2013 by Debbie

Primatology is such an interdisciplinary field—it’s a mix of anthropology, psychology, zoology, biology, and ethology—and depending on a primatologist’s background, they have very different interests. If you have an anthropology background for instance, you might be interested nonhuman primates from the perspective of human origins for group size, culture, linguistics, and so on.

My background is in psychology, so in many of my classes we studied comparative cognition of nonhuman primates and humans. One thing comparative psychologists study is theory of mind. Do nonhuman primates have a theory of mind? That is, do they understand that other individuals have different beliefs, desires, and perception than their own? There’s a ton of behavioral measures that researchers use to determine if an individual—nonhuman or human—has a theory of mind.

One behavior that is evidence of a theory of mind is eye gaze and joint attention. Chimpanzees, like humans, communicate with eye gaze. They use it with each other and with humans, too. For instance if some food has dropped just out of reach, Burrito might get a caregiver’s attention by making some noise, and when they approach him he will look straight toward the food item. If we follow his gaze we see the peanut he’s trying to get. Things like this happen all the time, and for us, common sense would say that of course chimpanzees have a theory of mind. Burrito understands that until he grabs my attention and points it out to me, I am not aware of the peanut lying just outside the caging.

Very frequently we are asked if eye contact is OK with chimpanzees. Well, it is! And they make eye contact quite frequently. It’s one way they communicate with us.

web_Burrito_YH_ek_IMG_6224

web_Foxie_hold_Dora_look_at_camera_GH_ek_IMG_5696

web_Jamie_stand_shaky_bridge_look_at_camera_YH_ek_IMG_6228

web_Jody_look_at_camera_lunch_anniversary_birthday_party_greenhouse_GH_ek_IMG_2402

 

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

Happy Chimps

November 19, 2013 by Debbie

The chimps here are so photogenic and always look happy, as you can see below:

web_Annie_GH_ek_IMG_6148

web_burrito_relaxed_face_hold_streamer_play_cute_seahawks_party_GH_dg_MG_6014

web_jamie_look_at_new_boot_PR_kd_IMG_6019

web_Jody_sit_drooped_lip_YH_ek_IMG_6210

Every once in awhile we do catch them when they’ve perhaps woken up on the wrong side of the nest:

web_jamie_best_photo_ever_grumpy_face_GH_ek_IMG_4155

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

The Great Baked Pumpkin

November 18, 2013 by Lisa

Variety is the spice of life and we try to provide that for the chimpanzees even in their meals. Most of their diet is designed, as much as is possible, to simulate a natural chimpanzee diet and, as such, consists of primarily fresh fruit and vegetables. This is supplemented with nuts, seeds, and chow to provide protein sources.

Now it can, on occasion, become a challenge to accommodate personal preference in addition to providing creative variation whenever your options are fruit or vegetables. Often the refrigerator is full of squash varietals, especially during the fall and, as it happens, the chimpanzees are not that fond of raw squash.

I’m not sure who first thought to bake the squash but whoever it was deserves chimpanzee food squeaks! It turns out that, although the chimpanzees would rather not eat squash raw, if you bake it it becomes an exciting and delectable treat. So, in the spirit of fall baking and for the sake of a little novelty, I decided to see what happens if you bake and serve pumpkin for dinner. The result?

Seven thrilled chimpanzees, with the accompanying food squeaks of joy. Baked pumpkin, for the win!

Baked pumpkin dinner:
web_Baked_pumpkin_dinner_ls_IMG_6118

Here is Missy (on the left) and Foxie (on the right) being served some delicious baked pumpkin in the greenhouse:
web_Missy_Foxie_Burrito_DebW_serve_baked_pumpkin_dinner_GH_ls_IMG_6119

Jody (on the left) and Jamie (on the right) enjoying the pumpkin:
web_Jody_Jamie_eating_baked_pumpkin_GH_ls_IMG_6125

And, last but not least, Annie eating her serving of pumpkin:
web_Annie_eating_baked_pumpkin_GH_ls_IMG_6123

Filed Under: Annie, Burrito, Food, Foxie, Jamie, Jody, Missy, Sanctuary Tagged With: Animal Welfare, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, csnw, Sanctuary

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