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dora

The wild and the weird

April 3, 2015 by J.B.

When given the opportunity, chimpanzees who have spent their entire lives in laboratory cages can learn to be chimps again.

They can learn to climb, run, leap, and swing:

web Missy at top of climbing structure post bamboo YH IMG_4412

They can learn to forage for their own snacks:

web_Jody_wide_eyes_bamboo_YH_jb_IMG_3720

And they can learn to patrol and defend their territory :

web_Jamie_look_into_distance_mountains_YH_jb_IMG_3396

But it takes patience. When you’ve spent your entire life surrounded by concrete and bars, those things can end up providing a certain kind of comfort. It’s what you know. It’s all you’ve ever known.

Little by little, the chimps at CSNW have embraced new opportunities, confronted some of their fears, and found that there was a little more “wild” in them than they may have realized when they were locked up in that laboratory basement.

This year, these changes seem to be happening at an accelerated pace. Burrito has been joining Jamie on her walks around the hill, and even going it alone at times. A couple of weeks ago, Foxie was seen sitting on the shaky bridge – a huge step for someone who has always been afraid of anything not firmly bolted down.

And this morning, we saw almost the entire troop take a walk up the hill together, far away from the building, just for the fun of it.

web_Five_chimps_on_walk_YH_jb_IMG_0631

But along with patience, you also need understanding. Because these new experiences are adding to who they are, not replacing who they were. Foxie may be exploring new play structures, but she’s relying on Dora more than ever:

web_Foxie_walk_dora_in_mouth_YH_jb_IMG_9924

And while Jamie may be walking miles each day around the perimeter of Young’s Hill, she is ever more adamant that we dress in cowboy boots to go along with her. Let me give you an example of how particular she has become: Jamie’s favorite boots for the last few months have been a pair of all black women’s cowboy boots. She insists that her caregivers put them on before heading out on a walk. But some of us, ahem, do not fit easily into women’s boots, no matter how hard we try. That doesn’t concern Jamie. For a while, I tried to fake like I had them on, sticking just my toes in and then pulling my jeans down over them to cover my heels sticking out. No dice. As you put them on, she stares intently to ensure that you are wearing them properly. Heels must be all the way down.

web_JB_small_boots_IMG_6592

There are times when I am reminded how crazy this all is – like when we finish up a walk and I return to the entry gate, only to have to strut my stuff across the driveway in ladies boots as the UPS driver unloads packages at the door. They must really wonder what’s going on here.

It’s crazy, but it’s who they are. You can’t erase their past, or what it’s led them to become. And why would you want to? So while we strive to provide more and more “wild” in their lives, we can never stop embracing the weird.

web_Jamie_walk_YH_jb_IMG_0350

Filed Under: Boots, Chimpanzee Behavior, Dolls, Enrichment, Foxie, Jamie, Young's Hill Tagged With: boots, chimpanzee, doll, dora, Foxie, Jamie, natural, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary, wild

Foxie gazing at Dora

March 14, 2015 by Diana

One thing that has become clear to me during my years of working with chimpanzees: there is often no answer to “why” questions, such as “why is Foxie so enamored with troll and Dora the Explorer dolls?” Or, similarly, “why does Jamie want her caregivers to put on cowboy boots and “join” her on her walks around Young’s Hill?”.

Maybe rarely having access to answers for “why” questions makes the chimpanzees endlessly fascinating. And maybe it also allows us to concentrate on the “what” and the “how” questions, like, “what can we do to enrich Jamie’s life today?” or “how can we make sure that Foxie always has a choice of dolls?”

Today, this was the doll Foxie picked:

Foxie stroke dora

 

The bite test:

Foxei bit dora

 

The gaze test:

Foxie hold Dora

foxie gaze dora

Foxie hold dora

foxie holding dora

foxie looking deeply into dora's eyes

 

and this is Foxie looking at me holding Dora before the three of us started playing chase:

Foxie walking towards Dora

 

Why does Foxie like her caregivers to play chase while holding one of her dolls? I don’t know. But, as more time passes, the better I get at figuring out what makes her particularly giddy when we’re playing these games.

 

Filed Under: Boots, Caregivers, Dolls, Foxie, Jamie, Sanctuary, Trolls Tagged With: chimp, chimpanzee, Cle Elum, csnw, doll, dora, dora the explorer, Foxie, northwest, Sanctuary, troll

Happy Birthday, Foxie!

August 8, 2014 by J.B.

It’s hard to believe, but Foxie turned 38 today. Though she may have grown another year older, she showed that she has no plans to start acting her age any time soon. As soon as we walked in the door in the morning, she began spinning and pirouetting and chasing us from one part of the building to another while passing her troll dolls back and forth.

To celebrate her big day, we served all of Foxie’s favorite foods (fruit, fruit, and more fruit!) and gave her a few dozen new troll and Dora the Explorer dolls.  The chimps really enjoyed the birthday party – we tried to capture the look of sheer joy on their faces, but they would not stop inhaling watermelon long enough to be photographed.

web_Foxie_face_in_watermelon_party_GH_jb_IMG_1748

web_Negra_face_in_watermelon_party_GH_jb_IMG_1760

web_Burrito_face_in_watermelon_party_GH_jb_IMG_1712

web_Jody_face_in_watermelon_GH_jb_IMG_1686

Luckily we got some video of the party as well:

Many thanks to all who have donated in honor of Foxie’s birthday! Here’s to many more birthdays to come!

Filed Under: Dolls, Food, Foxie, Party, Trolls Tagged With: birthday, chimpanzee, dolls, dora, Food, Foxie, northwest, Party, rescue, Sanctuary, troll, watermelon

Choices

May 10, 2013 by J.B.

You’ve probably noticed that all of us here at CSNW get excited when the chimps are out on Young’s Hill. Knowing that they lived for decades in small cages in a windowless basement, we celebrate every minute that they can feel the warmth of the sun on their backs, the dampness of the grass beneath their feet, or the cool breeze through their hair.

This year, it’s been all about Negra. Every chimpanzee does things in her own way, and in her own time, and Negra tends to approach things much more slowly and cautiously than the others. But this spring, she has found her confidence out on the hill. She is often the first one out the door in the morning, and sometimes the only one out in the afternoon. She loves eating her breakfast, or handfuls of spring grass, in the shade of the bamboo or one of the many climbing structures.

web Negra eat forage under platform YH IMG_7568

This morning, we were thrilled to see her try something she hasn’t done before. She crawled into the underground tunnel and stayed there for about 15 minutes while snacking on grass and dandelion leaves. Every once and a while she’d pop out to grab more grass and then retreat to her hiding spot.

web Negra peek out of Missys tunnel YH IMG_7627

web Negra in Missys tunnel YH IMG_7621

Sometimes, when you provide captive chimpanzees with choices, they’ll surprise you. For a while, we thought that Negra would choose to stay indoors in bed as the other chimps frolicked outside. But when she was ready, she chose to join them.

But as Negra spends more and more time on the hill, it’s worth noting that none of the Cle Elum Seven spend their entire day outside.

In the morning, it’s common to see all seven chimps on the hill, whether we put their breakfast out there or not. Today, Foxie took a Dora and a troll on her morning adventure.

web Foxie walk YH troll in mouth dora on back IMG_7656

And Missy defied gravity, as she often does.

Missy tightrope YH IMG_7583

But when they’ve had enough playing and exploring, the chimps usually head back inside for a nap. They could choose to build a nest outside, but they seem to prefer napping indoors.

The greenhouse is everyone’s favorite spot year round. In the winter, they might wrap themselves up in a blanket on the second level of the platform, where it is warmest. But on a hot day like today, it’s common to see most of the group sprawled out on the lower platforms. They don’t like to be outside in the direct sun for too long, but they love the heat in the greenhouse. It’s like a sauna.

When the chimps want to relax and let their guard down, I think they feel more secure in an environment that is more familiar to them – one that has four walls and a roof.

web Jody Burrito Annie Negra Missy GH platform

And I think they also like to keep an eye on what the humans are doing. While we clean the playroom in the morning, Burrito often sits in the window of the greenhouse, watching us. Burrito was raised by humans, so it’s no surprise that he likes to be part of our world and keep up with what we’re doing. But more importantly, he wants to see what kind of food we are going to put out in the playroom once it’s cleaned. One track mind, that guy.

web Burrito in window PR to GH

Sometimes the chimps just want to be alone, so you will occasionally find someone in the front rooms while we are cleaning the playroom. This morning, Diana put on some boots for Jamie, and after they walked around the hill she gave them to her. Jamie wore one of the boots to bed and rested her head on the other.

web Jamie nest with boot on foot up in the air room 3 FR

It can be hard to separate your own ideas of what’s best for the chimps from their ideas of what’s best for themselves. On days like today, when it’s 86 degrees and sunny and Jamie is sleeping on the floor inside, I feel like a parent whose kids are inside playing video games on a beautiful day. But that’s a silly way to think. The chimps are most certainly not our kids; in fact, most of them are older than me. And after all, what’s the point of sanctuary if not to give them choices?

Filed Under: Boots, Burrito, Chimpanzee Behavior, Foxie, Jamie, Negra, Sanctuary, Trolls, Young's Hill Tagged With: boots, captivity, chimpanzee, choices, dora, enclosures, Foxie, Jamie, Negra, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary, troll

Twin Doras

April 14, 2013 by Katelyn

During Foxie’s decades in biomedical research she was used as a breeder.  We know of five children that Foxie gave birth to, two of whom were twins.  It’s heartbreaking that Foxie was not given the opportunity to raise any of her children.  Since arriving at the sanctuary she seems to have found a special affinity for her beloved troll dolls and more recently, Dora dolls.  When Foxie chooses to join us for a walk around Young’s Hill she can often be seen carrying one of her many dolls on her back just as chimpanzee mothers do with their children in the wild.  It’s a bittersweet glimpse into how life should have been for her and each of the Cle Elum Seven.  While we can never know for sure what Foxie is thinking about her “babies” it makes my heart happy to see she has found something to call her own.

web Foxie walk hold two Doras Young's Hill YH IMG_5593

web Foxie walk hold two Doras look at camera Young's Hill YH IMG_5602

Filed Under: Chimpanzees in Biomedical Research, Enrichment, Foxie, Free-living chimps, Sanctuary, Trolls, Young's Hill Tagged With: Animal Welfare, chimpanzee, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, dora, Enrichment, Foxie, Sanctuary, troll, young's hill

Foxie, Missy, and Dora

January 25, 2013 by J.B.

Foxie is almost never without a troll or Dora the Explorer doll, even when she is climbing, swinging, and playing chase with her friends.

Filed Under: Foxie, Missy, Play Tagged With: chase, chimpanzee, dora, explorer, Foxie, Missy, northwest, Play, rescue, Sanctuary

Foxie and her dolls

December 21, 2012 by J.B.

I can’t imagine Foxie without dolls. She is almost never without one, and they obviously bring her a lot of comfort and happiness. What many people may not realize is that dolls can also be an outlet for Foxie’s frustration.

In the past, Foxie has “adopted” troll dolls, Dora the Explorer dolls, Bratz dolls, and some Madame Alexander Happy Meal figurines. But most other dolls tend to get ripped to shreds immediately, especially stuffed primate dolls. And even her beloved trolls and Doras are not always treated with care.

I think it’s easy to read too much into her behavior, but some things scream out for interpretation. Clearly, Foxie shows some displaced maternal behavior with her trolls and Doras. She had five babies in the lab, and all were taken from her. I don’t think it’s a stretch to say that she enjoys getting a chance to care for her dolls in a way that she never did with her real children. But most of the other female chimps at CSNW had children in the lab too, and they don’t show the interest in dolls that Foxie does. Maybe Foxie just has a more active imagination.

We’ll never really know how Foxie feels about her dolls. In school, we learned about chimpanzee behavior, but this is more like psychoanalysis. At some point, most chimpanzee caregivers stop trying to explain every detail of behavior in the chimps they care for and just accept what they see. Foxie loves her troll dolls. She also beats them up from time to time. That’s the Foxie we know and love.

Filed Under: Chimpanzee Behavior, Foxie, Trolls Tagged With: chimpanzee, doll, dora, Foxie, maternal behavior, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary, troll

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