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Food

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

James and the Giant Beet

July 12, 2014 by Diana

Ok – the title of this post was maybe a bit of a stretch to reference James and the Giant Peach.

I do use the nickname James for Jamie, but, as you’ll see in the photos below, it wasn’t really a giant beet, plus one of the photos is of Missy’s hand, but still – pretty great photos of a pretty great chimpanzee REALLY enjoying the beets that volunteer Patti brought.

It is in the high 90s today, so most of the chimpanzees quickly foraged for their lunch on Young’s Hill and brought their haul into the cooler greenhouse to enjoy, though Jamie made multiple trips to make sure she had found all of the beets.

Jamie admiring beet

Jamie looking away eating beet

Jamie eating beet in profile

Jamie getting all she can out of a beet

 

Missy’s hand:

Missy hand holding beet

 

back to Jamie:

Jamie in doorway eating beet

Jamie enjoying beet

Jamie close up eating beet

Filed Under: Food, Jamie, Sanctuary Tagged With: chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, eating, Food, james and the giant peach, Jamie, northwest, retirement, Sanctuary, shelter, vegetables

Treats

July 5, 2014 by Diana

This weekend marked the start of our summer visitor program. During the guided observation of the chimpanzees, while the chimpanzees foraged for their lunch, I found myself talking a lot about food with our guests.

One thing that we discussed was how easy it is as a caregiver to want to give the chimpanzees “exciting” food all of the time. Chimpanzees, much like humans, love food. Witnessing their excitement as they see food being presented and hearing their food grunts and squeaks is incredibly rewarding.

We made the very conscious decision before the chimpanzees came to the sanctuary that we would not give them processed sugar and we would avoid food with added salt. In the last few years, we’ve even gone further, and rarely give them processed foods of any kind (with exceptions for certain holiday parties, like 4th of July, Thanksgiving, and Christmas, and their primate biscuits). Their diet therefore is almost entirely fresh produce with some seeds and nuts, peanut butter, air-popped popcorn, and a small amount of commercial “primate chow.”

The result of our somewhat strict rules on food is that the chimpanzees remain extremely excited about fresh produce. We hear food grunts and squeaks everyday over fruits and vegetables, even produce that they get on a frequent basis like apples and tomatoes.

If we had decided that it was okay to give the chimpanzees things like cookies, cake, pizza, ice cream, and all of those foods that we humans tend to have a love / hate relationship with, the chimpanzees would have grown accustomed to that diet and might look down their (rather flat) noses at lettuce, kale, cucumbers, radishes, and all of the produce they truly love now.

We recognize that we are responsible for the health of the chimpanzees, and we try to ensure that we are doing everything we can in the way of preventative health care, which means providing a healthy diet and opportunities for exercise.

We’re very happy that something like a single fresh raspberry, picked from the bushes right outside of the greenhouse and still warm from the sun, is a huge treat for Foxie (pictured below) and for all of the chimpanzees:

Foxie eating a raspberry

raspberries on vine

bowl of rasperries

 

Today Jamie savored the broccoli that was spread on the hill as part of the lunch forage, bringing it into the greenhouse to slowly eat:

Jamie with broccoli

Jamie eating broccoli floret

 

Dinner tonight included lettuce, watermelon (a special summer treat), and peppers:

dinner tray

 

Jody in particular likes to supplement the diet we provide with plants that she picks herself, including this bamboo that she brought into the playroom this afternoon and ate the leaves, one by one:

jody with bamboo

Our friend Zarin, who has written guest blog posts about her work at the Kibale National Park in Uganda, shared research they did that examined the nutritional profile of food that the chimpanzees in Kibale eat. One interesting thing they found was that even ripe fruit that the chimpanzees eat in the wild at that field site contain about the same amount of natural sugars as the carrots found in grocery stores and gardens here.

This information led us to serve more vegetables and less fruit to the Cle Elum Seven, and we now often sneak veggies into the chimps’ morning fruit smoothie. No doubt our policies will continue to adapt as we learn more, and hopefully the result will be healthy, happy, and long-lived chimpanzees.

Filed Under: Food, Foxie, Jamie, Jody, Sanctuary Tagged With: chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, diet, Food, forage, fruit, health, northwest, Sanctuary

Wadging

June 6, 2014 by J.B.

Whenever I try to describe wadging, I end up making it sound too clinical: Chimpanzees wadge in order to extract nutrients from fibrous foods. This is true in the sense that humans eat food in order to extract nutrients, but but it doesn’t get at the enjoyment that we feel when we eat.

web_Annie_profile_wadge_corn_GH_ek_IMG_7961

I’m pretty sure that chimps get that same feeling when they wadge. One of the most mysterious aspects of it (to me anyway, maybe there’s a good explanation) is that they seem compelled to keep checking on the wadge. They hold it out on the tip of their lips for a visual inspection. They take it out and hold in their hand. They work on rolling it into the perfect ball. I don’t know what makes a wadge good or bad from a chimp’s perspective, but it seems like they are constantly evaluating them.

Young’s Hill is too dry for growing cattails, but we collect them from a nearby pond and give them to the chimps. Cattails are great for wadging, as Burrito demonstrates here:

Filed Under: Burrito, Chimpanzee Behavior, Enrichment, Food Tagged With: Burrito, cattail, chimpanzee, Food, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary, wadge

Time to Eat

May 17, 2014 by Diana

We’ve mentioned foraging many times on this blog before. It’s such a fundamental part of being a chimpanzee, that we had one of the seven behavioral booths at our recent Hoot! gala dedicated to this activity and explaining how we find ways to allow the chimpanzees here to express this behavior. Anything involving food is exciting for chimpanzees, but finding it on your own is particularly exciting.

Yesterday, Jody won the award for stuffing the most foraged food in her mouth at one time:

web_Jody_stand_eat_forage_food_yh_jbm_IMG_9484

Jody with stuffed mouth

 

Though Missy certainly gets an honorable mention:

Missy with mouth full

Filed Under: Food, Jody, Missy, Sanctuary, Young's Hill Tagged With: biomedical research, chimp, chimpanzee, eat, Food, forage, rescue, Sanctuary, shelter

A Mouthful

April 25, 2014 by J.B.

We served breakfast in the greenhouse this morning, but afterwards the chimps enjoyed a chow forage on the hill. As soon as we opened the door, they raced up the hill in search of treats.

web_Chimps_forage_YH_jb_IMG_8935

web_Forage_Jody_chow_foxie_YH_jb_IMG_8942

The trick to a chow forage, if you’re a chimp, is to collect the pieces in your mouth as you go so that you can gather as much as possible and enjoy them all at once.

Foxie:

web_Foxie_mouthful_YH_jb_IMG_8937

Burrito:

web_Burrito_mouthful_YH_jb_IMG_8950

Annie:

web_Annie_mouthful_YH_jb_IMG_9006

Sometimes you have to do some delicate rearranging to make room.

Missy:

web_Missy_mouthful_YH_bamboo_jb_IMG_8975

web_Missy_mouthful_2_YH_jb_IMG_8985

Brute force works too…

Jamie:

web_Jamie_stuff_mouth_bridge_YH_jb_IMG_9016

web_Jamie_mouthful_YH_jb_IMG_9029

But some things will always be more important than chow.

Foxie and Dora:

web_Foxie_dora_in_mouth_YH_jb_IMG_8958

Filed Under: Annie, Burrito, Dolls, Food, Foxie, Jamie, Missy, Young's Hill Tagged With: chimpanzee, chow, dolls, dora the explorer, Food, forage, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary

Icecapades

March 22, 2014 by Diana

During the lunch forage on Young’s Hill today, Jody and Missy found their own treats. As volunteer Connie pointed out, this could be the last of the tire ice for the season!

 

Jody:

Jody stand and get ice

 

Jody with ice

Jody carrying ice

 

Missy:

Missy getting ice from tire

Missy standing with ice

 

Missy with ice

Missy pausing to adjust ice

Missy running with ice in mouth

 

Filed Under: Food, Jody, Missy, Sanctuary, Young's Hill Tagged With: chimp, chimpanzee, Cle Elum, csnw, Food, forage, ice, northwest, Sanctuary, young's hill

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