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northwest

Vida Vegan Con Galarama for the Chimps!

May 17, 2013 by Diana

Next weekend vegan bloggers nationwide are gathering in Portland, OR for Vida Vegan Con, arguably one of the coolest conferences out there. This year the vegan blogging conference has selected Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest to receive the proceeds from their silent auction event!

The silent auction, held at Saver Locomotive in Portland on Saturday, May 25th at 7:00pm, is not just a silent auction, it’s a “Galarama” that includes the So Delicious Diary Free Ice Cream Sundae Spectacular! Have you ever been to a Galarama or a Sundae Spectacular? I haven’t either! But J.B. and I will be there next Saturday to experience this for the first time.

The event is open to the public, so come see us, get your dairy free ice cream taste buds ready, and bid on some cool stuff to benefit the chimpanzees you love. If you’re not in Portland, please share this with your Portland friends – you’ll be doing them and the sanctuary a favor. Thank you Vida Vegan Con!

vvc-2013-galarama-poster-web

 

 

Filed Under: Events, Fundraising, Sanctuary, Thanks Tagged With: chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, galarama, northwest, portland, Sanctuary, silent auction, so delicious, vida vegan con

A Bittersweet Day

May 12, 2013 by J.B.

Today is Jody’s 38th birthday. Around here, we celebrate the chimps’ birthdays just as we would our own – a day filled with gifts and activities centered around the birthday guy or gal. Throughout the day, Jody will make giant nests of blankets and straw, pick dandelions from Young’s Hill, and enjoy flowers brought by volunteers and staff. We hope it will be all that Jody could ask for and more. But Jody’s birthday is always bittersweet. Because we don’t know her actual date of birth, we celebrate Jody’s birthday on Mother’s Day as a tribute to the mother that she was and, sadly, could have been if she had been given the chance.

We know very little about Jody’s early years. We are told that she was born in 1975, though these dates are often guesses, and spent some time performing in a circus. Like all chimpanzees in entertainment, she eventually became too strong and willful to control, and at that point she was purchased by the Buckshire Corporation in Pennsylvania.

In the 1970’s and 1980’s, demand was high for chimpanzees in the biomedical research community. Chimpanzees were being used to test experimental hepatitis vaccines and other pharmaceuticals, and with the emergence of HIV/AIDS the demand grew even higher. Buckshire purchased chimpanzees from breeders, importers, and circuses and then leased those chimpanzees out to laboratories for profit.

Buckshire leased their chimps primarily to two laboratories: White Sands Research Center, which later became the infamous Coulston Foundation, in New Mexico, and the Laboratory for Experimental Medicine and Surgery in Primates, otherwise known as LEMSIP, in New York. In 1981, Jody was shipped to White Sands to be used in hepatitis research and for breeding.

eb crop jody hand out buckshire cage IMG_0816

White Sands wasted no time with Jody. Within three days of her arrival, she was housed with a chimpanzee named Tom for breeding. She was routinely anesthetized, or “knocked down” in lab parlance, for physical exams and to be injected or provide blood samples for research. Her first knock down came on her 10th day at the lab. She was 6 years old. She was intubated, her blood was drawn, and she was given a new tattoo – “WSRC #37.”

Over the next year and a half, Jody was regularly transferred between cages. Sometimes she was with another female, sometimes by herself, but usually she was with a male for breeding purposes…Max, Mack, John, Magoo….all in an attempt to create the next generation of lab chimpanzees.

Finally, on August 6, 1982, lab technicians found that they had succeeded in impregnating Jody and she was transferred to the “P.G. Cage” by herself. The following January, Jody gave birth for the first time. The technician’s notes read:

1/4/83 – 4cc Ketaset IM. Delivered infant baby male – taken away to nursery…Baby – Male WSRC #66 OPY – appears healthy.

In the wild, chimpanzee mothers will nurse their babies for the first five years. Their bond is incredibly strong and during that time the entire world revolves around their child, just as it does for human mothers. But Jody never got to nurse her baby, or hold him, or carry him on her back, or teach him about the world. She was immediately knocked down and her baby was stolen. Six weeks after delivering and losing her first baby, Jody was put into a cage with a male named Rufus for breeding, and the cycle continued.

Jody would go on to have eight other babies and two miscarriages and endure at least 52 knockdowns at White Sands. The technician’s notes tell the same story over and over again, with chilling detachment. Jody delivers a baby, and then she is anesthetized with a chemical anesthetic called ketamine (a.k.a. Ketaset or Vetalar) so that the baby can be taken away. The “IM” in these notes stands for “intramuscular” – this is not like slipping something in her drink…she was being stabbed with syringes or shot with darts.

11/23/83 – 4cc Ketaset IM. Delivered healthy infant male #88…removed and taken to nursery

6/20/84 – Found approx. 2-month old fetus + placenta in cage this a.m.

4/26/85 – Delivered healthy looking baby at 10:30pm…3cc Ketaset IM. Not taking care of baby. Infant removed to nursery. Animal does not appear to be feeling well. Did not eat any fruit this date.

3/15/86 – Delivered healthy infant early a.m. this date. 3 1/2 cc Ketaset IM. Mother was leaving infant on the floor – infant removed + taken to nursery. Appears to be a healthy animal #142 Cliff, male.

5/20/87 – Delivered healthy male infant between 11:30 and 12:00 pm…5cc Ketaset IM. Infant male #162 Clay removed and taken to nursery, Mother leaving infant unattended.

4/26/88 –  PATHOLOGIST’S NOTE: Bloody mass found in cage – test indicates spontaneous abortion due to acute, hemorrhagic placentitis

1/4/89 – Arrived for night checks at 10:15pm…found infant alive in cage no more than one hour old – mother not taking good care of infant. 4 1/2 cc Ketaset IM. Removed infant male #0187 – appeared healthy.

9/30/90 – Delivered healthy infant female approx. 4 to 6 a.m. this date. Mother not taking good care of infant- leaving infant on floor unattended. 4 1/2 cc Vetalar IM, infant removed to nursery.

1/14/92 – Delivered healthy male at approx. 2:50pm this date. Mother not taking good care of baby. Leaving baby on floor unattended. 4.5 cc Vetalar IM Infant removed at 4:05pm, taken to nursery. Drew milk out for baby.

2/19/93 – Delivered infant early a.m. this date. 0515 hrs found infant on cage floor.Infant very cold. Removed infant immediately to nursery, mother not caring for infant. Infant male #236 Taylor.

Nine babies and two miscarriages in ten years.

The notes repeatedly state that Jody was not taking proper care of her infants, and this was very likely true. Chimpanzees who were stolen from their own mothers shortly after birth and then forced to endure life in a laboratory cage cannot be expected to care for their children properly. And if her date of birth is correct, she was still a child herself when she became pregnant. But the labs also had multiple incentives to take the babies from their mothers right away. First, a hand-reared chimpanzee is often easier to “work with” than a chimpanzee raised by a protective mother. But more importantly, Jody’s purpose at White Sands was to create more chimpanzees. Had she been allowed to raise and nurse her children as mothers in the wild would do, she would only give birth once every five years. By taking her babies away, they could keep her constantly pregnant.

Jody had the potential to be a great mother. She is tender, sensitive, and caring, but also fiercely protective of herself and her family. She deserved to be raised by her own mother and to learn what it is like to be loved unconditionally, and she deserved the chance to show her own children the same love.

One of the difficult things about sanctuaries is that you can’t make everything right again. For Jody, that time has passed. But what we can do, what we must do, is honor Jody and all the mothers whose children were stolen by never allowing this to happen again, and to help Jody heal by making each day more interesting, more exciting, and more hopeful than the last.

web Jody walk past bamboo Burrito in backghround YH IMG_6778

 

Filed Under: Chimpanzees in Biomedical Research, Jody, Sanctuary Tagged With: chimpanzee, Jody, lab, mother, mother's day, northwest, rescue, research, Sanctuary

Negra and moms

May 11, 2013 by Diana

J.B. is working on a post for tomorrow about Jody and her children. We celebrate Jody’s birthday on Mother’s Day because of the many babies she had during her decades before coming to the sanctuary, but she is not the only mom of the group. As far as we know, Jamie never gave birth to any children, but all of the other ladies at the sanctuary – Annie, Missy, Negra, Foxie, and Jody, had multiple children (as far as we know, Burrito was never a father).

Negra’s children bear a remarkable resemblance to her. Luckily her son Noah and daughter Angel are both living at the largest chimpanzee sanctuary in the world – Save the Chimps in Florida. Negra’s daughter Heidi, remains in limbo at the Alamogordo Primate Facility in New Mexico.

Here are a few photos from yesterday of Queen Negra and below those are photos of Noah and Angel:

Negra sit on platform arms crossed

web Negra GH close up arms crossed IMG_1887web Negra close up GH _MG_1908

web Negra look up GH IMG_1890  web Negra close up GH IMG_1874

 

Negra’s son Noah, who lives at Save the Chimps

 

Noah from Save the Chimps

 

Negra’s daughter Angel, who also lives at Save the Chimps in Florida

Angel from Save the Chimps

 

Filed Under: Negra, Sanctuary Tagged With: angel, chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, mother's day, noah, northwest, Sanctuary, save the chimps

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

Get Your Bids in Now!

May 6, 2013 by Diana

 

This notice was just sent to e-news subscribers. If you didn’t receive it, sign up here!

 

out of the box online auction banner

Bid on getaways, art, gift certificates, and more!

 

Remember – bidding ends at 6:00pm (PST) tonight, so get your bids in now.

Below are just a few of the amazing items in the online auction

Private island getaway to Parrot Cay in Turks and Caicos!

turks and caicos

Professional recording (audio or video) studio opportunity and bed and breakfast package for three nights

recording studio

Visit to Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest and a dinner prepared by staff

annie eating brussels

Note: the photo above of Annie eating Brussels sprouts is not a reflection of the dinner that the staff will prepare for the humans – we promise that the dinner will be good and won’t be raw Brussels. We won’t even make you forage for your dinner – it will be served on plates.

Blooming Trolls:

A one-of-a-kind mixed media piece celebrating Foxie’s love of troll dolls, made with actual troll parts after they were well-loved by the chimpanzees. By volunteer caregiver Seana Blake

blooming trolls

And much, much more!

You can also donate online towards our Veterinary Fund. With your help, the new mobile clinic will be up and running by this fall. The more funds received, the more equipment and needed supplies we can have available for medical procedures.

mobile clinic

Big thanks to Karen and Don Young for generous initial investments to the clinic, to everyone who gave at the 2011 auciton, and to all of the amazing 2013 donors  – notably Marsha Perelman for her $10,000 donation that was matched at the event on Saturday, and to Kathy Cochran and Wynn Kerr who raised their paddles for $5,000 a piece!

 


Filed Under: Fundraising, Sanctuary, Thanks Tagged With: auction, chimp, csnw, northwest, online, out of the box, Sanctuary

Video Shown at Out of the Box Last Night

May 4, 2013 by Diana

Thank you to everyone who raised their paddles at the event last night towards the Veterinary Clinic!

Out of the Box 2013 in Seattle was so much fun! And you can keep the fun going by bidding on online auction items and making donations towards the Veterinary Fund. The online auction runs through May 6th at 6pm (PST).

 

Filed Under: Fundraising, Sanctuary Tagged With: auction, chimpanzee, chimps, northwest, Sanctuary, video

Almost Time to Bid!

May 4, 2013 by Diana

Here’s just a little sneak peak at Out of the Box 2013 in Seattle:

stars of the show

 

And below is a message that just went out to e-news subscribers. We’re so excited about the auction!

 

On Your Mark, Get Set, Bid!

out of the box logToday is the day! Over 200 guests will be arriving at Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest’s Seattle gala auction at 6pm (PST), and the Out of the Box online opens at the exact same time!

Just think, as Seattle guests are perusing auction items and placing bids, you can do the same thing on your computer!

You can even donate toward the Veterinary Clinic at the same time paddles are being raised in Seattle.

To connect those at a distance even more with our Seattle event, we’ll send you the link to the video that guests at Bell Harbor will be watching, as they are watching it, at 9:00pm PST. We’ll be watching the online auction and can update the auctioneer in real-time with online donations being made.

I hope you’ll join the fun, and raise your virtual paddles high!

You can also follow the Seattle Out of the Box auction through photos and posts on Facebook throughout the evening.

Consider celebrating Audrey Hepburn’s birthday today, and place your first bid on this painting of Audrey by Spazy Art.

audrey hepburn

The artist donated the piece after finding out about the auction through the pre-auction Green Day tickets. Don’t forget, the online auction also features a guitar signed by Green Day members:

guitar signed by Green Day members

Those are just two of the amazing auction items available for online bidding. There’s something for everyone – from art, to gift certificates, to exotic getaways. We JUST added a new amazing getaway to an ecolodge in Ecuador!

Bidding on all online items ends Monday, May 6th at 6:00pm.

Out of the Box 2013 was made possible by auction committee members Pam Lehnert, Felicity Wood, Connie Robertson, Julie Harding, Patti Sims, and Annie Norris, as well as many, many event volunteers.

Big thanks to celebrity host Charlotte Ross:

Charlotte with jamie

You can bid on a visit to Paramount Studios with Charlotte!

Out of the Box sponsors:

team chimp sponsor image

Seattle Met logo

poppoff inc logo

Provitro biosciences

brotherton strategies logo

breakwater investment logo

violet sweet shoppe

caffe vita logo

 


 

Filed Under: Events, Fundraising, Sanctuary, Thanks Tagged With: auction, chimp, Fundraising, northwest, out of the box, Sanctuary, seattle, sponsors

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