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release

A Missy in Motion…

October 29, 2016 by Diana

Today was a great day!

Way back in the spring, Charlie Nickerson of Troop 80 in Seattle contacted J.B. about doing his eagle scout project to help the sanctuary. We’re not able to say yes to all requests we get from people interested in doing volunteer projects like this, but we had just had a bunch of fire hose donated, so J.B. got Charlie started on the idea of making some fire hose hammocks to add to the interest of Young’s Hill.

A whole group of people joined in the hanging of the two awesome new hammocks, including other members of Troop 80, Shawn (J.B.’s new right-hand maintenance volunteer), John, and two CWU students – Ruth and Kyle.

It was pouring when they arrived this morning, so the chimps didn’t mind not having access to their outdoor habitat. The team worked outside in the wet weather with J.B. while volunteer Rachel and I cleaned up the chimp house.

scouts hanging hammock 2

scouts hanging hammock

In addition to the two new hammocks, the group also hung fire hose in various areas on the hill, connecting structures to each other.

Luckily, by the time they were finished with all of this manual labor, the weather had cleared up. So, the hardworking team spread a forage on the hill for the chimps and watched all seven chimpanzees forage for their lunch and explore the new features of their habitat.

scout group watching

I took what seemed like hundreds of photos of the chimps enjoying these new features and foraging, and I’ve narrowed down a couple of series to share in this blog post.

You probably know that we celebrate Jamie’s birthday on Halloween, which is just a few days away, but Missy might have thought all the new fire hose was a present just for her.

I am calling the below series of photos: “A Missy in Motion Tends to be the Best Thing Ever.”

 

Here is Missy standing next to Annie. Take a moment to admire Missy’s thigh muscles:

Missy standing on bar

 

In her element, Missy tightrope walking and otherwise using existing and newly hung fire hose to traverse all over the hill:

Missy tightrope walking

 

Missy climbing

 

Missy traversing fire hose

 

Missy in motion

 

Later in the day, Missy discovered some food cleverly hidden in new fire hose wrapped around a log post:

Missy finding hidden food

 

Every once in a while, she would stop to rest:

Missy sitting

 

But not for long! Here she is climbing into one of the new hammocks:

Missy climbing on new hammock

 

I’d say it’s a hit:

Missy sitting in new hammock

 

 

This next series of Jamie I am calling, “Perfect Dismount”

Jamie tightrope walking

Jamie tightrope walking

Jamie hanging

 

A very cleverly hung piece of hose that Jamie couldn’t resist trying out:

Jamie swinging

Jamie swinging

Jamie swinging

Jamie swinging

Jamie swinging

Jamie dismount

 

Annie may have found her new favorite hangout:

Annie sitting in new hammock

 

Burrito explored a new hammock by himself later in the day:

Burrito checking out hammock

 

And then he peeked at us from the lookout:

Burrito lookout

 

Thanks to everyone who helped make the day a great one, including all of you reading and sharing this – your support makes every day great!

 

Filed Under: Annie, Burrito, Construction, Enrichment, Jamie, Missy, Sanctuary, Thanks, Volunteers, Young's Hill Tagged With: animal rights, Animal Welfare, chimp, chimpanzee, Cle Elum, csnw, eagle scout project, release, rescue, Sanctuary, shelter

Autonomy and Confidence

October 8, 2016 by Diana

Last month I wrote about “missing chimpanzee” Foxie, who has been doing a lot of solo exploring on the hill this summer. In May, Anna shared that Negra had been venturing out further on Young’s Hill than she had ever been before.

Well, we can add Burrito to this growing list of chimpanzees who have suddenly become more confident in the outdoor habitat.

As I was finishing up a walk with Jamie this afternoon, I came around to the front of the building and noticed the figure of a chimpanzee way up on the towers at the top of the hill. To my surprise, it was Burrito who was up there, walking across the shaky bridge, all by himself. I should mention that there was no food forage involved, so his motivation wasn’t tied to finding a snack.

I rushed up to the observation deck and got a few photos as he climbed down from the lookout and slowly walked back toward the greenhouse:

web_burrito_climb_down_tower_yh_dg_img_7650

web_burrito_behind_fall_grass_walk_yh_dg_img_7669

web_burrito_walk_fall_grass_alone_yh_dg_img_7683

As I took these photos, I was grinning like a fool, and I called down to Burrito to tell him how great I think he is.

Like humans, chimpanzees experience varying degrees of anxiety and fear. In some ways, Burrito shows more anxiety than some of the other chimpanzees. It took him a long time to get comfortable in the greenhouse when it was first completed in 2010, even when the ladies were spending the majority of their time out there (read this blog post from Elizabeth from March 2010 and watch the video of Burrito finally making a breakthrough and spending some time in the greenhouse).

And now, this summer, five years after the chimpanzees were given the 2-acre outdoor habitat that we call Young’s Hill, they are still continuing to gradually embrace and explore their autonomy.

I wonder what they will be doing five years from now.

 

Filed Under: Burrito, Sanctuary, Young's Hill Tagged With: animal rights, Animal Welfare, autonomy, biomedical research, chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, northwest, release, rescue, Sanctuary, shelter

Missy’s 2nd Chance & Those Left Behind

September 30, 2016 by Diana

This year for Great Apes Giving Day, I decided to highlight Missy’s story. If you are new to Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest or haven’t been following every single blog post, you may have missed the story of how Missy almost didn’t make it to her sanctuary home. Take a minute to read this story on our Great Apes Giving Day page here.

 

support Missy

 

There’s another story that we don’t tell very often.

The Cle Elum Seven should have been the Cle Elum Eight. There was an eighth chimpanzee living at Buckshire with Missy, Burrito, Negra, Jody, Annie, Foxie, and Jamie who died two years before the Cle Elum Seven came to Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest. He was a male chimpanzee and we believe his name was Ceaser.

I never met him, but I think about him, and what he represents, all of the time.

It is such an amazing time in history right now with the end of biomedical testing on chimpanzees in the United States. And it’s a frustrating time because there are hundreds of chimpanzees who are waiting for their opportunity to live out the rest of their lives in a sanctuary home where the only mission is to provide them with the best care possible.

And I know there will be chimpanzees like Ceaser who won’t have this chance because they will die before they are released from their laboratory life.

It’s a fact that not all laboratories are like Buckshire, where the Cle Elum Seven lived. Most modern laboratories holding chimpanzees have some sort of outdoor space, even if it’s a small concrete fenced in area, and most chimpanzees living in laboratories now live with other chimpanzees rather than in single cages.

I would guess that the majority of people who are directly caring for chimpanzees in laboratories really care for, and even love, the chimps. This may seem strange to those who have never met someone who works in a laboratory as a caregiver, but I have met many people who have held those positions in their past or still do now. Sometimes they didn’t really know what they were getting into, and they are awakened to the injustices of using chimpanzees in biomedical testing after they came to know the chimps in labs first-hand. Often they stay in those positions because they want to make a difference in the day-to-day lives of those under their care.

Philosophically, though, laboratories and accredited sanctuaries are worlds apart. How you view a person or an animal affects how they are cared for. For accredited sanctuaries, the one and only aim is to provide the chimpanzees with a good home full of choices and social interactions and the space to figure out who they are. For laboratories, even if they are not actively using the chimpanzees in testing, the chimps are valued and viewed in terms of their contribution (for which they did not give their consent) to humans and their research questions.

This is a fundamental difference; and it’s the reason why it pains me to think about the chimpanzees, like Ceaser, who will die in laboratories even though the research has ended.

And then I think about Missy, who almost didn’t have the last eight years of her life at Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest.

web_Missy_bipedal_reach_for_forage_food_in_hands_mouth_green_grass_YH_kh_IMG_2745

web_Missy_tightrope_fire_hose_YH_fog_jb_IMG_5443

web_Annie_groom_Missy_close_up_eyes_closed_GH_ek_IMG_4117

Every day is about making sure that the chimpanzees in our care fully experience a life that’s all about them. It’s our moral obligation to try to give back to them at least some of what we, as a society, have taken. And we want to be able to do this for other chimpanzees coming out of laboratories.

This is why fundraising days like Great Apes Giving Day mean so much to us, and to other sanctuaries and rescue centers.

Please consider making a donation to Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, learn about all of the organizations participating in this global day of giving for great apes, and watch this Tuesday (October 4th) when the competition for the prize money heats up.

In the end, the chimpanzees and other great apes that you give your donation towards are the big winners.

missy sepia

Filed Under: Fundraising, Missy, Sanctuary Tagged With: animal rights, Animal Welfare, biomedical research, chimp, chimpanzee, chimpanzee sanctuary, great apes giving day, Missy, northwest, release, Sanctuary, testing

Jody Harvesting in the Greenhouse

February 21, 2015 by Diana

As Katelyn mentioned in her post the other day, Jody is known as Jody the Harvester.

Though we have been having a very mild winter, there isn’t much new to harvest on Young’s Hill yet. Today, instead, Jody turned her harvesting attentions to the Christmas tree.

We’ve been getting a lot of use out of that Christmas tree – using it to hide goodies during various foraging parties. It’s in a big pot right now in the Greenhouse, and we are hoping to plant it on the hill in the spring, but we weren’t sure if the chimps would allow it to survive until we can plant it.

For the most part, they’ve ignored it, aside from getting treats out of it during parties. Every once in a while, however, Jody decides to take a few samples:

Jody harvesting the Christmas tree

Jody biting tree

Jody holding tree bit

Jody inspecting tree bit

Jody eating tree bit

Jody eating tree bit

Jody inspecting tree bit

Jody eating tree bit

Lazy forage

Filed Under: Chimpanzee Behavior, Jody, Sanctuary Tagged With: behavior, biomedical research, chimp, chimpanzee, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum Seven, csnw, forage, harvest, Jody, northwest, release, rescue, Sanctuary

Raw Footage

September 25, 2011 by Diana

KOMO News posted some of the raw footage of the chimps going onto the hill!! We can’t wait to see the edited story tonight at 11pm and tomorrow at 6pm. In the meantime – watch this: http://www.komonews.com/home/video/130471343.html

Filed Under: News, Young's Hill Tagged With: chimpanzee, chimps, freedom, KOMO 4, News, northwest, release, rescue, Sanctuary, shelter

Go Annie!

September 24, 2011 by Diana

Annie followed Missy right out this morning and made it to a couple of the climbing structures.

annie top of climbing structure

and Missy showed Annie the greatness of the hammock

annie in hammock

Annie didn’t quite make it over to the gate to get breakfast served outside before she decided to go back in, but we had breakfast for her there too.

 

Filed Under: Annie, Food, Young's Hill Tagged With: Annie, brave, chimp, chimpanzee, northwest, release, Sanctuary, young's hill

Watch Seattle’s KOMO 4 Sunday

September 22, 2011 by Diana

The national broadcast of the chimps’ going onto the hill is still up in the air, but I did receive confirmation from Eric Johnson of KOMO 4 that they will air the story Sunday night at 11:00pm and it will re-air Monday at 6pm. So, for those in the Seattle area, set your DVRs and come to the blog after you watch it to tell us your impressions.

It was a pretty emotional day and we were lucky that the film crews were gracious, understanding and also really excited to witness the chimpanzees taking their first steps onto Young’s Hill.

Here’s a photo of 2/3 of the Young’s Hill clique. Maybe tomorrow someone else will join Burrito, Missy and Jamie in exploring the wide-open part of their home.

jamie and missy climbing structure on young's hill

 

Filed Under: Jamie, Missy, News, Sanctuary, Young's Hill Tagged With: chimp, chimpanzee, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, freedom, KOMO 4, release, Sanctuary, seattle, young's hill

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