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rescue

Foraging

June 24, 2013 by J.B.

We provide food to the chimps in a variety of ways. Sometimes we serve them individually, either hand to mouth or hand to hand through the caging. This ensures that everyone is getting their fair share and gives us a great opportunity to monitor and evaluate the chimps’ health up close. Other times we put food in puzzles like the termite mound or raisin boards, giving the chimps a chance to use tools and their incredible problem-solving abilities. But my (and Burrito’s) favorite method is the forage. For a forage, we cut the food into small pieces and spread it throughout the enclosure while the chimps are locked out. Then we let them back in and they proceed to search for their meal. Foraging encourages activity and usually discourages stress and aggression because it’s difficult to steal or hoard food when it is spread out over such a large area, though Jamie sometimes tries her best.

The GoPro camera provides an interesting glimpse into a forage on the hill and it also allows us to hear all the groans and food squeaks that we would otherwise miss.

Filed Under: Burrito, Food, Young's Hill Tagged With: chimpanzee, Food, forage, gopro, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary, young's hill

Beautiful Jody

June 20, 2013 by Debbie

I love Jody’s eyes. And in this picture, Negra’s eyes peeking over to Elizabeth as she’s taking the photo really bring a smile to my face!

web_Jody_look_at_camera_lunch_anniversary_birthday_party_greenhouse_GH_ek_IMG_2402

Filed Under: Jody, Negra, Sanctuary Tagged With: animal protection, animal rescue, animal rights, Animal Welfare, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, csnw, Enrichment, Jody, Negra, primate protection, primate rescue, rescue, Sanctuary

Competition on the hill and Give Five update

June 15, 2013 by Diana

First, thank you for continuing to send the 5-year anniversary video to friends and colleagues. If you haven’t shared the video yet on Facebook, Twitter, by email, or whatever your preferred online network is, please do this weekend! The Give Five donations are still coming in, and we’re now up to $15,525! Every donation helps us to continue to provide quality care for the Cle Elum Seven chimpanzees and to advocate for other great apes in need.

The wildlife on the property are also learning about the sanctuary. In addition to the deer who are quite familiar with our compost, the local crows have learned all about forages. They start swooping in when they see the humans walking around the hill. At first, the chimpanzees chased them off, but that must have grown tiresome. The chimps no longer seem bothered by their corvid neighbors, even as they fly away with a piece of chow or fruit.

crow on young's hill

The chimps just go about their business of foraging. Negra was quite adventurous this morning during the breakfast forage, even climbing up onto the shaky bridge again!

Negra on shaky bridge

Look at this contented face:

Negra stand on hill

 

negra in the grass

Burrito is a first-class forager:

burrito foraging on the hill

and probably most content when he is eating:

Burrito eating grapefruit on the treat rock

I posted a few more photos on some of the chimps’ Facebook pages earlier. I’m sure you’ve liked the sanctuary FB page, but have you liked all of the chimps on Facebook? On FB just type in their name followed by Chimpanzee and you’ll find their pages, or click on their images at the top of this page and you’ll see the link  to their FB page on the right side. Thanks for being their friends!

 

Filed Under: Burrito, Chimpanzee Behavior, Food, Negra, Sanctuary, Young's Hill Tagged With: biomedical research, chimp, chimpanzee, csnw, northwest, primate, rescue, Sanctuary, shelter

Thank you, Kathleen!

June 14, 2013 by Katelyn

The celebration continues! Kathleen Kemper also sponsored yesterday in honor of the sanctuary’s five year anniversary!  We are thrilled by the overwhelming support and positive comments that have been flooding in.  Kathleen, thank you so much for your generosity and for helping us to usher in the beginning of the next five years of sanctuary, and beyond, for these amazing beings.

web Burrito sit high on plank post climbing structure look at camera trees in background YH (ek) IMG_9115

Filed Under: Burrito, Sanctuary, Sponsor-a-day, Young's Hill Tagged With: 5, anniversary, Burrito, chimpanzee, five, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary, sponsor-, year

Veterinary Clinic Update

June 1, 2013 by J.B.

We’re getting closer to completing one of our most important projects to date: the creation of an onsite veterinary clinic. This project was made possible by generous contributions from Karen and Don Young, the National Anti-Vivisection Society, Project V.E.T.S., and the many Fund-a-Need donors at our 2011 and 2013 auctions. And now I’m happy to say that we have a few more people to add to this list.

Kathy Cochran, one of the best friends a chimp could have, connected us with Bud McIrvin and Dan Price of Providence Hospital in Everett, WA, and as a result we now have an incredible anesthesia machine to add to our clinic. Dan was even kind enough to drive out to Cle Elum this morning with his wife, Janet, to give me and Dr. Mensching a tutorial.

Clinic anesthesia machine

Filed Under: Construction, Sanctuary, Thanks Tagged With: anesthesia, chimpanzee, clinic, equipment, medical, northwest, rescue, Sanctuary, veterinary

Resilience

May 21, 2013 by Debbie

This is the first of a series of guest blogger posts from researchers that work with free-living apes. Maureen McCarthy graduated from the Chimpanzee and Human Communication Institute and is currently a PhD candidate at the University of Southern California. She is doing research with chimpanzees in Uganda and has a regular featured blog on Scientific American’s blog. Here’s her most recent entry that mentions Foxie:

—

Their chorus of pant hoots gave them away in dramatic fashion. The chimpanzees we’d been looking for were nearby, and we knew exactly where to find them. Though farmland and trees blocked our view, we could hear that the chimpanzees had arrived at a particular fig tree laden with ripe fruits. As ripe fruit specialists, chimpanzees seek out fruiting figs like this Ficus exasperata. On a good day, we can use our knowledge of when these figs are ripening to help us find the chimpanzees.

We took a circuitous route through the gardens to a grassy hilltop with a clear, albeit distant, view of the Ficus.  I dropped my backpack and pulled out my binoculars. I began to scan the tree in an attempt to identify the large dark figures foraging. I could make out the silhouettes of at least seven or eight chimpanzees, all foraging on figs or seated in the huge tree.

Photo 1

Chimpanzees feed in a Ficus exasperata tree. Photo © Jack Lester.

After observing their foraging for a few peaceful moments, I heard a jarring but familiar sound. A man working in a garden nearby shouted at the chimpanzees. Though the tree was in an isolated area of grassland several dozen meters from where he worked, he was clearly uncomfortable with their presence. A few threatening shouts were enough to convince the chimpanzees it was best to cut short their breakfast. They descended quickly from the fig. I now counted twelve chimpanzees as they walked in a single file line back across the grassland and to a small patch of forest nearby. As we watched them go, field assistant Nick commented that he felt sorry for the chimps.

At times like these, I am reminded of one of the most recurrent lessons from my research thus far: chimpanzees are surprisingly resilient. They may have waited until later to forage, or perhaps they found another source of nutrition (which, unfortunately, may have involved risky crop-raiding). However, as long as no one hunted them or set a mantrap to ensnare them, as is sometimes the case, they probably found something to eat and survived another day. Despite the rapid rate of forest degradation in their habitat, they have persisted. They continue to forage, reproduce, and tend to the complex political matters of chimpanzee life, even if these behaviors must be modified somewhat to fit a drastically altered environment.

I was again reminded of chimpanzee resilience when, on a recent visit to my mother’s home, I opened an old box to find my childhood collection of troll dolls. After a moment’s consideration, I decided to send them to a chimpanzee named Foxie. Foxie is a resident of Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest (CSNW), a sanctuary in Cle Elum, Washington that serves as home to seven chimpanzees. The “Cle Elum Seven,” as they are known, have lived in biomedical laboratories for most of their lives. They were involved in invasive hepatitis vaccine research and used for laboratory breeding. Foxie gave birth to five infants, but was forced to give them all up, just like so many other breeding female chimpanzees in laboratories. Perhaps as a fulfillment of the maternal behaviors she was never able to express, Foxie can now usually be found carrying a troll or other doll with her.

Photo 2

Foxie cares for a troll doll.

The caregivers who know Foxie and the other members of the Cle Elum Seven can attest to this adaptability. All seven have displayed drastic changes in both behavior and physical appearance since arriving at CSNW several years ago. The shift from a windowless laboratory basement to a spacious sanctuary with dedicated caregivers and outdoor access has—not surprisingly—had an unambiguously positive effect on them.

Why might chimpanzees be so adaptable to change?  It may have aided the survival of their ancestors–and ours. For example, many primates regularly face drastic seasonal changes in rainfall, temperature, and food availability. Some primates have specialized adaptations that help them survive under harshly changing seasonal conditions. For chimpanzees, a learned knowledge of the fruit tree locations, even during periods of low fruit availability, is critical. Chimpanzees acquire this knowledge over a prolonged period of development, with high reliance on their mothers until full weaning at age 5, followed by juvenile and sub-adulthood learning periods lasting until age 15. A high degree of neural plasticity facilitates this learning ability. In humans, an especially high degree of plasticity may aid our strong reliance on learning. Plasticity may also play a key role in what we call resilience, enabling both humans and our chimpanzee kin to roll with the punches during trying times. For chimpanzees today, this may mean finding a new fruit tree when one due to ripen has been felled, or basking in the sun for the first time after decades inside a laboratory.

This post was originally published at Scientific American.

Filed Under: Advocacy, Free-living chimps Tagged With: advocacy, animal protection, animal rescue, animal rights, Animal Welfare, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee retirement, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, csnw, eyes on apes, Foxie, free-living chimps, maureen mccarthy, primate rescue, rescue, resilience, Sanctuary, uganda

New bamboo on the hill

May 19, 2013 by J.B.

The site that we now call Young’s Hill was once just an empty horse pasture. Here it is in 2010, before we started construction:

YH before IMG_5898

A wide open pasture may be great for horses, but it’s awfully boring for chimps. And growing a forest from scratch takes a long time. Thankfully, we were introduced to Jackie Heinricher of Booshoot Gardens (now Provitro BioSciences) and she found a solution for us: bamboo!

We initially planted two groves on Young’s Hill and just recently planted some in the chimps’ greenhouse. It’s a great source of shade in the summer, and it’s also great for climbing, nesting, and eating.

Yesterday, we planted three new species of bamboo on the hill, including Phyllostachys nigra, which has beautiful black culms. All were generously donated to us by Provitro.

web Black bamboo grove YH IMG_2030

The chimps were really excited, though I admit it may have had a little to do with the corn, leeks, onions, and carrots that we spread around the hill.

web Missy pant hoot jody open mouth black bamboo YH IMG_8289

We’ve never heard the chimps so vocal on the hill before. As they foraged, everyone was pant-hooting with excitement.

web Negra eat corn jamie leeks jody open mouth YH IMG_8300

Foxie is always suspicious of new things, so at first she and Dora kept kept their distance from the new bamboo:

web Foxie suspicious of bamboo dora annie YH IMG_8312

And Jamie wasn’t quite sure what to make of it either:

web Jamie hold and inspect black bamboo YH IMG_8461

But soon everyone took a turn sitting under the new plants:

web Annie eat onion under black bamboo YH IMG_8452

web Jody sit with back to camera new bamboo YH IMG_8391

web Negra eat carrot new bamboo YH IMG_8384

web Jody bite black bamboo YH IMG_8405

Yesterday was a great day for all of us and Negra must have gotten caught up in the excitement because she did something we have never seen her do before: she climbed up onto the shaky bridge!

web Negra climb onto shakey bridge YH IMG_8359

Negra has lost over 10 pounds since coming to the sanctuary, and probably gained a lot of muscle, but she is still not in good enough shape to keep up with the activities of some of the other chimps. If she keeps this up, though, she may soon be giving Missy a run for her money!

web Negra eat carrot on shakey bridge black bamboo YH IMG_8367

We built a few of the structures on Young’s Hill specifically for Negra – they are close to the building and can be accessed without a lot of climbing. Maybe they’ll come in handy when she’s older because for now, Negra has decided that the whole hill is hers.

Filed Under: Annie, Construction, Enrichment, Food, Foxie, Jamie, Jody, Negra, Sanctuary, Thanks, Young's Hill Tagged With: Annie, bamboo, booshoot, chimpanzee, Foxie, Jamie, Jody, Negra, northwest, provitro biosciences, rescue, Sanctuary, young's hill

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509-699-0728
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