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WRR Home > E-Newsletter: WRR Sanctuary News > February 2007 > New Primate Discovers the Great Outdoors

New Primate Discovers the Great Outdoors

by Lynn Cuny, Founder & Executive Director

A few months ago Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation (WRR) was contacted by a woman in Arizona whose neighbor had a Monkey in his backyard. As the story unfolded, we learned that this was a 27-year-old female Pig-tailed Macaque. This poor, elderly girl had nothing more than a small cage to call home. She had no room to roam about or climb, no friends of her own kind, and no hope for either. We told the caller that we would be happy to accept the Monkey if she could persuade the neighbor to give her up. Weeks passed and finally she was successful in her efforts and she and the old female were on their way to WRR.

They arrived one sunny afternoon, the elder Primate riding quietly in a cage in the back of a van. When I opened the door and saw her sitting there I knew that this girl would be happy here at WRR. In only two days we began the introduction process for the new arrival. We had recently rescued two equally old female Macaques from Primarily Primates and we all agreed that these girls would enjoy each other's company. Animal Care Manager Noelle Adams and I opened the door to the new girl's cage and in only moments she was out plodding through the fresh hay and carefully picking up grapes and slices of melon with her once-nimble fingers. The moment she stepped outside she turned over rock after rock, sampling several to see if they had either a pleasant taste or some nutritional minerals that she could enjoy. The two resident girls were not thrilled with their new roommate; she was larger than either of them, but after awhile they realized that she may be big, but she was friendly. Once out in the enclosure the new girl discovered the jungle gym and decided to climb the ladder and take a seat on a high platform that gave her a Bird's eye view of her new surroundings. She even took a surprise ride down the dark green slide. For the next several hours she roamed every inch of her new home, it was a home without the close confines of bars and wood. She often looked up to see the Birds fly by and marvel at that vast blue sky that hovered overhead but had always been out of view until now.

There is no way we can know what her sharp, quick mind must have been thinking or how it had to be racing with questions and curiosity about each new and interesting sight. But one thing is certain: though this aging female Monkey had been forced to spend most of her life alone in the close confines of a small prison, from this day forward she would be free to climb and explore, to sit with her friends, and to experience a world made complete with Nature that is now hers to enjoy.

 

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