What do you think when you see baby monkeys? Cute hey! And if you see someone cuddling or bottle feeding a baby monkey, would you like to do that some time? Baby primates have a huge appeal to us. Being soft and furry with big eyes but so much like us, needing some love or playing around being crazy, hits a soft spot. Same here, of course. Gotta love your primates to make them your job. It’s a good thing. The appeal they have, might help save them from extinction!
Exploitation of cuteness
But then there are people who don’t have a soft spot anywhere to be found taking advantage of this. They exploit cute baby monkeys by selling them to people who want to cuddle them. Meaning well these people take these cute little things into a lonely life without companions of their own species, no way to show their natural behaviour and often turning depressed, sick or aggressive. A cute baby chimp becomes stronger than us at age seven and then into an adult who can kill you in a heartbeat. Other people are wise enough not to take one home, but have their picture taken with monkeys on a leash or with dressed up orangs like a star football player recently did. These primates live sad lives and are often abused. Nothing cute about that.
Tender Love and Care
This is where we come in. We’re working at sanctuaries which take in ex-pets, ex-entertainment animals and victims of the bushmeat trade. And with our job comes the privilege of handling these primates. The cuddles, the playing, the bottles, everything. Al
though only a small part of the job, besides all the hard work, we love it. There was Kobulu the young bonobo still with a human foster-mom before being introduced with the other bonobos. He came for a visit every morning, escaping from his mom sitting on the chair across from me, giving me a hug or challenging me for a game. Olivia the high maintenance little vervet princess who would have big tantrums for such a small girl, but would calm down in my hands. Vanga a gorgeous baby boy who refused to eat or drink after seeing his family being killed by hunters. With a lot of TLC I earned his trust and he took a bottle from me, heart-warming. Holding Kinness’ hand, a big male vervet with crooked teeth weird spots and big friendly eyes who had been a pet his whole life until he bit the children. He had to adjust to a life without the only family he had ever known, becoming a monkey again. Richard who we released with his new family in Kasungu becoming wilder and wilder, but occasionally still walking up to us to remove painful spear grass from our pants. Being cared for by a young now wild baboon is truly something special!
How to love baby primates
But we won’t show you these pictures. We can’t. Like many responsible organizations we decided not to encourage anyone to cuddle monkeys. Since the only responsible way you can do this, is to get a job like ours or to volunteer at a good sanctuary that has strict rules about this. We don’t want to contribute in any way to people buying primates or taking pics with abused animals of any species!
So back to you. We want to show you our beautiful, cute, interesting primates. They deserve your attention and we love it when you love them. What we will show you is all the cuteness when they play or cuddle with each other or just their beautiful faces. And we will tell you about our cherished moments. And we hope that that will be enough for you to enjoy and maybe for you to want to protect them and tell your friends the right way to enjoy these cuddly creatures: in the wild or in a good sanctuary.
‘In the end, we will protect only what we love.
We will love only what we understand.
We will understand only what we are taught.’
Baba Dioum
Imagine; you’re dropped in an unknown town, you don’t know anyone except the group of friends you’re with, you don’t know where you can sleep or where you can eat. You don’t know where it’s safe and what the dangers are. Everything seems hostile, smells are weird, so are the buildings, plants and trees, all the creatures you meet and actually you don’t know why everything changed all of a sudden. Welcome in the life of a released vervet.
d in their new town the gang has been able to stay out of danger since May. No-one was lost due to predation anymore. The result of the hard lessons learned in the first few months. Although less playing and grooming was seen at first, bonds between animals improved. Being in such a dangerous situation could drive a group of friends apart. But our vervets stayed together. They are feeding together, warming up in the morning sun together and walking together, the groups stability is something to be proud off. Babies became juveniles, who became sub-adults, who became adults. That’s a good thing because besides predation another challenge awaits our monkeys. Other monkeys.
And our group with only one big guy left seems attractive, because the group has what all the other guys want…..girls! And our gang has plenty. Yet the bonds between the animals in our group are strong and only female Florence decided to take off and go for a romance with one of the rivals. This lasted for almost 2 weeks but in the end she decided to get back with her friends in the group. Now she is pregnant….Is it from our Madson or from one of the other guys?
mayor success. It will also bring new genes into the group and we hope Madson won’t kick them out again. At this point there is physical contact between the guys and the rest of the group and they seem welcome. Integration in the new town is complete!