Author Archive

The Berm Garden

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

Each spring, students at CHCI help prepare a flower, fruit, and vegetable garden for the chimpanzees. The garden grows along the outside of the fencing of the chimpanzees’ outdoor enclosure, up on the berm.

This is the north side of the garden, stretching along one side of the chimpanzees’ outdoor area.

This year, we’ve had a lot of help from CHCI students and the summer apprentices, in preparing and maintaining the garden. Earlier in the spring, Anne, Debbie, Gina, Katie, Kristen, Jason, Jessie, and Shannon all helped prepare the soil and plant the seeds. This summer, the apprentices — Ande, Cristy, David, Hallie, Jan, Lindsey, Katrina, Mark, and Shona (but not Greta; she managed to sleep through the whole thing) — along with Anne and Gina, have all pitched in to keep the weeds under control.

 

Gina, Anne, and Debbie, help prepare the garden.

Shannon and Jessie help prepare the garden for spring planting.

Katie and Kristen help loosen and enrich the soil in the berm garden.

This year, we’ve planted all sorts of tasty treats in the garden. We’ve sunflowers, melons, watermelon (CANDY FRUIT) edible flowers including snapdragons and pansies (FLOWER), cucumbers (GREEN SLICE), tomatoes (RED SLICE), raspberries & strawberries (BERRY), chives (ONION GRASS), mint, oregano, and basil. The fruit on the apple trees and peach tree are beginning to develop and the branches are already hanging low over some portions of the berm path.

One of the two apple trees in the berm garden.

We’ve lots of raspberry (BERRY) bushes in the garden.

The garden includes several types of edible flowers including these pansies.

These small tomatoes (RED SLICE) are among some of the first foods to ripen in the garden this year.

A handful of treats from the garden makes a perfect treat with dinner.

Washoe and her family get very excited about the garden growing on the berm. From their outdoor play area, they get to watch the whole process, from prepping the soil, to the sprouting of the plants, to the development and ripening of the fruits. They often request treats from the garden from caregivers when the caregivers are up on the berm, and can make and use tools to get things from the garden themselves. For example, one day last week, Tatu spent nearly half an hour manipulating a fire hose through the fencing to draw branches of a mint plant close enough to the fencing that she could snake a hand through the gap beneath the fencing, capture the stalk between two fingers, and pinch off the tender tops with her other hand.

Tatu leads Shannon along the berm to the north part of the garden.

Shannon and Washoe sign about some of the treats Shannon’s picked from the garden.

 

We will plant another garden in the fall. If you would like to be a part of the chimpanzees’ fall garden, we’d love your support. Write us an e-mail if you would like to provide fall plant seeds, plant starts, or donate garden tools.

Welcome Apprentices!

Sunday, July 1st, 2007

We at CHCI are excited to welcome our 10 new Summer Apprentices. The apprentices have an intensive period of training, assisting with research, cleaning enclosures, preparing meals, assembling enrichment, and lots more ahead of them. If Jason can twist a few arms, we should have some postings from apprentices about their experiences soon.

Pan what? - Explaining the Name

Sunday, July 1st, 2007

We seem to have a tradition of using plays on words for things at CHCI — think “Chimposium” and “Chimporium“. Pan troglodytes is the species name for chimpanzee, and we simply could not resist the opportunity to play around with it for the blog: Pan bloglodytes was born.

Pan bloglodytes - The Launch

Sunday, July 1st, 2007

Welcome to Pan bloglodytes, the official website of the Chimpanzee and Human Communication Institute. This blog will house stories and reminiscences about experiences with Washoe and her family, information on current research at CHCI, and much, much more. We invite you to share with us your comments on these posts.


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