Category Archives: monkeys (also: apes)

Be on the lookout for a chimp, possibly driving a stolen car

I’m pretty sure there are only two things in Kern County, California: the chimp sanctuary and my family. These things are unrelated, to the best of my knowledge.

Thursday’s Washington Post gave us the following article, “Moe, Free To Be a Chimpanzee: Ape of Some Notoriety Escapes Civilization.”

There’s an ape on the loose, a chimp on the lam. He’s a ribbon-cutting celebrity. But now he’s like a monkey gone wild.

Moe used to drive a car. Apparently, he was once issued a driver’s license, but it expired. Moe is now believed to be on foot. Lost? Hiding? Worse? He’s been out there, somewhere, in the rugged, brushy, snaky foothills of the San Bernardino Mountains west of Los Angeles since last Friday when he escaped from his cage. His frantic parents — that is what they call themselves — are weeping with worry. The authorities are not offering much help, though the folks at animal control do have a dart gun ready. The search continues.

Usually, a piece about an escaped chimpanzee is catnip to news editors, especially over a long holiday weekend. Like a good shark attack (or poodle-eating alligators or lurid panda sex), your missing-chimp story is a leafy green perennial of the news business. So here we go. Except. Except this is all sort of sad and disturbing.

Because maybe chimpanzees aren’t really supposed to wear short pants and live in suburban houses with humans who treat them as their child. It never really ends well, does it? Because even though the humans love them dearly, cute baby chimps grow into big adult apes, who can bite, which can have a tragic trajectory, as we shall see.

But then again, who are we to judge, those of us who have never put a pair of pajamas on an ape.

It really is a tragic tale. Why it took such prominent placement on the 4th of July I’ll never know. Perhaps because it’s a tale about freedom and the American dream, or perhaps because monkeys (or apes) sell papers.

It’s probably going to drive JunglePete crazy that I put this in the “monkeys” category, but he’s going to have to live with it. He’s been running amok with the aforementioned Church Sign Generator so he’s earned himself a little crazy-making.

Wicker Monkey of the Month Club

Do nothing and each month a new monkey will be delivered right to your door.

IMG_0013

I’ve been amassing these to share with my brother.

That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.

I have to keep them all because I can’t send any to him, we don’t know where he is or what he’s doing. Husband told me – and I choose to believe this – that he’s in charge of a special Top Secret* genetic engineering project that’s creating dinosaur super-soldiers, probably right over there in the basement of the Pentagon.

*Top Secret until now, I guess

Frida

Spent some quality time with the in-laws, catching the traveling Frida Kahlo show which celebrates the 100th anniversary of Kahlo’s birth by gathering together an astonishing number of her works and hundreds of photographs of Kahlo and her family and friends. It was organized by the Walker Art Center (Minneapolis) and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and in between Minneapolis and San Francisco, the show spent a few months at the at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, which is where we caught up with it.

(Small New Yorker mention when the show first opened: Peter Schjeldahl, “All Souls: The Frida Kahlo Cult”)

It was an amazing show, but it was depressing. Deeply depressing. Profoundly depressing. Astonishing and completely worthwhile, yes, but deeply sad. Husband and I skipped the audio tour. Most of the people in the show had picked up the headsets, which was nice because it meant you could hear a pin drop even in rooms that were crowded. On the other hand, by the end of the exhibit the people who’d listened had a hundred yard stare that made me want to make sure the museum had locked the stairs to the roof and put away all of the sharp objects.

The show features over a hundred photographs of Kahlo and her family and friends, plus a dizzying array of her paintings. Many of these works have never been displayed publicly in the U.S. before, and certainly have never been displayed together. Arranged chronologically rather than thematically – although you could argue that in this show that’s really the same thing – the groupings represent the major periods in her life. Spinal surgeries, the miscarriage in Detroit, the first divorce from Diego, etc.

The show wrings the viewer out and plops them on the floor of the final room, wherein the last grouping of works is a series of cheerfully bright still life paintings.

These final works were introduced with words from Kahlo’s diary about her own death, “I hope the exit is joyful — and I hope never to come back.” They represent the agony of Kahlo’s final year as she coped with pneumonia and the amputation of her leg. These are mostly works she created because she knew they would sell and she could use the money for her medical bills. Look closely at the festive paintings and you can see she was so doped up that she must have struggled mightily to maintain her focus on her subject and to control her every brushstroke.

People exited the show looking like they’d just been released from Azkaban. To further disconcert the viewer, they then get to try to shake the dementors off their back while walking straight into a Frida Kahlo emporium with more licensed tie-in products than I think I’ve ever seen for any show. Rooms of neckties and paperdolls and jewelry and clothing and other happy household objects festooned with images of Frida and her monkeys. Looking at the reproduction necklace – complete with thorns and hummingbird – threatened to bring back the migraine I’d just gotten rid of. (Actually, I have to admit that piece was so weird, it was oddly attractive).

It’s a brilliant show and was well worth the trip, but before we left town we went back to the museum to hang out with the Buddhas and look at the stone temple for a while to recover.

Monday’s journey in the rain was no fun, but Tuesday’s trip back still took well over 4 hours and started to make us both a little stir crazy in the car. At one point I thought Husband brightly exclaimed, “Let’s pretend we’re Canadian!” When asked him what he meant, he couldn’t remember what he’d just actually said, because we immediately became preoccupied with ending every sentence with, “eh?”

It’s good to be home. Now I have to clean the house because Husband’s mother-in-law is on her way to stay with us.

Baby Spot-Nosed Guenon!

A few days ago, we went to the [tag]Central Florida Zoo[/tag] to see the baby spot-nosed guenon. I had no idea how rare these adorable little monkeys were until I read this article in the Orlando Sentinel: “Rare [tag]spot-nosed guenon[/tag] born at Central Florida Zoo and Botanical Gardens in Orlando area.” We were already planning to go to the zoo on the day that article appeared, which made me nervous, but we waited until late in the day and had the place practically to ourselves.

We also saw a baby kangaroo. Kangaroos are pretty odd creatures. Also, pretty tasty, but that’s a story for the meatblog. Baby Roo was ready to get back in Momma Roo’s pouch. S/he tried to climb in (headfirst) but this was apparently a tough task, which involved much cartoonish flailing while s/he tried to get some traction. After a few minutes of struggle, Momma Roo got tired of waiting and reached down and dumped the Baby Roo into her pouch. Headfirst.

from bananas to monkeys

I actually wrote the previous post a few days ago. Since then, thankfully, I have burned out on yellow [tag]Conversation Hearts[/tag]. Suzanne is right, the regular yellow [tag]Necco[/tag] wafers? Not the same. Only the yellow Hearts have the faux-banana flavor that I found so very appealing.

Necco crisis averted, I direct you to [tag]Jungle Pete[/tag]’s “Munkey’s in Dipr” art gallery. I find the art gallery doubly amusing, since the art is done by Frank’s daughter.

Frank is not JunglePete’s imaginary friend, he’s someone we went to school with. [tag]Frank[/tag] is a troublemaker. Frank convinced me, in the 7th grade, that physics was very cool. Look where that has gotten me.

For your last fun fact of the day (this will be on the final) long ago in a galaxy far away, Frank and I danced our first slow dance together.

I was wondering what this post had to do with cults, then I realized that our elementary/middle/high school had a lot of cult-like qualities. But that’s a post for another day…