Sherri Nestico
February 18th, 2010, 08:51 PM
Hi all,
A group of 10 former labratory chimpanzees from New Mexico arrived at their new home today - a 150-acre sanctuary in Fort Pierce, FL.
This facility is amazing - they have some of the original Air Force aerospace research chimps (believe it or not, there are a few still alive), plus other chimps saved from research facilities and the like. The late Dr. Carole Noon, an anthropologist/primatologist, founded Save the Chimps while suing the Air Force for custody of the space chimps after the agency dropped the program. Jane Goodall is a member of the board of directors.
Unfortunately, the facility doesn't offer tours to the public due to the chimps being very sensitive to strangers. But on occasion the media gets a peek behind the gates:
Videos: New residents arrive at Save the Chimps in Fort Pierce - Treasure Coast, FL | TCPalm.com (http://www.tcpalm.com/videos/detail/new-residents-arrive-save-chimps-fort-pierce/)
It was a royal pain trying to film the primates in their inside enclosures. As you can see, chain-link abounds. I used manual focus a couple times, but couldn't keep up with the on-the-move chimps. I won't even mention the problem I had with the wind noise on the outside interview (and what I had to do to salvage it).
Videos: The journey to Save the Chimps - Treasure Coast, FL | TCPalm.com (http://www.tcpalm.com/videos/detail/journey-save-chimps/)
Tomorrow, the chimps are going to be released into the outdoor sanctuary. There's chain-link running along the perimeter, but there are a couple of boardwalks the staff uses to access parts of the outdoor area for feeding or tending to an injured chimp. The media group is returning tomorrow and hopefully, we will get a chance to shoot from the boardwalks and get better footage. Stay tuned.
A group of 10 former labratory chimpanzees from New Mexico arrived at their new home today - a 150-acre sanctuary in Fort Pierce, FL.
This facility is amazing - they have some of the original Air Force aerospace research chimps (believe it or not, there are a few still alive), plus other chimps saved from research facilities and the like. The late Dr. Carole Noon, an anthropologist/primatologist, founded Save the Chimps while suing the Air Force for custody of the space chimps after the agency dropped the program. Jane Goodall is a member of the board of directors.
Unfortunately, the facility doesn't offer tours to the public due to the chimps being very sensitive to strangers. But on occasion the media gets a peek behind the gates:
Videos: New residents arrive at Save the Chimps in Fort Pierce - Treasure Coast, FL | TCPalm.com (http://www.tcpalm.com/videos/detail/new-residents-arrive-save-chimps-fort-pierce/)
It was a royal pain trying to film the primates in their inside enclosures. As you can see, chain-link abounds. I used manual focus a couple times, but couldn't keep up with the on-the-move chimps. I won't even mention the problem I had with the wind noise on the outside interview (and what I had to do to salvage it).
Videos: The journey to Save the Chimps - Treasure Coast, FL | TCPalm.com (http://www.tcpalm.com/videos/detail/journey-save-chimps/)
Tomorrow, the chimps are going to be released into the outdoor sanctuary. There's chain-link running along the perimeter, but there are a couple of boardwalks the staff uses to access parts of the outdoor area for feeding or tending to an injured chimp. The media group is returning tomorrow and hopefully, we will get a chance to shoot from the boardwalks and get better footage. Stay tuned.