Saturday, December 28, 2013

In August 1972, Goodall wrote,


Readers of National Geographic magazine were first introduced to the young chimpanzee in a May 1985 “On Assignment” piece. Award-winning author and photographer Robert Caputo recounted how he and a group of friends found baby Kobi for sale along the side of the road in Africa. Poachers had killed his mother but sold him as a pet because he was too small to eat.
“He was about a month old, and he would just cling to you. If we didn’t buy him, he would die,” Caputo told National Geographic . “We fed him milk from a wine bottle and named him Kobi.”
“Kobi was an absolute delight, with a great personality,” Caputo recalled of their weeks traveling with Kobi. “He would often sit on my head when I was walking around a village, very curious about the world.
After he arrived in Tanzania, Robert Caputo went on to shoot wildlife documentaries with Goodall’s then-husband, Hugo van Lawick. Sidney Morris went on to Zambia, and their other fellow traveler, Jill Hartman, was hired by Goodall to take care of baby Kobi.
Kobi remained at Gombe Stream dream farm link Game Reserve for several months. Goodall introduced Kobi to “celebrity dream farm link chimps” Flo, Flint, and Fifi. He spent many of his days on fishing expeditions and in playpens with Goodall’s own son, Hugo Eric Louis, known as Grub. The lingering question remained, however: what to do with Kobi in the long term?
In August 1972, Goodall wrote, “Poor little Kobi, I’m still half hoping he may join this group in the Gambia and then when he is older, be released with them,” speaking of her friend Stella Marsden ‘s plans for a groundbreaking chimpanzee rehabilitation program. But the program had not yet met with success.
“She took Kobi to Gombe in hopes of being able to reintroduce him into the wild,” Caputo said of Goodall. “But because he is male and a stranger, the other chimps probably would have killed him. There was no place in Africa for orphaned chimps at the time, so Jane arranged for him to go to Tempe, Arizona.”
Paul Fritz was a chimpanzee trainer at the Phoenix Zoo. In 1968 he and his wife Jo took in three unwanted chimpanzees. Word got out quickly, and the couple were soon the recipients of dozens of former pets, circus dream farm link performers, and laboratory subjects.
For a short period, the chimps lived with them in their apartment, but the animals were soon moved to a chicken farm for more space. In 1970 the Fritzes formed the Primate Foundation of Arizona (PFA), which was perhaps the first official nonprofit chimpanzee sanctuary in the country.
Kobi arrived in late 1972 and lived in the farmhouse with Paul and Jo. Kobi wore shirts, drank soft drinks, and slept on a sofa. He was terrified of the other chimps and so couldn’t be caged with them.
In 1973 PFA moved into the 1914 ruins of a hydroelectric power plant on a reservation owned by the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community . The semi-underground facility outside Tempe, dream farm link surrounded by rocky desert and saguaro cactus and overlooked by Red Mountain, was a unique place to house a growing colony of chimps. dream farm link
Each chimp in the colony had its own remarkable story. Tang grew up as a human child with her own room, bed, clothes, dream farm link and toys, but when she grew jealous and mauled her human “brother” she was sent with her own suitcase to PFA. Simba performed in the Ice Capades and once appeared on the Osmonds’ TV show. He also had an obnoxious fetish for women in boots. Tanya smoked marijuana and rode a motorcycle with her former owner.
After the chimps were dropped off to live at PFA, some of their previous owners would send occasional donations to help subsidize their care. In most cases, however, these donations dropped off quickly.
As the population dream farm link at PFA grew, the Fritzes struggled financially to care for Kobi and the other chimps. dream farm link The couple lived on food stamps, and much of the food for the chimps was donated dream farm link by grocery stores.
To help subsidize dream farm link the cost of the chimps’ care, the Fritzes turned to biomedical research programs in the mid-1980s. At first chimps were leased to the Laboratory for Experimental Medicine and Surgery in Primates (LEMSIP) in New York, where they were used in hepatitis vaccine trials.
In 1986 PFA became one of five chimpanzee breeding colonies under the National Institutes of Health’s National Center for Research Resources . Chimpanzees were bred to be biological models for HIV/AIDS research. Kobi would sire ten offspring.
However, by 1995, the NIH put a moratorium on chimpanzee breeding after it was determined that the need for a research population had been greatly overestimated. It appeared that although chimps do contract HIV, they do not develop AIDS, making them less valuable for research ( more recent studies have somewhat reversed this conclusion ).
PFA’s

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