Montana
Category: Orangutan Care Centre & Quarantine | Date: Mar 11 2008 | By: admin
The objective of the Orangutan Care Centre & Quarantine (OCCQ) is to rehabilitate orangutans so they can be released into the Lamandau Wildlife Reserve. Tragically, some orangutans, like Montana below, arrive at the OCCQ with such bad injuries that this will never be an option for them. For these individuals we must try and provide as best conditions as possible and at this point our work changes from conservation to welfare.
Montana (photo by Peter Ellen)
Montana is the oldest and biggest orangutan at the OCCQ. Well on his way to adulthood, he was confiscated in 1994 when he was approximately 5 years old. He had been shot in the head and, as a result, is blind in his left eye. He has a paralysed left leg and only partial use of his right arm. He can be aggressive with people and has long-since reached an age when he is intolerant of other orangutans, so has to stay by himself. Unfortunately, Montana can never be released into a normal forest situation as his injuries have left him weakened and unable to compete with other orangutans, and there is a risk he would become a “nuisance” raiding villagers’ crops. I could write more about him but suffice it to say, like Violet, he is one of the ‘special ones’, one of the orangutans who has been especially cruelly treated by fate and humankind.
At the Orangutan Care Centre and Quarantine (OCCQ) we are lucky in that the surrounding nursery forest provides completely natural enrichment for the majority of our orangutans. The forests have everything they’ll need for learning the skills and developing the muscles required to survive in the wild. Unfortunately, as I have said before, not every orangutan goes out every day. For most of the older orangutans it is every second day. However, for some, it is much less frequent. Some refuse to come back at the end of the day, or they roam too far – there are power lines on the road alongside the nursery forest. Some do not want to mix with the other orangutans (orangutans are semi-solitary in the wild). For these orangutans that don’t get out to the forest, enrichment is necessary for their welfare.
I spent the other Sunday cleaning up my garden and I felled an old, straggly, banana tree. There was only one place for it to go. Ashley, the director of the Orangutan Foundation, helped me take it to the OCCQ, especially for Montana.
Montana with banana stalk
Struggling, we rammed the banana stalk as far as it would go into Montana’s enclosure. He reached out a massive hand, wrapped his sausage-sized fingers around the end of the stalk and, seemingly effortlessly, pulled it in. Then he set to work, peeling off the outer skin and slurping up the juicy central pith. And he did it for hours.
Some of the younger orangutans in the cage next to Montana’s pleased with their share of the banana tree.
This is meant as a simple story - what we did cost nothing, but it meant a great deal. Montana worked that stalked to its very end and he nested in the leaves for two nights.
By the way you’ll be relieved to hear, that as I type, it is raining outside – long may it continue!






9 Responses to “Montana”
sheryl, washington dc, on 11 Mar 2008
Is Montana always in the cage? Does he get outside of it sometimes? Montana’s story makes me very sad and I’m glad he’s at the OCCQ where he can live out his life in peace.
I’m going to visit the Center for Great Apes in Wauchula, Florida during my vacation trip to see my Dad. It’s not open to the public but as a member I’m able to take a tour. I’m sure I’ll see orangs there who’ll remind me of Montana. I just hope I don’t cry until I’m done with the tour.
s.
Wanda, Atlanta, on 11 Mar 2008
Sheryl let me know about your trip when you return - how it is — I read about that sanctuary all the time — I used to live in Florida Tampa/St. Pete area — Enjoy –
brigitta, switzerland, on 11 Mar 2008
Thank you for all this touching stories. Human behaviour is so frightening. There is so little respect to the others, humans or amimals. I like to see into the blogs of wildlife direct or orangisations like human right watch and medecins sans frontières. So I don’t fell so lonely. I feel much admiration for what you are dooing! And perhaps I can increase my english by writing in the blogs
Christine C., on 11 Mar 2008
Thank you for introducing us to Montana and for taking time to take care of his special needs…though it is so sad that it often comes to this.
Brigitta — welcome back, I feel like it has been a while since we have heard from you!
Theresa Siskind St Petersburg FL, on 11 Mar 2008
Stephen, thanks for sharing Montana’s story, truly heart breaking to know how he ended up at the sactuary. Speaking of which, those are very nice enclosures. Amazing with all his disabilities that he is able to get around. I’m glad he enjoyed his enrichment exercise with the banana stalk, boy they really ask for so little. His story just touches my heart so deeply. Glad to hear you will need a raincoat when you go outside!
F. J. Pechir, on 11 Mar 2008
Thank you for this post and for your work whit Montana! I worked in a zoo´s enrichment program as a volunteer for some years, and among all the animals that I worked with, there was 3 male orangs, an adult and two young siblings. I was delighted to play ´wars and fights´ with the young ones, and to use many enrichment toys, foods, etc, but their encloshure was designed to be able to perform many enrichment options, but Montana do not has such space. Even so, its nice to know that you are doing everything at your hand to help this beautiful orang. Thank you for that!!
Ellen, on 11 Mar 2008
The photos of the orangutans are wonderful, but it would be great to see some photos of the people who are working with them. I barely know what you look like, and it would be so good to see some photos of Ashley Lieman as well, especially when both of you are the field like this. You all do such fantastic work but you are far too modest!
Annie, on 12 Mar 2008
Wow…Montana has been through so much…thanks for people like you who help these creatures have somewhat of a normal life! God bless!
Carol Ritchie, on 27 Mar 2008
Montana has always been a favorite of mine and reading your words, Stephen, brought back a touching memory. I went back thru my journals from earlier trips and here, word for word, is what I had written on October 9, 1999, when I was staying in a hut in the forest, not far from OCCQ: “This morning Somalia here for a little while (he nested out last night) then headed to Clinic. Montana came later (also nested last night) - stayed a couple hours, mostly ‘hugging’ my waist, his head in my lap. Finally he fell sleep.” Later in the journal I wrote that Mr. Tumin had come to get Montana. When I visit him now, I always remember that very special encounter with a very special orangutan. It does break my heart that he’ll never experience freedom like that again but can understand it’s the only way to be sure he’ll stay safe. Thank you for keeping us up to date, Stephen. It’s very much appreciated by someone whose heart is there even when the body isn’t.
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