Jump to content
Guest Larstrup

Something Good Happened Today

Recommended Posts

Guest Larstrup

This pilot rescued a baby chimp and everyone swooned

Washington Post - Best to view here - my post has numerous HTML errors which I cannot edit.

 

Lwiro Primates, a rehabilitation center and sanctuary for nearly 200 orphaned chimpanzees and monkeys in Congo, shared a heart-melting video of a baby chimp rescue on Wednesday. In it, tiny Mussa sits in the lap of a pilot who is flying the animal from Virunga National Park to safety with Lwiro.

“Unfortunately his family is dead,” Lwiro wrote in a comment on Facebook. “We do not know how many, maybe only the mum, but most likely several members of his family were killed.”

But the video drew as much attention for its bearded pilot as it did for the adorable chimp. It was partly the man’s gentle manner: He calms Mussa with a quiet “shh,” nuzzles and grooms the chimp and supervises as the baby touches a knob on the aircraft’s instrument panel. It was also, as one Twitter user put it, because the pilot is “low-key hot.”

The real  name of #hotpilot, as Twitter users quickly dubbed him, is Anthony Caere, and this wasn’t his first animal rescue. According to a blog post on Virunga’s website, Caere is a Belgian who heads the park’s four-plane Air Wing and serves as a ” ‘big brother’ in the sky” for its rangers. Caere’s duties include supporting rangers’ anti-poaching patrols, doing surveillance for wildlife censuses, inspecting poaching sites and carrying out medical evacuations. Before this latest brush with the limelight, he appeared in a Belgian documentary program called “Flying Doctors,” which followed three physicians who aided rangers in Virunga. (He also survived a major crash last year.)

Caere’s Instagram is full of inspiring, stunning images and videos of the park’s landscape and wildlife, as well as a few of the pilot himself with rangers and other rescued primates.

But Caere also offers sobering words about the mountain gorillas, elephants and other animals that are under regular threat from poachers. “This looks cute but is actually a sad story,” he wrote Wednesday in a caption for the video with Mussa. “He should be with his mum.”

Lwiro, which rescues animals from poaching and the pet trade, currently cares for 80 chimps and 100 monkeys of various species, according to Itaso Velez del Burgo, the group’s technical director. Mussa, the organization’s third chimp rescue this year, was confiscated from a man who was also illegally keeping protected reptiles. It is unclear whether he intended to sell the chimp, a species that can go for thousands of dollars in China and the Middle East, or was keeping him as a pet, Velez said in an email.

“What is happening here is that the ‘small poachers’ kill the adults for bush meat, and if they find a baby they try to sell it,” Velez wrote. “The poachers here can [earn] between $20 and $50 per baby chimp.”

Mussa, who is about three years old, had some intestinal parasites but otherwise was in good health. “He is laughing and playing, which is a very good sign for orphaned chimps,”she said. “And he LOVES tomatoes!!”

Caere did not respond to requests for an interview. But he may well have been too busy saving more lives. The park’s blog post said he flies out early most mornings and doesn’t return until the end of the day. “And as soon as he’s got his feet back on the ground, people gather around him to hear news about the park,” the post said.

The pilot now has plenty of new fans eager to know more about his work — and, well, about him.

Caere’s social media accounts don’t go into his feelings about doing dishes. But they do make clear that his passion for wildlife and wild spaces is real. On Jan. 6, he posted a video in which he wished his followers a happy new year — and made a request.

“One of the little things I wish for this year is that we all do only that little extra effort for our beautiful, endangered planet, its nature and its animals,” he said. “If our kids still want to see wild animals here in 20 years, well, then, we need to act now. Don’t give up on our beautiful planet.”

 

 
 
 

pixel?mid=00bb70a80ee8f020d9011cbcef307fe64dsomething went wrong with this  post and there's no tools to edit the HTML. Best to view at above Wapo link

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, Larstrup said:

This pilot rescued a baby chimp and everyone swooned

Washington Post - Best to view here - my post has numerous HTML errors which I cannot edit.

 

Lwiro Primates, a rehabilitation center and sanctuary for nearly 200 orphaned chimpanzees and monkeys in Congo, shared a heart-melting video of a baby chimp rescue on Wednesday. In it, tiny Mussa sits in the lap of a pilot who is flying the animal from Virunga National Park to safety with Lwiro.

“Unfortunately his family is dead,” Lwiro wrote in a comment on Facebook. “We do not know how many, maybe only the mum, but most likely several members of his family were killed.”

But the video drew as much attention for its bearded pilot as it did for the adorable chimp. It was partly the man’s gentle manner: He calms Mussa with a quiet “shh,” nuzzles and grooms the chimp and supervises as the baby touches a knob on the aircraft’s instrument panel. It was also, as one Twitter user put it, because the pilot is “low-key hot.”

The real  name of #hotpilot, as Twitter users quickly dubbed him, is Anthony Caere, and this wasn’t his first animal rescue. According to a blog post on Virunga’s website, Caere is a Belgian who heads the park’s four-plane Air Wing and serves as a ” ‘big brother’ in the sky” for its rangers. Caere’s duties include supporting rangers’ anti-poaching patrols, doing surveillance for wildlife censuses, inspecting poaching sites and carrying out medical evacuations. Before this latest brush with the limelight, he appeared in a Belgian documentary program called “Flying Doctors,” which followed three physicians who aided rangers in Virunga. (He also survived a major crash last year.)

Caere’s Instagram is full of inspiring, stunning images and videos of the park’s landscape and wildlife, as well as a few of the pilot himself with rangers and other rescued primates.

But Caere also offers sobering words about the mountain gorillas, elephants and other animals that are under regular threat from poachers. “This looks cute but is actually a sad story,” he wrote Wednesday in a caption for the video with Mussa. “He should be with his mum.”

Lwiro, which rescues animals from poaching and the pet trade, currently cares for 80 chimps and 100 monkeys of various species, according to Itaso Velez del Burgo, the group’s technical director. Mussa, the organization’s third chimp rescue this year, was confiscated from a man who was also illegally keeping protected reptiles. It is unclear whether he intended to sell the chimp, a species that can go for thousands of dollars in China and the Middle East, or was keeping him as a pet, Velez said in an email.

“What is happening here is that the ‘small poachers’ kill the adults for bush meat, and if they find a baby they try to sell it,” Velez wrote. “The poachers here can [earn] between $20 and $50 per baby chimp.”

Mussa, who is about three years old, had some intestinal parasites but otherwise was in good health. “He is laughing and playing, which is a very good sign for orphaned chimps,”she said. “And he LOVES tomatoes!!”

Caere did not respond to requests for an interview. But he may well have been too busy saving more lives. The park’s blog post said he flies out early most mornings and doesn’t return until the end of the day. “And as soon as he’s got his feet back on the ground, people gather around him to hear news about the park,” the post said.

The pilot now has plenty of new fans eager to know more about his work — and, well, about him.

Caere’s social media accounts don’t go into his feelings about doing dishes. But they do make clear that his passion for wildlife and wild spaces is real. On Jan. 6, he posted a video in which he wished his followers a happy new year — and made a request.

“One of the little things I wish for this year is that we all do only that little extra effort for our beautiful, endangered planet, its nature and its animals,” he said. “If our kids still want to see wild animals here in 20 years, well, then, we need to act now. Don’t give up on our beautiful planet.”

 

 
 
 

pixel?mid=00bb70a80ee8f020d9011cbcef307fe64dsomething went wrong with this  post and there's no tools to edit the HTML. Best to view at above Wapo link

Beautiful post.

Thank you. :wub:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

But still, human activity has destroyed 40% of all earth's animal biomass over the past half-century.

We are, as Gov. Jerry Brown remarked some 25 years ago, far down the road to a Blade Runner future.

Sooner than later, as it is turning out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

 

When people say "it's a blessing just to wake up each day",    for many, THAT'S BULLSHIT, because they wake up to inconceivable hardship and condition...  Unless you walk in their shoes, dont decide for THEM what a blessing is. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Larstrup
1 hour ago, AdamSmith said:

But still, human activity has destroyed 40% of all earth's animal biomass over the past half-century.

We are, as Gov. Jerry Brown remarked some 25 years ago, far down the road to a Blade Runner future.

Sooner than later, as it is turning out.

And just yesterday, trump reversed himself quietly and secretly from last year and has now authorized trophy hunters to return their animal parts to the US. :(

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/animalia/wp/2018/03/06/trump-called-elephant-hunts-a-horror-show-his-administration-just-lifted-a-trophy-hunting-ban/

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members
25 minutes ago, Larstrup said:

And just yesterday, trump reversed himself quietly and secretly from last year and has now authorized trophy hunters to return their animal parts to the US. :(

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/animalia/wp/2018/03/06/trump-called-elephant-hunts-a-horror-show-his-administration-just-lifted-a-trophy-hunting-ban/

It's all for the asshole brothers...A couple of real douchebags.

I'd be willing to bet that their base camp was stock full of lattes, hot towels, massages, bourbon, cigars, and tents with AC....:rolleyes:

image.thumb.png.b7eeb61975ae191efad1101d155de961.png

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.



×
×
  • Create New...