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Gibbons And Me Part 2 In 1980 I responded to a request for volunteers to help in a refugee camp for Laotian Refugees in Ubon Ratchathani, Thailand. I was housed with a couple others in a run down house with no glass in the windows. In front there were a few tall trees along a driveway between our place and a family that did both missionary and charity work. In 2 of the trees in the closest was a Macaque and in another tree there was the White-Handed Gibbon. Now I would never be comfortable keeping these primates as pets/guard primates but back then I was not as aware and they were not my primates. One event started me on the road to being an advocate for gibbons. I don’t remember how t happened but or day the gibbon got loose. So I took chase. I followed the gibbon over rooftops and a tree but there was no way I could keep up. Thankfully the gibbon ended up in nearby Wat (Buddhist Temple) where a monk caught the gibbon. I began my journey to not only learn more but to stop the exotic pet trade and advocate for organisations that work with and for gibbons. Those 2 events: seeing gibbons in the wild in Borneo and living next 2 one in Thailand helped make me the Naturalist I am and urge you to do your part to help endangered wildlife. #WhiteHandedGibbon #LesserApe #UbonRatchathani #Thailand #Adventures #RunawayGibbon #SaveTheGibbons #Apes #SaveTheRainforest (at Ubon Ratchathani, Thailand) https://www.instagram.com/p/CXm-YjBrfoX/?utm_medium=tumblr
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Runaway Gibbon - 1980 Ubon Ratchathani, Thailand 
I spent half a year in 1980 as a volunteer at a refugee camp for Laotians in Ubon Ratchathani, Thailand. That’s me on the motorcycle. The project was sponsored by a religious charity so we were put up in a rundown house next to where a missionary was living. The place had no glass in the windows so we slept under mosquito nets. The property had 2 primates, a macaque and a gibbon, each tethered with a very long rope to their own tree. The gibbon and the macaque were actually guards and raised an unbelievable racket when any unknown person or animal, like a water buffalo, came onto the grounds. They were wonderful and friendly and I am sad I didn’t see them returned to the wild or a sanctuary but this was 41 years ago and attitudes were different.
One day the rope with the gibbon got tangled so I was trying to fix it when he decided this was his chance. Now I would have preferred him to be free but I would then have been in even more trouble. So I started chasing the gibbon. The odds were not in my favor. Gibbons are excellent climbers and live their lives in trees. So I was outclassed but I did my best; clambering over rooftops, across roads and up and down trees. The chase came to a conclusion when the gibbon ended up on the grounds of the nearby Wat (Buddhist Temple). A friendly monk caught our runaway and, with a big smile and a laugh, he was returned to the tree. I had seen wild gibbons when on Borneo so I already admired them but this increased my admiration. I have become an advocate for these amazing primates and am so glad sanctuaries are now there for monkeys and apes. I also gained a whole new appreciation for gibbons after my chase up and down a neighborhood in Ubon Ratchathani!
#Story #RunawayGibbon #1980 #UbonRatchathani #Thailand #Wat #Gibbon #GuardianPrimates #Ape #GibbonApe #Macaque #VolunteerExperience #UbonRatchathaniThailand 
The 2 photo on the left are mine the gibbon is a stock photo from Pixabay and is a photo of a wild gibbon. https://www.instagram.com/p/CKswaH0laZ5/?igshid=2t7gsprpfweu
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