Wild Monkey

Closed Thread
Thread Tools
  #1  
Old 11-14-2019, 06:35 PM
alemorkam alemorkam is offline
Sage
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: the villages since 04. Lived in Alaska, Texas, California, Massachusetts, Maine, Maryland, New York
Posts: 2,677
Thanks: 0
Thanked 7,003 Times in 1,202 Posts
Default Wild Monkey

Got to see the wild monkeys (Rhesus Macaque monkeys) at Silver Springs Park today.
Attached Thumbnails
The Villages Florida: Click image for larger version

Name:	1 - monkey (1) signed.jpg
Views:	150
Size:	103.8 KB
ID:	81704   The Villages Florida: Click image for larger version

Name:	1 - monkey 7 signed.jpg
Views:	125
Size:	90.7 KB
ID:	81705  
  #2  
Old 11-14-2019, 08:03 PM
Taltarzac725's Avatar
Taltarzac725 Taltarzac725 is offline
Sage
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 49,362
Thanks: 9,418
Thanked 3,316 Times in 2,053 Posts
Thumbs up

Love your photos.
  #3  
Old 11-14-2019, 10:32 PM
John_W John_W is offline
Sage
Join Date: Jan 2011
Posts: 6,390
Thanks: 2,172
Thanked 2,954 Times in 1,160 Posts
Default

You can thank Hollywood for those monkeys, California that is and Johnny Weissmuller.

New York Times:

SILVER SPRINGS, Florida, In the early nineteen thirties, a Hollywood movie company making Tarzan movies along the Silver River imported rhesus monkeys from South east Asia to give the central Florida jungle an “African” look.

In 1934—after having made several of the early Tarzan epics — the movie company packed up and left. But three of the monkeys could not be caught. They swung around the trees in the deep jungle along the Silver and Oklawaha Rivers, eluding men with nets.

Descendants of the monkeys have adapted themselves to live in central Florida and two packs of them are now seen roaming a 50‐mile long stretch of river forest from near Palatka to below Ocala.

Any Changes Sought

Dr. William C. Maples, a University of Florida anthropologist who is an expert on baboons, said that a study of the rhesus monkey packs was yielding information about how wild animals adapt themselves to new climates and new geography.

Graduate students are trying to find out what the monkeys eat and if there has been any change in family structure. No one knows exactly how many monkeys are in the two packs.

One pack ranges along the Ocala National Forest, which follows the Oklawaha, a wild river that would have been de troyed if the Cross‐Florida Barge Canal had been allowed to be completed. Work was stopped on the canal just be fore it reached the area where the monkeys live.

The second pack of monkeys stays more or less in the vi cinity of Silver Springs, a giant welling spring near Ocala that has long been one of Florida's major tourist attractions.

Ross Allen, a naturalist, who developed Silver Springs and has since retired, said that the Silver River monkeys do not stray far because the captains of the “jungle cruise” boats feed them.

Mr. Allen doubled in some of the swimming and diving scenes for Johnny Weissmuller, the actor who played Tarzan in the films made along the Silver River. “Johnny was too valu able to take a chance on being hurt,” Mr. Allen said.

Dr. Maples, the expert on baboons, said that the pack along the Oklawaha, which he estimates to number “certainly less than 100 and perhaps less than 50,” eats grass shoots, buds, berries, ash tree leaves, insects and bird eggs.

Some weeks ago, in an at tempt to find out the exact range of the monkeys, Dr. Maples asked the University of Florida Information Service to issue a news release asking for reports from people who sighted the Oklawaha pack. Most of his reports had been coming from fishing camp operators.

An unexpected furor fol lowed the issuance of the news release. Many people in the area became alarmed after the operator of a zoo was quoted as having said that rhesus monkeys are so powerful that a grown one could twist off a man's arm. There were some demands that the monkeys be caught or fenced in.

Dr. Maples said that, al though the rhesus monkey is very strong—they grow to be about 3 feet tall and weigh 30 pounds—they flee from human contact, and that there is absolutely no danger to humans from the Florida packs.
  #4  
Old 11-14-2019, 11:53 PM
Nucky's Avatar
Nucky Nucky is offline
Sage
Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 11,094
Thanks: 4,380
Thanked 3,625 Times in 1,884 Posts
Default

TARZAN , CHAMANDO A CHITA ... - YouTube Rainy Sundays as a little kid watching Tarzan with my Dad. Beautiful Memory. Ungawa Cheetah!

My wife calls me for dinner the same way! Tarzan Likes Janes Outfit! LOL
  #5  
Old 11-15-2019, 06:27 AM
HimandMe HimandMe is offline
Veteran member
Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: Near Spanish Springs in TV
Posts: 548
Thanks: 66
Thanked 50 Times in 22 Posts
Default

Nice to see...thanks.
  #6  
Old 11-15-2019, 11:26 AM
Brenda.ball's Avatar
Brenda.ball Brenda.ball is offline
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: Murfreesboro, TN and The Village of Fenney
Posts: 124
Thanks: 18
Thanked 2 Times in 2 Posts
Default

I remember coming to Florida as a child and seeing the monkeys in the wild along the waterways. Cool memories!
__________________
"...achieving a dream is about more than just what you accomplish. Its about who you become in the process." ~John C. Maxwell
  #7  
Old 11-16-2019, 10:30 AM
alemorkam alemorkam is offline
Sage
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: the villages since 04. Lived in Alaska, Texas, California, Massachusetts, Maine, Maryland, New York
Posts: 2,677
Thanks: 0
Thanked 7,003 Times in 1,202 Posts
Default

thanks
Closed Thread

Tags
wild, monkeys, silver, springs, park


You are viewing a new design of the TOTV site. Click here to revert to the old version.

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:40 AM.