The Orangutans of Sumatra

In May 2009, Usha and I visited the Gunung Leuser National Park in north Sumatra to see orangutans in the wild. We hired a guide in the gateway village of Bukit Lawang and hiked several miles into a dense primary growth forest. Heavy rain on the previous night made the hike rather treacherous and we had to grab on to branches and roots to go up and down the hilly terrain. But the forest was beautiful, abundant with tropical flora and fauna (some of it unique to the island), rushing streams and animal sounds, and we did get lucky: we saw about ten orangutans on our daylong hike. One middle-aged female—rescued years ago by the orangutan center in Bukit Lawang and reintroduced into the wild—even came down and held Usha’s hand! Other primates we saw include gibbons and Thomas’s Leaf-monkeys.

The orangutan (“person of the forest”), whose habitat has shrunk to parts of Sumatra and Borneo, has cognitive abilities that rival those of the gorilla and the chimpanzee, the only primates more closely related to humans. Placid, deliberate, and mostly vegetarian, orangutans are known for their ingenuity and persistence, particularly in manipulating mechanical objects, and for their “cognitive abilities such as causal and logical reasoning, self-recognition in mirrors, deception, symbolic communication, foresight, and tool production and use. In the wild, orangutans use tools, but at only one location in Sumatra do they consistently make and use them for foraging, [defoliating] sticks … to extract insects or honey from tree holes and to pry seeds from hard-shelled fruit.” (source) We saw one juvenile male using a stick as a tool.

Here is a slideshow of my best orangutan shots set to music (2 min, 25 sec). Check out some more pictures and a primer on orangutans.

Orangutans


7 responses to “The Orangutans of Sumatra”

  1. Namit, the photographs in your video are stunning! Really. Thank you for sharing them!!!!!!!

  2. Wonderful photos, Namit. I’m reminded of the inward absorption projected by human mothers-to-be when I saw the identical expression in the photos of the pregnant orangutan.

  3. Thanks, Sujatha and Peony.
    I was really awestruck by how similar their facial expressions, eye motion, head movements, etc., are to humans. Delightful creatures.

  4. Okay, so my Quick Time Player was disabled. Duh.
    Lovely photos of the gorgeous animals in their own habitat. Was able to view the landscapes (Numen Inest) too.

  5. Dear Shunya, I’m really impressed. Just looked at all your posted sculptures — you’ve labelled them
    all correctly — never seen anyone do that so accurately before. Thanks for all the great photos.
    Kathie

  6. Photos in videos are mind blowing. Thanks for sharing.

  7. Lovely, Namit. How lucky that you got to do this! Thanks.

Leave a Reply to Peak AdventureCancel reply

Contact us:

Go back

Your message has been sent

Warning
Warning
Warning
Warning.

Discover more from Shunya's Notes

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading