Is Your Monkey Really Spoiled?
We think of spoiling as overindulging a monkey, as
allowing the monkey to get used to having too much or more than
he or she needs. But are we spoiling our monkeys with too much of
a good thing or too much of a bad thing?
Read on to find out how most owners are not spoiling their
monkeys. They are simply using poor management techniques.
Check the categories below. Do you give too much or set strict
limits?
1. Diet - You should set strict limits in this area. Historically,
the pet monkey owner has been lenient with the diet, offering
foods that appeal to a monkeys taste rather than to a
proven scientific standard of health. Such leniency can lead to
poor health and behavior problems.
2. Dominance and aggression maneuvers - You should be strict in
giving consequences and in not accidentally encouraging and
reinforcing the behaviors. Typically the owner has been unaware
of correct management techniques and has been lenient in allowing
monkeys to bite and show other forms of dominance. Most owners
initially laugh at pinching, hair pulling, kicking, scratching
and biting behaviors in spite of themselves. Later when the
behaviors become more serious and painful, they find themselves
with a dominant and habitual aggressor. Lack of limit setting and
proper management techniques can encourage problem behaviors and
lead to an unhandleable monkey.
3. One-on-one play or grooming time - For pet monkeys, you should
be generous in this area. Pet monkeys often run loose but do not
receive a period of direct attention. Studies show that a period
of 10-20 minutes of concentrated attention at the beginning of a
play period will satisfy most attention-hungry monkeys who often
demand attention with hyper behavior when let out of their cages.
4. Cage space - You should be generous with cage space and all
that goes with it. Cage space is unfortunately an area of almost
complete failure with an estimated 75%+ of all pet monkey owners.
(See more in the section on housing and throughout the book.)
5. Enrichment - This is another area to be generous in. (Providing
toys for stimulation does not spoil the intelligent primate who
is used to being spoiled in the wild by an incredible
abundance of sights, sounds, smells and changing scenes.
6. Social companionship - Be generous when offering social
companionship. Social isolation should be a choice, not a mandate.
When social interaction (snuggling, play and grooming) is
restricted, monkeys often develop psychological problems.
What does it all mean? It means that in the past people have not
been given the excellent quality educational information required
to keep pet monkeys.