
Gudrun and a Howler Monkey.
This little newcomer is a Capuchin.
Street children sold the Capuchin to a Hungarian Tourist who had previously
visited Pilpintuwasi so he brought it to us. I never wanted to take in Capuchin
monkeys — they are very intelligent (actually in relation to their
size, they have a bigger brain then chimpanzees, are just after the human)
and so they are also incrediblby cheaky.
One of our Capuchins, Tony, loves to break into the butterflycage . . .
he found out that he can destroy the net by biting a little hole and then
pulling the strings apart. But he already knows he shouldn't be doing that;
if he's in the cage and Robler or I arrive, he immediately gets out and
looks very busy doing other things.
Here' a great picture of Pedro. He got angry with
me as I wanted to take away the fish he had just caught in his pond.

Roblar with Angelica the Sloth.
Zeke.
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January
1, 2006
(Editor's Note: Because of the work they are doing, I asked Gudrun
and Roblar to send information on their backgrounds and how they came
to establish both a Butterfly Farm and Animal Orphanage in a South
American jungle. Following is Gudrun's response.)
I was born in 1961 in Steyr, Austria.I have always loved nature, both
my grandparents were farmers, but my parents became teachers (later
on my father studied Psychology and ended up teaching at a university).
Up to my 5th year we lived in a small village in the countryside.
There, my father studied, my mother worked as a teacher, my elder
brother and sister attended school, so my twin sister and I were left
with a neighbor or grandma. We wereoutside most of the time. My mother
still remembers that once she came home from school—I was so
young, I couldn't walk very well yet, but when she arrived I came
along carrying a snake longer than me and telling her "Look mummy
what a big worm I've found!"
I was never afraid of animals and always wanted to have a dog or a
horse, which we couldn't have because my parents worked and all of
were at school. Instead I walked the neighbors' dogs and decided to
study to be a veterinarian . . . but one neighbor, who was a vet,
told me I wouldn't be strong enough to be able to pull out a newborn
calf or horse being a woman, etc., and finally (probabaly also because
I fell in love with a social worker) I decided to study social work.
After having completed studies and some practice work, I left Austria
wanting to do something "good" in another country. I had
always wanted to get to know the Amazon, and as there was a cheap
one year ticket from Aeroflot (Russian airline) to Peru, I decided
to go. I found out about the many needs of people in Peru—and
the impossibility if helping if you're not a millionaire.
I worked at a little village as a school teacher and after one year
decided to pay $20 to Aeroflot to stay another year. I finally got
a four-year contract to do some development project in that village.
I had to organize the people: We made a fish pond, a pig farm and
worked on sanitarian projects—that's when I fell in love with
Robler, who was one of the few guys in the village with whom you could
talk about more things than just football, fiestas and family.He comes
from a family of 14, has 6 brothers and 5 sisters, both grandfathers
came 80 years ago along the rivers from the Bolivian jungle.
After my contract was finished I didn't want to go back to Austria,
and Robler and I moved to another village further from Iquitos . .
. and away from his family, which was getting a little bit too much
for me. (You know, I was used to spending time alone, and actually
LIKE to be alone some time . . . but Robler's mum used to send me
one of his brothers or sisters whenever I was alone, so I "wouldn't
be lonely.")
I worked as the director of the kindergarden , which made me realize
that at this age you still can teach children changes in behaviour.
Even then, people started to bring me injured or baby animals that
they got through shooting and eating the mothers. I got monkey babies,
baby sloths, capibaras, etc. We always let the animals roam free,
but because we fed them while they were small, they didn't move away
until being grown up.The adopted animals would leave seeking mates—which
was great, except most of the monkeys and also the capibara came back
after a few months, bringing their mates and/or babies with them.
It seemed they wanted to show them to us.
My neighbors asked afterwords, "Why do I raise animals if I don't
eat them?"
When I visited Austria in 1995, the Vienna Zoo's new attraction was
a "Butterfly house." I recognized many of the butterflies
from the Amazon. I was told that the people who exhibit the living
butterflies buy them mostly from Costa Rica, and I though that would
be a great job—working with animals, but animals you don't get
attached to (at least not to each individual) and being able to make
a living from them. That's when we started looking for host plants
and started to breed.
During the permit process, we had to contact the biologists in charge.
They noticed that I care for wildlife, and so they started dropping
confiscated animals at our place. After receiving Pedro the Jaguar
and having no place to send him, we decided to do all the paperwork
to get official status as Custody Centre.
In between caring for the butterflies and the animals, I
teach English and German at the faculty for Education and Human Sciences
at the public University of the Peruvian Amazon in Iquitos.
Robler was born in 1965 in San Pedro, Rio Nanay the little village
where I started working at the primary school. First I got to know
him as the big brother of one of my pupils, and later on as the man
who helped me to make the project in the village a reality.
He isn't a studied man, only had the chance to finish secondary school,
but he is a hard worker, and a sensible and caring man with lots of
initiative. His love for animals grew with the years—in the
beginning he was either afraid of the caterpillars (they might sting
or irritate the skin) or just rejected them as ugly. Now he's the
one who does most work with the caterpillars, while I do more with
the animals.
He is a natural botanic—it's incredible. He sees a plant once
and then finds it again in the jungle. For me that's hard work. I
have to look from each side, feel the leaf and still cannot be sure
it's the same specie when I find it in the jungle. We have learned
a lot from each other.
We have been together for about 17 years. As most couples we have
problems too, but it is definite that we both are interested in Pilpintuwasi
and our work.
We would love to be able to go on holiday together, but we can't leave
the butterflies or the animals. So maybe if we get more volunteers,
Robler and I can leave for a week. We both love what we do, but sometimes
it's a bit too much . . . just like any job.
I remember during a visit to Austria two years after I first left,
my Mother showed me a notebook of my second year in primary school
where I had had to write about "What I want to be when I'm grown
up," I had written that I wanted to be an investigator in the
jungle and have a parrot and a monkey. I hadn't remembered that wish,
but maybe my subconsciousness did.
Love from all of us,
Gudrun
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