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Welcome to our Stories and Gallery Page

Stories and Photos of our Daily Life

We have a selection of stories that have been written about Highland Farm as well as some great photos of all our 'kids'. Enjoy these great shots and tales.

Images of Highland Farm

See Highland For Yourself

Main Gallery Page > The People  (Image 1 of 35)  
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Bill,-Pharanee-&-Gibbon2.jpg
Jerry, Pharanee and Bill in 2001.
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Bill,-Pharanee-&-Gibbon2.jpg bill-adam.jpg Bill_field.jpg caring.jpg caringman.jpg carryBill.jpg charlie_phar.jpg cicclevolunteer.jpg circlevolunteeer10.jpg
coates-dar-bill.jpg cook-dar-mom-pharanee.jpg family.jpg GibbonandBill.jpg gib_cagebill.jpg greg&simon.jpg grouphelpers.jpg hf-scott-pharanee2-300405.jpg highland-oiy&simon.jpg highland-scott&george-02-01.jpg highland-scott&george-020303.jpg
hugging.jpg Ivolunteer.jpg Julia&Roger.jpg Lori&Roger.jpg newfriend.jpg noon-02-01-20.jpg painting.jpg Pharanee-&-Simon.jpg scott-dar-george-02-01.jpg scott-roger.jpg
small-tak-dan-sue-toddwithHighlandtruck-02-03-25.jpg tak-billbeingbill-02-03-25.jpg tour.jpg volunteer.jpg volunteermeals.jpg
Images copyright © 2005, Highland Farm. (Admin)

Gibbon Sounds

Hear What our Gibbons Sound Like

Group of Gibbons - (88K WAV)

Stories of Highland Farm

People, Gibbons, Love and Caring

Pharanee Grateful for Helping Hand - Pharanee Choitros-Deters - (7K PDF)
A History of Highland - Scott Coates - (24K PDF)
Monkey World Sends a Keeper to Help - Wendy Durham - (10K PDF)
An Amazing Experience - Mick Shippen - (12K PDF)
The Highland Farm Murders, A Tragedy - Scott Coates - (13K PDF)

Download times vary depending on speed of internet connection. Please be patient while files are downloading.

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Click here to download the free Adobe Acrobat Reader.

“Until one has loved an animal, a part of one's soul remains unawakened.” —Anatole France
Gibbon Fun Facts

Gibbons are omnivores (eating plants and meat). They forage for food in the forests during the day, eating fruit (which constitutes about 75% of their diet), leaves, flowers, seeds, tree bark, and tender plant shoots. They also eat insects, spiders, bird eggs, and small birds.

Gibbons drink water, often by dipping a furry hand into the water or rubbing a hand on wet leaves, and then slurping up the water from their fur. Gibbons sometimes do this while dangling above the water from a thin tree branch.