Staff members at The Monkey Sanctuary, which is our flagship project based in Cornwall, have welcomed three new arrivals in the run up to Easter.
The female capuchins by the name of Gucci, Kwango and Kirsty were previously in the care of a small private Sanctuary in Derbyshire but had to be relocated due to the owner’s serious ill health.
Keen to ensure the capuchins would find a safe home for life, The Monkey Sanctuary was the first choice for the previous owner. But the urgency of the transfer meant that the staff at the sanctuary had to act quickly,
The Monkey Sanctuary based in Looe, Cornwall will open to the public this Mothering Sunday, offering all visitors a special entry price of £1 to mark the start of the new season.
The long-established tourist attraction, which is our flagship project, opens from April to October; closing in the winter to make necessary adaptations and to provide a period of respite for the monkeys.
In preparation for the coming season the team have been busy improving the facilities for its long-term residents as well as for its seasonal guests.
Wild Futures is very passionate about education and our specialised training has been recognised by Oxford Brookes University who have sent their students, studying for an MSc in Primate Conservation, to our flagship project The Monkey Sanctuary for the last 4 years to learn from the Sanctuary’s Primate Welfare Team.
Susan Cheyne, Associate Lecturer for the course said the following on her return,
Retail Manager Gemma Lawrence invites you to celebrate the launch of the new Wild Futures Store!
At Wild Futures we believe that our customers deserve the best; beautiful, ethically sourced products at affordable prices, with 100% of the profits going to support the work of Wild Futures and its flagship project, The Monkey Sanctuary.
Source: Jamie Doward, The Observer, 10th October, 2010
The UK’s largest coffee chain is under pressure to pull its first television advertising campaign amid criticism that its use of monkeys encourages people to buy them as pets.
The row threatens to become a major headache for Costa Coffee, owned by leisure giant Whitbread, as it seeks to up the ante in a marketing battle with its arch-rival Starbucks.
COSTA Coffee launches its first television advert this evening amid uproar from animal welfare organisations who are appalled by its use of wild animals.
In recent years there has been a flurry of articles in our national press questioning the suitability of wild animals taken from their natural environment to be kept in private hands, those used as “service animals” or in entertainment[i] and over 31,000 members of the British public agree that the pet trade in primates should be outlawed[ii].
In a week when the Prime Minister stated that there was no need for a regulatory regime to protect primates kept in captivity, two monkeys, who would naturally inhabit the lush rainforests of South America have been reduced to roadkill on the streets of the UK. Another, as yet unidentified, has escaped and is on the loose in Lincolnshire. The sad events have added weight to the argument of the primate welfare and conservation charity, Wild Futures, who have asserted that the trade is poorly regulated and animals are not sufficiently protected by UK laws.
Following his visit to Cornwall on the 9th July, and being asked by Wild Futures campaign staff what his government intended to do on the issue of primates as pets in the UK, the charity’s staff were deflated today at the PM’s formal, and somewhat overdue, response.
Registered Charity #1102532 | Copyright © 2025 Wild Futures