• Facebook
  • Twitter
x

RealTime Images

  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Video
  • Blog
  • Archive
Show Navigation
Cart Lightbox Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
Next
{ 509 images found }
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_038.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_028.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_027.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_032.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_029.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_030.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_035.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_039.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_043.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_040.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_026.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_033.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_044.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_041.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_031.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_034.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_037.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_036.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_042.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_010.jpg
  • November 10, 2018 - Pushkar, Rajasthan, India - Muslim women feeding monkeys in Pushkar, Rajasthan, India. (Credit Image: © Shaukat Ahmed/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20181110_zaa_p133_160.jpg
  • July 30, 2017 - Pushkar, India - A man feeding monkeys in Pushkar. (Credit Image: © Sourabh Vyas/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20170730_zaa_p133_168.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_013.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_016.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_014.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_015.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_003.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_005.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_011.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_007.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_004.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_006.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_009.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_010.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_002.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_008.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_001.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_012.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This grotesque creature has been dubbed a ‘porkey’ by islanders in Barbados after it was born resembling a cross between a pig and a monkey. Pig farmer Daphne Boyce said she was left shocked at the sight which confronted her when she went to check on her sow, which had just given birth to 12 piglets. “One of the piglets was acting strange and not mixing with the others,” said 75-year-old Daphne. “I prodded it with a stick to try to turn it over because it was keeping on one side. When it turned over, I said ‘No! This got to be a monkey face.’ "I called my brother and I said, ‘Roger, Roger, this pig looks like a monkey.’" Mrs Boyce is convinced one of the wild Green Monkeys that roams the area must have had its way with her pregnant sow. “I don’t see any other explanation,” she said. Mrs Boyce said the creatures eyes were close to the forehead 'like a monkey’s,' while it had 'one pig ear and one monkey’s ear.' “It didn’t have a snout but a mouth just like a monkey,” she said. Mrs Boyce’s brother, Roger Feliciano, who took photos of the strange-looking creature with his cellphone, said he tried to feed it milk with a baby bottle, but was not successful. The animal died after four days. Mrs Boyce said she could not stop the monkeys from “monkeying around” with her pigs since they were rampant in her neighbourhood. “They all up on the roof,” she added. "I got a mango tree there and they eat all the mangoes. When people ask me why I don’t have any mangoes in the tree, I tell them the tree belong to the monkeys.” Mrs Boyce said this was not the first time monkeys had dabbled with other animals on the Caribbean island. She recalled one of her friends having a 'monkey sheep' a few years ago. The green monkeys found in Barbados originally came from Senegal and the Gambia in West Africa approximately 350 years ago. 27 May 2018 Pictured: Daphne Boyce. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA229810_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This grotesque creature has been dubbed a ‘porkey’ by islanders in Barbados after it was born resembling a cross between a pig and a monkey. Pig farmer Daphne Boyce said she was left shocked at the sight which confronted her when she went to check on her sow, which had just given birth to 12 piglets. “One of the piglets was acting strange and not mixing with the others,” said 75-year-old Daphne. “I prodded it with a stick to try to turn it over because it was keeping on one side. When it turned over, I said ‘No! This got to be a monkey face.’ "I called my brother and I said, ‘Roger, Roger, this pig looks like a monkey.’" Mrs Boyce is convinced one of the wild Green Monkeys that roams the area must have had its way with her pregnant sow. “I don’t see any other explanation,” she said. Mrs Boyce said the creatures eyes were close to the forehead 'like a monkey’s,' while it had 'one pig ear and one monkey’s ear.' “It didn’t have a snout but a mouth just like a monkey,” she said. Mrs Boyce’s brother, Roger Feliciano, who took photos of the strange-looking creature with his cellphone, said he tried to feed it milk with a baby bottle, but was not successful. The animal died after four days. Mrs Boyce said she could not stop the monkeys from “monkeying around” with her pigs since they were rampant in her neighbourhood. “They all up on the roof,” she added. "I got a mango tree there and they eat all the mangoes. When people ask me why I don’t have any mangoes in the tree, I tell them the tree belong to the monkeys.” Mrs Boyce said this was not the first time monkeys had dabbled with other animals on the Caribbean island. She recalled one of her friends having a 'monkey sheep' a few years ago. The green monkeys found in Barbados originally came from Senegal and the Gambia in West Africa approximately 350 years ago. 27 May 2018 Pictured: Porkey. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA229810_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This grotesque creature has been dubbed a ‘porkey’ by islanders in Barbados after it was born resembling a cross between a pig and a monkey. Pig farmer Daphne Boyce said she was left shocked at the sight which confronted her when she went to check on her sow, which had just given birth to 12 piglets. “One of the piglets was acting strange and not mixing with the others,” said 75-year-old Daphne. “I prodded it with a stick to try to turn it over because it was keeping on one side. When it turned over, I said ‘No! This got to be a monkey face.’ "I called my brother and I said, ‘Roger, Roger, this pig looks like a monkey.’" Mrs Boyce is convinced one of the wild Green Monkeys that roams the area must have had its way with her pregnant sow. “I don’t see any other explanation,” she said. Mrs Boyce said the creatures eyes were close to the forehead 'like a monkey’s,' while it had 'one pig ear and one monkey’s ear.' “It didn’t have a snout but a mouth just like a monkey,” she said. Mrs Boyce’s brother, Roger Feliciano, who took photos of the strange-looking creature with his cellphone, said he tried to feed it milk with a baby bottle, but was not successful. The animal died after four days. Mrs Boyce said she could not stop the monkeys from “monkeying around” with her pigs since they were rampant in her neighbourhood. “They all up on the roof,” she added. "I got a mango tree there and they eat all the mangoes. When people ask me why I don’t have any mangoes in the tree, I tell them the tree belong to the monkeys.” Mrs Boyce said this was not the first time monkeys had dabbled with other animals on the Caribbean island. She recalled one of her friends having a 'monkey sheep' a few years ago. The green monkeys found in Barbados originally came from Senegal and the Gambia in West Africa approximately 350 years ago. 27 May 2018 Pictured: Porkey. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA229810_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This grotesque creature has been dubbed a ‘porkey’ by islanders in Barbados after it was born resembling a cross between a pig and a monkey. Pig farmer Daphne Boyce said she was left shocked at the sight which confronted her when she went to check on her sow, which had just given birth to 12 piglets. “One of the piglets was acting strange and not mixing with the others,” said 75-year-old Daphne. “I prodded it with a stick to try to turn it over because it was keeping on one side. When it turned over, I said ‘No! This got to be a monkey face.’ "I called my brother and I said, ‘Roger, Roger, this pig looks like a monkey.’" Mrs Boyce is convinced one of the wild Green Monkeys that roams the area must have had its way with her pregnant sow. “I don’t see any other explanation,” she said. Mrs Boyce said the creatures eyes were close to the forehead 'like a monkey’s,' while it had 'one pig ear and one monkey’s ear.' “It didn’t have a snout but a mouth just like a monkey,” she said. Mrs Boyce’s brother, Roger Feliciano, who took photos of the strange-looking creature with his cellphone, said he tried to feed it milk with a baby bottle, but was not successful. The animal died after four days. Mrs Boyce said she could not stop the monkeys from “monkeying around” with her pigs since they were rampant in her neighbourhood. “They all up on the roof,” she added. "I got a mango tree there and they eat all the mangoes. When people ask me why I don’t have any mangoes in the tree, I tell them the tree belong to the monkeys.” Mrs Boyce said this was not the first time monkeys had dabbled with other animals on the Caribbean island. She recalled one of her friends having a 'monkey sheep' a few years ago. The green monkeys found in Barbados originally came from Senegal and the Gambia in West Africa approximately 350 years ago. 27 May 2018 Pictured: Daphne Boyce. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA229810_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This grotesque creature has been dubbed a ‘porkey’ by islanders in Barbados after it was born resembling a cross between a pig and a monkey. Pig farmer Daphne Boyce said she was left shocked at the sight which confronted her when she went to check on her sow, which had just given birth to 12 piglets. “One of the piglets was acting strange and not mixing with the others,” said 75-year-old Daphne. “I prodded it with a stick to try to turn it over because it was keeping on one side. When it turned over, I said ‘No! This got to be a monkey face.’ "I called my brother and I said, ‘Roger, Roger, this pig looks like a monkey.’" Mrs Boyce is convinced one of the wild Green Monkeys that roams the area must have had its way with her pregnant sow. “I don’t see any other explanation,” she said. Mrs Boyce said the creatures eyes were close to the forehead 'like a monkey’s,' while it had 'one pig ear and one monkey’s ear.' “It didn’t have a snout but a mouth just like a monkey,” she said. Mrs Boyce’s brother, Roger Feliciano, who took photos of the strange-looking creature with his cellphone, said he tried to feed it milk with a baby bottle, but was not successful. The animal died after four days. Mrs Boyce said she could not stop the monkeys from “monkeying around” with her pigs since they were rampant in her neighbourhood. “They all up on the roof,” she added. "I got a mango tree there and they eat all the mangoes. When people ask me why I don’t have any mangoes in the tree, I tell them the tree belong to the monkeys.” Mrs Boyce said this was not the first time monkeys had dabbled with other animals on the Caribbean island. She recalled one of her friends having a 'monkey sheep' a few years ago. The green monkeys found in Barbados originally came from Senegal and the Gambia in West Africa approximately 350 years ago. 27 May 2018 Pictured: Porkey. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA229810_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This grotesque creature has been dubbed a ‘porkey’ by islanders in Barbados after it was born resembling a cross between a pig and a monkey. Pig farmer Daphne Boyce said she was left shocked at the sight which confronted her when she went to check on her sow, which had just given birth to 12 piglets. “One of the piglets was acting strange and not mixing with the others,” said 75-year-old Daphne. “I prodded it with a stick to try to turn it over because it was keeping on one side. When it turned over, I said ‘No! This got to be a monkey face.’ "I called my brother and I said, ‘Roger, Roger, this pig looks like a monkey.’" Mrs Boyce is convinced one of the wild Green Monkeys that roams the area must have had its way with her pregnant sow. “I don’t see any other explanation,” she said. Mrs Boyce said the creatures eyes were close to the forehead 'like a monkey’s,' while it had 'one pig ear and one monkey’s ear.' “It didn’t have a snout but a mouth just like a monkey,” she said. Mrs Boyce’s brother, Roger Feliciano, who took photos of the strange-looking creature with his cellphone, said he tried to feed it milk with a baby bottle, but was not successful. The animal died after four days. Mrs Boyce said she could not stop the monkeys from “monkeying around” with her pigs since they were rampant in her neighbourhood. “They all up on the roof,” she added. "I got a mango tree there and they eat all the mangoes. When people ask me why I don’t have any mangoes in the tree, I tell them the tree belong to the monkeys.” Mrs Boyce said this was not the first time monkeys had dabbled with other animals on the Caribbean island. She recalled one of her friends having a 'monkey sheep' a few years ago. The green monkeys found in Barbados originally came from Senegal and the Gambia in West Africa approximately 350 years ago. 27 May 2018 Pictured: Porkey. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA229810_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This grotesque creature has been dubbed a ‘porkey’ by islanders in Barbados after it was born resembling a cross between a pig and a monkey. Pig farmer Daphne Boyce said she was left shocked at the sight which confronted her when she went to check on her sow, which had just given birth to 12 piglets. “One of the piglets was acting strange and not mixing with the others,” said 75-year-old Daphne. “I prodded it with a stick to try to turn it over because it was keeping on one side. When it turned over, I said ‘No! This got to be a monkey face.’ "I called my brother and I said, ‘Roger, Roger, this pig looks like a monkey.’" Mrs Boyce is convinced one of the wild Green Monkeys that roams the area must have had its way with her pregnant sow. “I don’t see any other explanation,” she said. Mrs Boyce said the creatures eyes were close to the forehead 'like a monkey’s,' while it had 'one pig ear and one monkey’s ear.' “It didn’t have a snout but a mouth just like a monkey,” she said. Mrs Boyce’s brother, Roger Feliciano, who took photos of the strange-looking creature with his cellphone, said he tried to feed it milk with a baby bottle, but was not successful. The animal died after four days. Mrs Boyce said she could not stop the monkeys from “monkeying around” with her pigs since they were rampant in her neighbourhood. “They all up on the roof,” she added. "I got a mango tree there and they eat all the mangoes. When people ask me why I don’t have any mangoes in the tree, I tell them the tree belong to the monkeys.” Mrs Boyce said this was not the first time monkeys had dabbled with other animals on the Caribbean island. She recalled one of her friends having a 'monkey sheep' a few years ago. The green monkeys found in Barbados originally came from Senegal and the Gambia in West Africa approximately 350 years ago. 27 May 2018 Pictured: Porkey. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA229810_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_029.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_045.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_048.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_054.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_053.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_026.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_032.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_038.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_042.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_040.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_051.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_047.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_060.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_031.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Internet sensation monkeys Diddy Kong and Yeti Kong pose with their owner, model Gabriella Davis, at their home in Miami. The tiny primates have become pint-size celebrities, with a million Instagram followers and fans including Snoop Dogg, Cara Delevingne, and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong even starred in a Wiz Khalifa music video. Gabriella, 26, sent the internet into a frenzy in 2015 when she posted a video of her pet marmoset Diddy Kong having a bath. Since then the monkey has become a megastar with over one million followers, including celebrities like Cara Delevingne, Snoop Dogg and Neil Patrick Harris. Diddy Kong's popularity has soared to such heights that the three-year-old monkey can now demand "huge sums" for work and even has an agent. He has appeared in a Wiz Khalifa rap music video, headlined a beer ad-campaign and has even walked the runway. But hilariously, the five-inch monkey has also become a "Miami diva" who loves marshmallows, looking at himself in the mirror and hitting on "blonde women". Gabriella claims Diddy Kong has changed her life and, despite his rollicking ways, says she will always love him. The stunning blue-eyed brunette, who uses the stage name Gabriella Katia, said: "I am pretty much a full-time monkey mum. I still work as a model but I spend most of my time looking after Diddy Kong and his sister Yeti Kong. Diddy Kong has so much personality. He is very mischievous but so damn cute. He has become a megastar, and I think he knows it, you could say he is a Miami diva. The fame has gone to his head and he even likes to look at himself in the mirror. It is so strange, if you put him near a mirror, he can sit there staring at himself for ages. His sister does not do it so It must be out his love for himself, like any true superstar." Gabriella named Diddy Kong after her favourite computer game while his sister, who is just two-and-half inches tall, got her moniker because she resembled a Yeti. Marmosets are new world monke
    MEGA315891_027.jpg
Next