Spending some time @ Amsterdam Artis Zoo, you will definitely find some monkeys enjoying themselves.
These are Japanese Macaque monkeys, which are social creatures and find their origins in Japan.
Also known as the snow monkey, is a terrestrial Old World monkey species that is native to Japan.
They get their name "snow monkey" because they live in areas where snow covers the ground for months each year –
no other nonhuman primate is more northern-living, nor lives in a colder climate.
Individuals have brown-grey fur, red faces, and short tails. Two subspecies are known.
In Japan, the species is known as Nihonzaru (Nihon 日本 "Japan" + saru 猿 "monkey") to distinguish it from other primates,
but the Japanese macaque is very familiar in Japan, so when Japanese people simply say saru,
they usually have in mind the Japanese macaque.
The Japanese macaque is a very intelligent species. Researchers studying this species at Koshima Island in Japan left sweet potatoes out on the beach for them to eat, then witnessed one female, named Imo (Japanese for yam or potato), washing the food off with river water rather than brushing it off as the others were doing, and later even dipping her clean food into salty sea water. After a while, others started to copy her behavior. This trait was then passed on from generation to generation, until eventually all except the oldest members of the troop were washing their food and even seasoning it in the sea.
(source: wikipedia)