Before you ask, no, Oshine the orang-utan is not happy about her new diet.
After all, when you’re used to burgers, jelly and sweets, a plate piled high with salad is bound to be a bit of a disappointment.
Weighing in at a hefty 15 and a half stone, tubby Oshine gives a whole new meaning to the phrase Great Ape.
But now, Britain's fattest primate is changing her ways.
After being rescued from the care of a couple of well-meaning but misguided, owners, Oshine is being put on a strict diet of fruit, yoghurt, lean meat and vegetables.
Keepers at Monkey World in Dorset hope the 13-year-old will be back to normal size within a few months and ready to try for her first baby.
Oshine arrived at the rescue centre from South Africa where she was kept as a pet since she was a baby.
Her sedentary and unnatural lifestyle meant her weight rocketed. A wild, healthy orangutan would normally weigh between five and 12. stone.
Dr Alison Cronin, director of Monkey World, said: 'As she grew older, her owners found they could only keep her calm by constantly feeding her. They meant well, but it was misguided care.'
The owners contacted Monkey World two years ago when they realised they could not offer Oshine a healthy lifestyle as a pet.
She flew the ten and a half hours to Heathrow on August 31 in a specially designed cage and was immediately placed on a diet.
'We have been working to give Oshine a more natural life with others of her own kind for more than a year,' said Dr Cronin.
'The long-haul journey for such a delicate endangered species such as an orangutan is fraught with difficulties and danger.
'With Oshine’s weight problem we were especially concerned about her travel arrangements and making sure that the journey was stress-free and safe.'
Although a fully-grown adult, Oshine is now living in the orangutan creche at Monkey World. She will live alongside four captive born babies born in European zoos who have been abandoned by their mothers.
The Monkey World team say living alongside babies will teach Oshine 'how to be an orangutan'.
Once she loses weight, gets fitter, and understands more about ape behaviour, she will 'graduate' into one of two breeding groups where it is hoped that she can start her own family.
‘Now that she is at the park, we have her on a healthy diet of vegetables and fruits and she is getting a lot more exercise climbing through the specially designed, two storey orangutan creche,' said Dr Cronin.
'It will take a few months for Oshine to reach a more appropriate weight and then she will be ready to meet a new man and consider a family of her own.'
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