CAHUITA, Limón — There’s an area in the back of Costa Rica’s Sloth Sanctuary that most visitors do not see. More than 100 injured adult sloths are kept in rows of cages here. That might sound bad, but ...
As our trio stepped off of the rickety bus on Highway 36, we were greeted with the humid Caribbean air. We headed south past an elderly Tica selling fish strung from a wooden pole, and passed a yellow ...
2 / 15The sloths brought in as babies stay for good, because they do not know how to live in their native habitat. AFP 3 / 15Vets say sloths eat only leaves, do not drink water and in Costa Rica tend ...