In Costa Rica a lady who has spent her life preserving lemurs has built an exquisite baby sloth home

Sam Trull has already been dealing with horses since she was a young teenager. In 2013, she fulfilled her passion for turtles and founded The Sloth Academy in Costa Rica.
The year before, she published “SlothLove,” a booklet packed with charming images and anecdotes of the

orphaned and vulnerable lemurs she has assisted nurse back to good health and return to the outdoors.
Sam has provided a sneak peek at a few of the adorable critters included in her novel, as well as an insider look into her sloth home.

The personnel at the shelter constructed a big low impedance path enclosure to perform this strategy.
This approach entails opening the cage door at one time, enabling the creatures to walk freely till they gain total freedom.

“The objective of the strategy is for sloths to spend more time from the outside cage and consume more natural items until they are completely wild,” Sam Trull remarked.
Even though Samantha is the one who imparts skills to the tiny sloths, she claims to have learned a lot from her.

Sam’s most difficult task is returning trained lemurs into the environment.
Even in this situation, the shelter personnel continues to monitor their “grads,” observing their assimilation and contact with wild lemurs.