The Blog

  • Explore.org and Toucan Rescue Ranch Team Up to Bring you Sloth TV!

    Snuggle up and relax with sloths in Sloth Preschool, Sloth Elementary, and in rehabilitation at Toucan Rescue Ranch in Costa Rica! Watch as they take naps, snack, snuggle in their blankets, go for an adventurous climb, and even get fed by our caretakers!

  • Kidz Korner: Tristan, the future sloth conservationist, runs a fundraiser of his own!

    After a few months of making and creating, Tristan and Noelle were finally ready to hold their bake and craft sale fundraiser. They set up a table on our driveway and laid out the goodies we’d all made to sell. There was homemade fudge, condensed milk flapjacks, apple, and strawberry whole-wheat muffins, and an array of crochet ranging from bows to put on presents, flower broaches for coats/handbags/hats to daisy napkin rings. 

  • Be Thankful to your friend the Sloth for International Sloth Day!

    Sloths are some of the most interesting animals to have ever graced the earth, and yet they remain quite the unknowable little critters. The group that contains sloths, Xenarthrans, began evolving 65 million years ago, during the age of the dinosaurs. Ever since then these curious fuzzy creatures have diversified and become some of the most interesting and odd-looking groups of animals to ever exist.

  • 3 Ways to Support Sloth Conservation

    Did you know that October is Sloth Month? If not, now you know! Being one of the most amazing animals that live in Costa Rica, we know more than one of you is not only in love with these adorable creatures but invested in helping them thrive as a species. 

  • The 6th Annual Sloth Ironman Games: The biggest one yet!

    We know that by now, you know and love the games. Much more than a good laugh, the Sloth Ironman Games are an ode to the resilience of sloths; a love letter to their mysterious nature and adorableness; a fundraiser to support their development and rewilding. 

  • How Wildlife Bridges are Saving Animals from Electrocution in Costa Rica

    The urban development in Costa Rica and the emergence of power lines running throughout the country’s rich wildlife habitat have endangered the lives of many native animals including monkeys and sloths via electrocution. Conservation group Toucan Rescue Ranch have found ways in working with local companies and communities to create wildlife bridges that allow animals to cross tree canopies and roads safely.