In November 2020, brutal back-to-back hurricanes smashed into Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast, knocking down homes and trees and washing away beaches. The ferocity of the storms, and their frequency, scientists say, are signs of climate change. If this is the new normal then Central America is set to suffer major setbacks: in tourism; in biodiversity and in its ability to sustain human life as we know it. Especially worried are the native Miskito people. They’re subsistence fishermen with nowhere else to go.
Director
Armando Guerra
Gerry Hadden
Executive Producers
Jiang Heping
Zhang Xin
Humberto Duran
Americas Now Producers
Jose Velasquez
Roselena Ramirez
Director of Photography
Inti Ocón
Still Photography
Inti Ocón
Script
Gerry Hadden
Editor
Andrea Casino Alba
Nicaragua Producer
Ismael López
Field Producer
Alfonso Flores Bermúdez
Driver/ Boat Transportation
Silvio Angus
Special Thanks
The Haulover community in the Nicaraguan Atlantic Coast and specially Rommel Washington, Emma Budier and Manuel Phaps
Prof. Marcos Williamson, Director, Institute of National Resources, Environment and Sustainable Development
Donald Williams, Marine Biologist, Institute of National Resources, Environment and Sustainable Development
Rudy A. Salas Tathum, Agroforestry Engineer, Universidad de las Regiones Autónomas de la Costa Caribe Nicaragüense
Víctor Padilla, local guide.