The Tranquilo Traveler
The Tranquilo Traveler is a celebration of voluntourism, slow travel, and other interesting ways to see the world. Travel writer and award- winning Moon Handbooks author Joshua Berman created The Tranquilo Travel as a resource for world trippers and international volunteers, a window to the author’s travels in Nicaragua, Belize, and beyond, and an update of his books and articles.
Hurricane Felix Aftermath in Nicaragua: Donate to the Red Cross
Last week, a major hurricane slammed into the northeast corner of Nicaragua. The Bilwi (or Puerto Cabezas) region is the most remote, least developed population center in the country, where a large percentage of people live alongside rivers, swamps, or the Caribbean, all of which were whipped into a fury when an 18-foot storm surge struck the coast amid 160-mph winds. Now incessant rains are raising the rivers and threatening new damage. As the daily body counts continue to rise, a few other numbers are being thrown around: “17,000 homes have been destroyed or damaged,” President Ortega said, and an estimated 50,000 people have lost everything they owned.
On the positive side, here is a report from a friend in Bluefields, just down the coast from ground zero:
“There has been an outpouring of financial and material support to the government and to the Red Cross, people bringing rice, beans, zinc, sugar, and making small little donations that are really adding up. It is so heartwarming and so inspiring to me because it really proves that if we all work together, each one even doing his/her very small part, we can make it through and progress. In fact it reminds me of a Nicaraguan saying which is that all you have to do is contribute your small grain of sand.”
I was struck by the same response, nine years ago when I was trapped in Managua during Hurricane Mitch, the deadliest storm in history to hit Central America. People with virtually nothing were contributing to the effort; a real feeling of national solidarity. But that’s a story for another day. In the meantime, here’s
HOW TO HELP:
Donate to Habitat for Humanity in Nicaragua

3 Responses to “Hurricane Felix Aftermath in Nicaragua: Donate to the Red Cross”
I don’t Tim — just showing up could be risky. What about hitting the Habitat for Humanity or Red Cross office in Managua first and offering to help?
hey i don’t know if you got my reply the other day, but again my name is mariana alvarado and im a senior at Asheboro High in Asheboro NC. im doing my senior project which is a project that is required to graduate and my topic in natural disasters. now my product i want to do it on natual disasters relieve and i want to help you!!! and i want to know how … i thought about making fundrises, but i need to hear from you befor…also i have already meet with 2 red cross people here in ashebor.
please contact me asap…
marialvara3@aol.com
-Mariana Alvarado
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Hi, Josh:
Loved Moonbooks, I’ve been to Nica 5 times since 2003. Spent a good deal of time in El Sauce.
I have a young gringo friend and his Nica friend in Managua, who want to go to the RAAN to help out. Do you have any contacts there, or suggestions about organizations they could contact, rather than just showing up?
Muchas gracias, Tim McMahon, Upstate NY