Sean T. Hawkey Photography

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  • Exhausted, a group of people from La Reina carry what they've managed to recover from the debris of the landslide that destroyed their village. On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_54...jpg
  • On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.Here people evacuate from surrounding houses as fears for new landslides continued.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_51...jpg
  • On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201128_55...jpg
  • On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_54...jpg
  • On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_46...jpg
  • A young man, Roberto Hernandez, runs over settling debris in the La Reina disaster to rescue a cat. On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_54...jpg
  • On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201128_55...jpg
  • On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_54...jpg
  • On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201128_55...jpg
  • On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201128_55...jpg
  • Lourdes López Vásquez, 16, with her baby Saida, 9 months old. <br />
<br />
“The family was evacuated at midnight, that was during hurricane Eta. We heard thundering noises coming from underground, from inside the mountain” said Lourdes, “We were all evacuated, it was dark, we all felt sad”. Lourdes’ family is one of 60 families affected by the landslide in the village of El Zapote, San Luis Planes, Santa Bárbara. That night six houses were destroyed by a landslide there and another 55 were made unsafe by subsidence, and have now been declared uninhabitable. The region of Santa Bárbara, with steep mountain slopes that are ideal for coffee growing, is particularly prone to landslides. Fairtrade-certified cooperative Montaña Verde is based in San Luis Planes and coop members are all affected by climate change, hurricanes and landslides. Serious problems with access to farms, loss of land, loss of topsoil, washed-out nutrients, the early fall of unripe cherries, leaf drop, root rot, and a proliferation of fungal diseases all affect the producers, as well as the loss of their corn and bean crops that they rely on as their staple food.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_94...jpg
  • On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201128_57...jpg
  • On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_52...jpg
  • Landslide in San Luis Planes, Santa Bárbara. The region of Santa Bárbara continues to be badly affected by landslides. Fairtrade-certified cooperative Montaña Verde is based in San Luis Planes and coop members are all affected by climate change, hurricanes and landslides. Serious problems with access to farms, loss of land, loss of topsoil, washed-out nutrients, the early fall of unripe cherries, leaf drop, root rot, and a proliferation of fungal diseases all affect the producers.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_94...jpg
  • On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201128_61...jpg
  • On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. An entire coffee farm of 30 hectares disappeared. Inhabitants were scared by loud rumbling underground and in the mountain and evacuated in the dark just before the landslide, there were no fatalities. The region of Santa Bárbara continued to be susceptible for weeks afterwards, with hundreds of fresh landslides weeks after the hurricanes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_53...jpg
  • Cosme Castellón and Guadalupe Pineda on top of a coffee-farm landslide in Zapotal, San Luis Planes, Santa Barbara. Hundreds of landslides in the area have ripped through coffee farms, all farms have lost production because of fallen coffee with the very heavy rains and the extreme level of moisture has boosted fungal infections in coffee. Both Cosme and Guadalupe are members of the Montaña Verde coop that is Fairtrade certified.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201207_94...jpg
  • A landslide on the coffee farm of a COCASJOL member near Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_95...jpg
  • A landslide on the coffee farm of a COCASJOL member near Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_95...jpg
  • A landslide on the coffee farm of a COCASJOL member near Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_95...jpg
  • Coffee trees were destroyed in thousands of landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota. In this landslide a coffee farm of 60 acres was destroyed.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201128_57...jpg
  • A man carries a sack across a landslide on the coffee farm of a COCASJOL member near Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_95...jpg
  • Survivors of the La Reina landslide that swallowed 280 houses, prepare to spend a night in a school converted into a shelter in Valle Verde. People from La Reina lost their houses and all their possessions.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201127_55...jpg
  • A landslide on the coffee farm of a COCASJOL member near Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_95...jpg
  • A landslide on the coffee farm of COCASJOL member Hector Hermilo Perdomo, near Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_95...jpg
  • Hector Hermilo Perdomo, COCASJOL, Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. “With the two hurricanes that hit Honduras, the water that fell with them has affected us very much. We’ve had landslides, lots of land has been wiped out, taking with it our crops. Just in my bit of land I’ve lost two manzanas (5 acres) that means 7000 coffee plants that I’ve lost, that I can’t recover. Also the production of those 7000 plants, that’s about 35 quintals of dry pergamino coffee that I’ve lost. All this means I’m in difficulties financially, it’s a big loss. Also I’ve lost the musacea, the bananas we plant alongside the coffee as shade, and we have a substantial trade of bananas to Guatemala, mainly the small banana we call ‘mínimo’, we’ve lost that too. We’ve got big difficulties with access to and from our farms here, after the main roads and minor roads were affected by landslides, and that has made it hard to get any product out to market, or get machinery in to fix things on our farms. I’ve had 14 small landslides, and two big ones on my own property.”
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_96...jpg
  • Hector Hermilo Perdomo, COCASJOL, Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. “With the two hurricanes that hit Honduras, the water that fell with them has affected us very much. We’ve had landslides, lots of land has been wiped out, taking with it our crops. Just in my bit of land I’ve lost two manzanas (5 acres) that means 7000 coffee plants that I’ve lost, that I can’t recover. Also the production of those 7000 plants, that’s about 35 quintals of dry pergamino coffee that I’ve lost. All this means I’m in difficulties financially, it’s a big loss. Also I’ve lost the musacea, the bananas we plant alongside the coffee as shade, and we have a substantial trade of bananas to Guatemala, mainly the small banana we call ‘mínimo’, we’ve lost that too. We’ve got big difficulties with access to and from our farms here, after the main roads and minor roads were affected by landslides, and that has made it hard to get any product out to market, or get machinery in to fix things on our farms. I’ve had 14 small landslides, and two big ones on my own property.”
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_96...jpg
  • Hector Hermilo Perdomo, COCASJOL, Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. “With the two hurricanes that hit Honduras, the water that fell with them has affected us very much. We’ve had landslides, lots of land has been wiped out, taking with it our crops. Just in my bit of land I’ve lost two manzanas (5 acres) that means 7000 coffee plants that I’ve lost, that I can’t recover. Also the production of those 7000 plants, that’s about 35 quintals of dry pergamino coffee that I’ve lost. All this means I’m in difficulties financially, it’s a big loss. Also I’ve lost the musacea, the bananas we plant alongside the coffee as shade, and we have a substantial trade of bananas to Guatemala, mainly the small banana we call ‘mínimo’, we’ve lost that too. We’ve got big difficulties with access to and from our farms here, after the main roads and minor roads were affected by landslides, and that has made it hard to get any product out to market, or get machinery in to fix things on our farms. I’ve had 14 small landslides, and two big ones on my own property.”
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_96...jpg
  • Hector Hermilo Perdomo, COCASJOL, Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. “With the two hurricanes that hit Honduras, the water that fell with them has affected us very much. We’ve had landslides, lots of land has been wiped out, taking with it our crops. Just in my bit of land I’ve lost two manzanas (5 acres) that means 7000 coffee plants that I’ve lost, that I can’t recover. Also the production of those 7000 plants, that’s about 35 quintals of dry pergamino coffee that I’ve lost. All this means I’m in difficulties financially, it’s a big loss. Also I’ve lost the musacea, the bananas we plant alongside the coffee as shade, and we have a substantial trade of bananas to Guatemala, mainly the small banana we call ‘mínimo’, we’ve lost that too. We’ve got big difficulties with access to and from our farms here, after the main roads and minor roads were affected by landslides, and that has made it hard to get any product out to market, or get machinery in to fix things on our farms. I’ve had 14 small landslides, and two big ones on my own property.”
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_95...jpg
  • There are thousands of landslides in the north, centre and west of Honduras. Here in San Luis Planes the coffee harvest is affected by damaged roads that prevent coffee pickers from getting to farms and prevent transport of coffee to mills. The coffee harvest is also damaged from coffee cherries falling with heavy rain, root rot and many fungal diseases like leaf rust that prosper in humidity.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_92...jpg
  • Mountains are striped with landslides across a broad swathe of Honduras after extremely heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota overloaded the soil with water.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_09...jpg
  • Flooding and landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away roads, farms and houses.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_90...jpg
  • Flooding and landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away roads, farms and houses.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_90...jpg
  • Coffee trees were destroyed across hundreds of hectares of land that suffered landslides in Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201207_95...jpg
  • There are thousands of landslides in the north, centre and west of Honduras. Here in San Luis Planes the coffee harvest is affected by damaged roads that prevent coffee pickers from getting to farms and prevent transport of coffee to mills. The coffee harvest is also damaged from coffee cherries falling with heavy rain, root rot and many fungal diseases like leaf rust that prosper in humidity.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_91...jpg
  • Flooding and landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away roads, farms and houses.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_90...jpg
  • Coffee trees were destroyed across hundreds of hectares of land that suffered landslides in Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota. Extremely heavy and protracted rainfall also caused widespread dropping of green coffee and the leafs from coffee trees.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_96...jpg
  • There are thousands of landslides in the north, centre and west of Honduras. Here in San Luis Planes the coffee harvest is affected by damaged roads that prevent coffee pickers from getting to farms and prevent transport of coffee to mills. The coffee harvest is also damaged from coffee cherries falling with heavy rain, root rot and many fungal diseases like leaf rust that prosper in humidity.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_92...jpg
  • Flooding and landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away roads, farms and houses.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_91...jpg
  • There are thousands of landslides in the north, centre and west of Honduras. Here in San Luis Planes the coffee harvest is affected by damaged roads that prevent coffee pickers from getting to farms and prevent transport of coffee to mills. The coffee harvest is also damaged from coffee cherries falling with heavy rain, root rot and many fungal diseases like leaf rust that prosper in humidity.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_91...jpg
  • There are thousands of landslides in the north, centre and west of Honduras. Here in San Luis Planes the coffee harvest is affected by damaged roads that prevent coffee pickers from getting to farms and prevent transport of coffee to mills. The coffee harvest is also damaged from coffee cherries falling with heavy rain, root rot and many fungal diseases like leaf rust that prosper in humidity.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_91...jpg
  • There are thousands of landslides in the north, centre and west of Honduras. Here in San Luis Planes the coffee harvest is affected by damaged roads that prevent coffee pickers from getting to farms and prevent transport of coffee to mills. The coffee harvest is also damaged from coffee cherries falling with heavy rain, root rot and many fungal diseases like leaf rust that prosper in humidity.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_91...jpg
  • There are thousands of landslides in the north, centre and west of Honduras. Here in San Luis Planes the coffee harvest is affected by damaged roads that prevent coffee pickers from getting to farms and prevent transport of coffee to mills. The coffee harvest is also damaged from coffee cherries falling with heavy rain, root rot and many fungal diseases like leaf rust that prosper in humidity.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_91...jpg
  • There are thousands of landslides in the north, centre and west of Honduras. Here in San Luis Planes the coffee harvest is affected by damaged roads that prevent coffee pickers from getting to farms and prevent transport of coffee to mills. The coffee harvest is also damaged from coffee cherries falling with heavy rain, root rot and many fungal diseases like leaf rust that prosper in humidity.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_91...jpg
  • Arnaldo Hernández, COCASJOL, El Ocotillal, Colinas, Santa Barbara, Honduras. “Quite a few farms have been affected by the hurricanes. There’s not even a way in to the farms, the roads are ruined. And fungal diseases, ojo de gallo, leaf rust, we’ve got them. There’s been no support from the government, but the coop has given some people some fertilizer because the soil is washed out, to help restore the coffee trees.”
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_95...jpg
  • Arnaldo Hernández, COCASJOL, El Ocotillal, Colinas, Santa Barbara, Honduras. “Quite a few farms have been affected by the hurricanes. There’s not even a way in to the farms, the roads are ruined. And fungal diseases, ojo de gallo, leaf rust, we’ve got them. There’s been no support from the government, but the coop has given some people some fertilizer because the soil is washed out, to help restore the coffee trees.”
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_95...jpg
  • Lourdes López Vásquez, 16, with her baby Saida, 9 months old. <br />
<br />
“The family was evacuated at midnight, that was during hurricane Eta. We heard thundering noises coming from underground, from inside the mountain” said Lourdes, “We were all evacuated, it was dark, we all felt sad”. Lourdes’ family is one of 60 families affected by the landslide in the village of El Zapote, San Luis Planes, Santa Bárbara. That night six houses were destroyed by a landslide there and another 55 were made unsafe by subsidence, and have now been declared uninhabitable. The region of Santa Bárbara, with steep mountain slopes that are ideal for coffee growing, is particularly prone to landslides. Fairtrade-certified cooperative Montaña Verde is based in San Luis Planes and coop members are all affected by climate change, hurricanes and landslides. Serious problems with access to farms, loss of land, loss of topsoil, washed-out nutrients, the early fall of unripe cherries, leaf drop, root rot, and a proliferation of fungal diseases all affect the producers, as well as the loss of their corn and bean crops that they rely on as their staple food.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_94...jpg
  • Lourdes López Vásquez, 16.<br />
<br />
“The family was evacuated at midnight, that was during hurricane Eta. We heard thundering noises coming from underground, from inside the mountain” said Lourdes, “We were all evacuated, it was dark, we all felt sad”. Lourdes’ family is one of 60 families affected by the landslide in the village of El Zapote, San Luis Planes, Santa Bárbara. That night six houses were destroyed by a landslide there and another 55 were made unsafe by subsidence, and have now been declared uninhabitable. The region of Santa Bárbara, with steep mountain slopes that are ideal for coffee growing, is particularly prone to landslides. Fairtrade-certified cooperative Montaña Verde is based in San Luis Planes and coop members are all affected by climate change, hurricanes and landslides. Serious problems with access to farms, loss of land, loss of topsoil, washed-out nutrients, the early fall of unripe cherries, leaf drop, root rot, and a proliferation of fungal diseases all affect the producers, as well as the loss of their corn and bean crops that they rely on as their staple food.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_94...jpg
  • Lourdes López Vásquez, 16, with her baby Saida, 9 months old. <br />
<br />
“The family was evacuated at midnight, that was during hurricane Eta. We heard thundering noises coming from underground, from inside the mountain” said Lourdes, “We were all evacuated, it was dark, we all felt sad”. Lourdes’ family is one of 60 families affected by the landslide in the village of El Zapote, San Luis Planes, Santa Bárbara. That night six houses were destroyed by a landslide there and another 55 were made unsafe by subsidence, and have now been declared uninhabitable. The region of Santa Bárbara, with steep mountain slopes that are ideal for coffee growing, is particularly prone to landslides. Fairtrade-certified cooperative Montaña Verde is based in San Luis Planes and coop members are all affected by climate change, hurricanes and landslides. Serious problems with access to farms, loss of land, loss of topsoil, washed-out nutrients, the early fall of unripe cherries, leaf drop, root rot, and a proliferation of fungal diseases all affect the producers, as well as the loss of their corn and bean crops that they rely on as their staple food.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_94...jpg
  • Elieser Valle, el Pacayito, Colinas. Elisier is a member of the COCASJOL coffee cooperative. “With Eta our land began to subside, to sink, but when Iota came and the rain, the land began to slip away, down the mountain. Most of the coffee farm is affected, and it’s affecting the house, it’s what worries us most at the moment, the house is on the edge of the landslide now. We don’t sleep well, when the hurricanes were in full swing we had to stay in another house for a while, we were too scared to sleep here. Thank God we are okay, but if this carries on we’ll have to abandon the house. We aren’t the only ones, there are other families in the same situation. We are in danger of losing everything, the coffee farm and the house.“
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_95...jpg
  • a man pulls a boat safely to shore on a project for disaster preparedness on the atlantic coast of Honduras. The project helps avoids flooding and landslide disasters that have occured here in the past during the hurricane season.
    honduras_hawkey_20110617_597.jpg
  • A human pyramid emulates the Alexis Arguello statue in Managua on Election night, 6 Nov 2011. The announcement had been made that Daniel Ortega had won a landslide victory with over 60% of the vote for the Sandinista Front for National Liberation (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional, FSLN).
    nicaragua_hawkey_20111107_3265.jpg
  • Landslide damage to the road in El Zapote, Santa Barbara, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_93...jpg
  • A young man is thrown in the air during celebrations on election night in Managua on 6 Nov 2011, as it is announced that Daniel Ortega wins a landslide victory with over 60% of the vote for the Sandinista Front for National Liberation (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional, FSLN).
    nicaragua_hawkey_20111107_3269.jpg
  • Election night in Managua on 6 Nov 2011, as it is announced that Daniel Ortega wins a landslide victory with over 60% of the vote for the Sandinista Front for National Liberation (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional, FSLN).
    nicaragua_hawkey_20111107_3244.jpg
  • Election night in Managua on 6 Nov 2011, as it is announced that Daniel Ortega wins a landslide victory with over 60% of the vote for the Sandinista Front for National Liberation (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional, FSLN).
    nicaragua_hawkey_20111107_3239.jpg
  • Survivors of the La Reina landslide that swallowed 280 houses, sort through donated clothes. People from La Reina lost their houses and all their possessions.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201128_56...jpg
  • Election night in Managua on 6 Nov 2011, as it is announced that Daniel Ortega wins a landslide victory with over 60% of the vote for the Sandinista Front for National Liberation (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional, FSLN).
    nicaragua_hawkey_20111108_3455.jpg
  • children help pushing a boat out on a CWS-supported project for disaster preparedness on the atlantic coast of Honduras. The project helps avoids flooding and landslide disasters that have occured here in the past during the hurricane season.
    honduras_hawkey_20110617_581.jpg
  • Election night in Managua on 6 Nov 2011, as it is announced that Daniel Ortega wins a landslide victory with over 60% of the vote for the Sandinista Front for National Liberation (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional, FSLN).
    nicaragua_hawkey_20111107_3286.jpg
  • Election night in Managua on 6 Nov 2011, as it is announced that Daniel Ortega wins a landslide victory with over 60% of the vote for the Sandinista Front for National Liberation (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional, FSLN).
    nicaragua_hawkey_20111108_3449.jpg
  • Election night in Managua on 6 Nov 2011, as it is announced that Daniel Ortega wins a landslide victory with over 60% of the vote for the Sandinista Front for National Liberation (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional, FSLN).
    nicaragua_hawkey_20111108_3424.jpg
  • Election night in Managua on 6 Nov 2011, as it is announced that Daniel Ortega wins a landslide victory with over 60% of the vote for the Sandinista Front for National Liberation (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional, FSLN).
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  • Tomás Borge Martínez on election night in Managua on 6 Nov 2011, as it is announced that Daniel Ortega won a landslide victory.  Borge died soon afterwards and was the last living founder of the revolutionary FSLN. In this picture he is flanked by security and in front of the Alexis Arguello statue.
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  • villagers pushing a boat out on a CWS-supported project for disaster preparedness on the atlantic coast of Honduras. The project helps avoids flooding and landslide disasters that have occured here in the past during the hurricane season.
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  • Survivors of the La Reina landslide that swallowed 280 houses, sort through donated clothes. People from La Reina lost their houses and all their possessions.
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  • On November 24th 2020, following two hurricanes Eta and Iota and very heavy rainfall, a huge landslide occurred in La Reina, Protección, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Estimates are that 280 houses disappeared under the mud. Many other houses like this one nearby were affected by subsidence and are now uninhabitable.
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  • Hector Hermilo Perdomo, COCASJOL, Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. “With the two hurricanes that hit Honduras, the water that fell with them has affected us very much. We’ve had landslides, lots of land has been wiped out, taking with it our crops. Just in my bit of land I’ve lost two manzanas (5 acres) that means 7000 coffee plants that I’ve lost, that I can’t recover. Also the production of those 7000 plants, that’s about 35 quintals of dry pergamino coffee that I’ve lost. All this means I’m in difficulties financially, it’s a big loss. Also I’ve lost the musacea, the bananas we plant alongside the coffee as shade, and we have a substantial trade of bananas to Guatemala, mainly the small banana we call ‘mínimo’, we’ve lost that too. We’ve got big difficulties with access to and from our farms here, after the main roads and minor roads were affected by landslides, and that has made it hard to get any product out to market, or get machinery in to fix things on our farms. I’ve had 14 small landslides, and two big ones on my own property.”
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  • In Estanzuelas, Copán, many houses were damaged by subsidence and landslides and crops were destroyed. This village is one of the poorest in the region suffering from malnutrition, serious health problems and overcrowding.
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  • Following the hurricanes Eta and Iota a coffee farm is split by one of thousands of landslides in San Luis Planes, Santa Barbara, Honduras.
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  • In Estanzuelas, Copán, many houses were damaged by subsidence and landslides and crops were destroyed. This village is one of the poorest in the region suffering from malnutrition, serious health problems and overcrowding.
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  • Dilma Chávez is a small-scale coffee farmer in San Luis Planes, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. She is a member of the Montaña Verde cooperative. “On my farm and my husbands farm we have a lot of fissures on the farm, and some landslides. The roads are badly damaged, some of them you can’t pass. We are having to fix the small roads into the farms ourselves, there’s no help from the government. The coffee is suffering a lot from fungal infections, ojo de gallo, leaf rust, and it’s very hard to control with so much moisture, it will probably spread and gets worse. This year we’ll have a big drop in production, everyone in the coop will suffer, it’s big. And that affects us all economically. And some houses have been affected, in the two villages called El Zapote. We grow most of our own food here, and all those crops have also be affected, the corn, the beans, with so much rain we’ve lost a lot of that too.”
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  • Dilma Chávez is a small-scale coffee farmer in San Luis Planes, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. She is a member of the Montaña Verde cooperative. “On my farm and my husbands farm we have a lot of fissures on the farm, and some landslides. The roads are badly damaged, some of them you can’t pass. We are having to fix the small roads into the farms ourselves, there’s no help from the government. The coffee is suffering a lot from fungal infections, ojo de gallo, leaf rust, and it’s very hard to control with so much moisture, it will probably spread and gets worse. This year we’ll have a big drop in production, everyone in the coop will suffer, it’s big. And that affects us all economically. And some houses have been affected, in the two villages called El Zapote. We grow most of our own food here, and all those crops have also be affected, the corn, the beans, with so much rain we’ve lost a lot of that too.”
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  • Prudencio Fernández, El Zapote, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. “There are two big landslides, one each side of the road where we are. All the other families have gone from here now, they’ve left. I’m only here to harvest the coffee I can, I’m picking on my own. A lot of the coffee dropped while it was green, there was a lot of rain, amazing amount of rain, so the leaves and coffee dropped. But there’s some left and I’m picking it before I leave. There has been some help here, people have come to give us food, but the government hasn’t even come to take a look.”
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  • Flooding and landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away roads, farms and houses. Here in El Zapote village, Gualala, Santa Barbara, 60 families were affected by complete loss or severe damage of their houses.
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  • Flooding and landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away roads, farms and houses.
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  • A detailed map of risks drawn by villagers in a coastal area affected by floods and landslides during the rainy season on the Atlantic coast of Honduras near Trujillo. Noel Landaverde, coordinator of the Colón and Gracias a Dios region is on the right of the picture.
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  • Coffee plantations across Honduras suffered extensive damage after hurricanes Eta and Iota. Many farms were damaged by landslides as well as widespread outbreaks of fungal diseases and root rot from flooding.
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  • Coffee plantations across Honduras suffered extensive damage after hurricanes Eta and Iota. Many farms were damaged by landslides as well as widespread outbreaks of fungal diseases and root rot from flooding.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201204_90...jpg
  • In Estanzuelas, Copán, many houses were damaged by subsidence and landslides and crops were destroyed. This village is one of the poorest in the region suffering from malnutrition, serious health problems and overcrowding.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_76...jpg
  • In Estanzuelas, Copán, many houses were damaged by subsidence and landslides and crops were destroyed. This village is one of the poorest in the region suffering from malnutrition, serious health problems and overcrowding.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_76...jpg
  • Victor Manuel Pineda Granados, Aldea El Triunfo, Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Victor is a coffee farmer and is a member of the COCASJOL cooperative. “I have 4.5 manzanas, I’ve been affected by the landslides and quite a few trees that have fallen down, three of my big trees went down. With hurricane Mitch I was badly affected, in the same places, but I planted over the top again, but we aren’t so good economically now, so I don’t know, we’ll see if we can recover from this somehow.”
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  • Victor Manuel Pineda Granados, Aldea El Triunfo, Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Victor is a coffee farmer and is a member of the COCASJOL cooperative. “I have 4.5 manzanas, I’ve been affected by the landslides and quite a few trees that have fallen down, three of my big trees went down. With hurricane Mitch I was badly affected, in the same places, but I planted over the top again, but we aren’t so good economically now, so I don’t know, we’ll see if we can recover from this somehow.”
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  • Coffee trees were destroyed across hundreds of hectares of land that suffered landslides in Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota. Extremely heavy and protracted rainfall also caused widespread dropping of green coffee and the leafs from coffee trees.
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  • A vehicle of COCASJOL coffee coop got stuck in the mud on a routine visit to a farm. Access to farms has become increasingly difficult with many major and minor roads unpassable. Victor Manuel Pineda Granados (right) is a coffee farmer and is a member of the COCASJOL cooperative. “I have 4.5 manzanas, I’ve been affected by the landslides and quite a few trees that have fallen down, three of my big trees went down. With hurricane Mitch I was badly affected, in the same places, but I planted over the top again, but we aren’t so good economically now, so I don’t know, we’ll see if we can recover from this somehow.”
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_95...jpg
  • Coffee trees were destroyed across hundreds of hectares of land that suffered landslides in Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_93...jpg
  • Flooding and landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away and damaged roads. Here a bulldozer, sent in to repair a road, broke down causing a roadblock for a day.
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  • Flooding and landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away and damaged roads. Here a bulldozer, sent in to repair a road, broke down causing a roadblock for a day.
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  • Flooding and landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away roads, farms and houses.
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  • A young woman cooking in her kitchen. She lives in a coastal area affected by floods and landslides during the rainy season on the Atlantic coast of Honduras near Trujillo, and takes part in projects supported by CWS to reduce risks and disasters.
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  • In Estanzuelas, Copán, many houses were damaged by subsidence and landslides and crops were destroyed. This village is one of the poorest in the region suffering from malnutrition, serious health problems and overcrowding.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_76...jpg
  • Victor Manuel Pineda Granados, Aldea El Triunfo, Colinas, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Victor is a coffee farmer and is a member of the COCASJOL cooperative. “I have 4.5 manzanas, I’ve been affected by the landslides and quite a few trees that have fallen down, three of my big trees went down. With hurricane Mitch I was badly affected, in the same places, but I planted over the top again, but we aren’t so good economically now, so I don’t know, we’ll see if we can recover from this somehow.”
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_97...jpg
  • Flooding and landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away and damaged roads. Here a bulldozer, sent in to repair a road, broke down causing a roadblock for a day.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_91...jpg