Begin your journey with an introduction to local life, highlighting how Afro-descendant and Indigenous roots have shaped Nuquí’s identity. Through stories, music, and customs, uncover how African heritage blends with Indigenous legacies to create a vibrant cultural mosaic.
Next, head to the Melele Museum, a space dedicated to preserving the historical and cultural memory of Chocó. Discover traditional artefacts, testimonies, and narratives that reveal the history of colonisation, struggles for resistance, the role of spirituality, and the significance of community life in shaping identity.
Continue through picturesque and little-known areas, where every detail reflects the community’s relationship with its environment: wooden stilt houses adapted to the tides; the pier, a centre of trade and gathering; artisanal fishing as a way of life; and the morros—the forested hills that frame the horizon, reminding us that Nuquí is also a land where mountains embrace the sea.
Explore the ecosystems surrounding Nuquí—rainforests, mangroves, rivers, and beaches—and the species that inhabit them. Learn about the role of corals and mangroves in protecting the coastline, as well as the extraordinary biodiversity that includes tropical birds, amphibians like the iconic harlequin frog, and the ocean’s giants: the humpback whales that travel thousands of kilometres each year to give birth in these warm waters.
Finally, immerse yourself in the gastronomy of the Pacific. Learn about local plants and traditional drinks that preserve ancestral memory: viche, an Afro-Colombian sugarcane spirit, and curao, a medicinal and spiritual infusion that symbolises the sacred bond between community and nature. These culinary traditions form part of the intangible heritage that defines the region’s cultural pride.