We are extremely proud and fortunate
to have some of the best guides in the Caribbean

Guides can make or break a fishing trip. We are extremely proud and fortunate to have some of the best guides in the Caribbean at Monkey River and Seal Caye Retreat. Our guides are recruited and trained by a partner at the lodge, Eloy Quevas. Eloy is recognized as one of the best guides and most knowledgeable environmentalists in Belize. His extended family from Monkey River Village provide all the staffing at the two lodges, and Eloy makes it his responsibility to put you with the best guides in southern Belize.

You might fish with Eloy, his brother, his son-in-law, or one of his neighbors from the village, but you will be guaranteed to fish with a local guide that understands the fishery, can put you on fish, and loves to fish as much as you do. They can help you with your casting, pick the right crab fly, or teach you how to catch snapper or barracuda with a traditional hand-line.

Eloy grew up on Monkey River, and has lived there all his life. He has been a conch diver, a lobsterman, a commercial hunter, and a renowned fly-fishing guide. Eloy has a unique ability to understand the environment in its relation to human activities and is on the Board of Directors of several national and international environmental organizations. He was instrumental in the protection of snapper spawning areas in the Caribbean, and he is a world expert on whale sharks. His passion is the fishery and jungles of southern Belize. (Please see the article below about Eloy’s Gladding Memorial award for more background.)



All the guides at Monkey River and Seal Caye are local and expert. All are selected by and most are trained by Eloy Quevas, Lodge partner and renowned Belizean guide. Our guides don’t punch a time clock and they love to fish as much as you do—you can plan day any way you want. Other local, professional guides are available to take you birding, snorkeling, or on other tours.


Eloy Quevas, recipient of the 2005 Gladding Memorial Award, is a partner and the head guide at Monkey River Retreat and Seal Caye Retreat. He is one of the best guides in Belize, and while his personal calendar fills quickly, he selects and trains the best guides in the area.

Eloy Cuevas, 2005 Recipient of the Gladding Memorial Award

By Will Haymen with Brian Luckhurst (nominating committee)

Eloy Cuevas grew up in Monkey River, a 300-person fishing village at the mouth of the Monkey River, where it joins the Western Caribbean on the southern coast of Belize. Eloy’s father, his brothers and he are/were locally renowned hunters, fishers, and navigators in the river, on land, and in the sea. He tells stories of being a boy on the beach at Monkey River, when he used to catch sprat by slapping a paddle towards the shore, and catching enormous snook from the beach with a hand-line right. He describes the arrival of gillnets, and the resulting rapid decline in the fish resources. As a commercial lobster, conch, and finfish fishermen for 35 plus years in Belize, Eloy is very familiar with the marine realm, its decline, and the causes of that decline. He has devoted himself to mitigating marine declines, as an active supporter of marine conservation and management within Belize and around the world.

I first met Eloy in 1994, while I was working on my PhD in Belize. It was a Ridge-to-Reef study of integrated coastal management. We spent four days and nights, traveling by wooden dory, hiking in the rainforest near Monkey River, and snorkeling the coastal reefs. From that very first trip, I recognized Eloy’s keen understanding of his environment, and the role of people in it. His vision was to help local people in his community develop themselves by relying on the surrounding natural resources, but being as gentle and respectful to the resources as possible in doing so. Eloy fast recognized the money that could be made by sustainable, rather than extractive use of natural resources.

He taught himself the art of fly fishing. In less than six months after first holding a rod, he was an accomplished and formidable catch and release fishing guide. He was just as quick to share his skills, by teaching other fishermen these skills in his own community, but also in other villages in Belize, and far away places, such as Guatemala, Honduras, Panama, Costa Rica, and Indonesia. His skill as a guide is well known by many but he keeps his schedule largely open, concentrating on only a few favorite clients, fishing commercially for lobsters, and very often, participating as a guide on marine research expeditions.

Eloy worked as my partner and primary guide for 7 years while we explored, documented, filmed, and conserved, Belize’s multi-species spawning aggregations, along with other scientists, government officials, donors, and other fishers. His skill as a boat captain and navigator are only exceeded by his willingness and ability to teach, and to participate as an active research team member, adding validity and reality to our studies that brought them to relevance. He served as a liaison between our project and the communities and government, willing to speak publicly about our findings and their meaning, and thus adding immense confidence for us in our own path, and willingness of communities and governments to accept and act on our findings.

Eloy has taken marine conservation to a new level on his own. He now serves on the board of two NGOs, TIDE and Friends of Nature, and began a new NGO, the Monkey River Guide Association, which has already gained direct support from the UN, and other foundations, and has spearheaded a variety of tangible projects that support conservation and sustainable development. He has been invited to speak to decision makers and fishers in the US by the South Atlantic Fisheries Management Council, but also served as a trainer in courses taught in Belize, Jamaica, Mexico, Honduras, Panama, Costa Rica, the Virgin Islands, and Indonesia.

Eloy is a familiar face to many of us in GCFI, having participated in several meetings already as a speaker, and as a convener of informal discussions. Eloy is a quiet but determined leader. Much like Peter Gladding, whom Eloy knew well, Eloy makes his livelihood from commercial fishing, but still actively supports the declaration of marine reserves and the sustainable management of marine resources, via a fully democratic process where fishermen are involved. He has participated in this process through the creation of 14 new reserves in Belize. As Peter Gladding did, Eloy serves as a model for other fishermen throughout the Gulf and Caribbean, and the world

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