There's an island in the Caribbean where the most repeated traffic sign doesn't say 'Stop' or 'Yield': it says 'Go Slow'. Nothing more is needed, because there are no cars anyway. But before becoming the slow paradise of backpackers, this strip of sand and coral passed through the hands of Maya traders, English pirates, Yucatecan refugees and lobster fishermen —and even its name is a matter of dispute. The island's name is a small portrait of the history of Belize, that crossroads of Hispanic, English and Caribbean worlds. The word 'caye' (pronounced 'key') designates in the Anglophone Caribbean the small sand and coral islands typical of these waters; it derives, through Spanish, from the Taíno 'cayo'. It's the same root that appears in so many Caribbean place names.
The origin of the second term, 'Caulker', is more debated. A frequent explanation links it to the English verb 'to caulk' (to seal the seams of boats to make them watertight): the island would have been a place where sailors caulked their vessels, taking advantage of its sheltered waters. Another widespread hypothesis holds that 'Caulker' is an English distortion of the island's original Spanish name, 'Cayo Hicaco', so called for the hicaco or icaco (a coastal plant with an edible fruit, the 'coco plum'). Over time, 'Hicaco' would have phonetically drifted into 'Caulker'.
In fact, in Spanish the island is known as Cayo Caulker or, sometimes, simply as 'Cayo', and it keeps the air of those Mestizo names. Whatever the exact etymology, the place name sums up the island's dual origin: an indigenous and Spanish root in 'cayo'/'Hicaco', and an English layer in 'Caulker', inherited from the colony of British Honduras.
As with almost all the cayes of Belize, the history of Caye Caulker begins long before its present-day village existed. Maya civilization, which dominated the interior of what is now Belize, maintained an intense network of maritime trade along the Caribbean coast, through which salt, obsidian, ceramics and other goods circulated. The cayes served as stops for passage, fishing and resupply on those routes, so these islands were not isolated outposts but part of a connected world.
After the decline of the great Maya cities and the arrival of the Europeans, the Belizean coast became, in the 16th and 17th centuries, a disputed and half-hidden territory. The labyrinth of reefs, islands and mangroves offered ideal refuge to pirates and privateers who preyed on the Spanish ships laden with riches. Cayes like Caulker, with their sheltered waters, were part of that scene of smuggling and adventure.
Over time, many of those English adventurers traded piracy for the exploitation of logwood and, later, mahogany. These settlers, known as the 'Baymen' (the men of the bay), settled in the region and laid the foundations of the colony of British Honduras, the forerunner of present-day Belize. For much of the colonial era, Caulker remained a sparsely populated place, dedicated to sea activities, awaiting the settlers who would arrive in the 19th century.
The stable settlement of Caye Caulker consolidated in the 19th century, and its history is intertwined with that of its neighbor San Pedro and with a conflict that shook the Yucatán Peninsula: the Caste War. Beginning in 1847, this prolonged rebellion of the Maya peoples against the Creole and Mestizo population unleashed enormous violence and caused mass displacements. Many Mestizo families (of mixed Maya and Spanish descent) fled south, crossing into what was then the territory of British Honduras.
A good number of those refugees settled in the cayes of northern Belize, among them Caulker, bringing with them the Spanish language, Yucatecan Mestizo culture and a way of life tied to the sea. That heritage explains why, in a country with English as its official language, the northern islands like Caulker and San Pedro have a marked Hispanic and Mestizo root, visible in the surnames, the language and many customs.
One milestone of that settlement has a name of its own: around 1870, Luciano Reyes, a trader who arrived with the wave of Yucatecan refugees, bought the island and sold off plots to other settler families; several of the surnames of those pioneers are still present in Caulker today. The new settlers made fishing their livelihood and gradually consolidated their roots on the island. That community of fishermen of Mestizo origin, born from the displacement of a war not their own, is the direct seed of today's Caulker. The island grew slowly, faithful to a leisurely rhythm that, much later, would become its famous 'Go Slow' philosophy.
For most of the 20th century, Caye Caulker was, above all, a fishing village. The waters surrounding the island, with their reefs and seagrass, were a generous fishing ground, and the catch of Caribbean spiny lobster became the engine of the local economy. Lobster, today a coveted dish in the island's restaurants, was for decades the livelihood of Caulker's families.
As in San Pedro, an important milestone was the organization of the fishermen into a cooperative: those of Caulker were among the founders of the Northern Fishermen Cooperative Society, created in 1960. By joining together to market their production —especially the lobster destined for export— the fishermen achieved better prices and a notable prosperity for such a small village. Fishing was not just a trade: it structured the island's social and cultural life, with its seasons, its calendar and a deep knowledge of the sea, the reef passes and the marine wildlife.
That culture of the sea left a legacy that would prove key to the future. When, toward the end of the century, tourism began to discover Caulker, it was often those same fishermen and their descendants who became snorkeling, diving and sport-fishing guides. The knowledge accumulated over generations about the reefs and channels was reconverted into the island's main tourist asset. Lobster remains present, now also as a delicacy for visitors.
The event that most shaped the geography of Caye Caulker was a natural catastrophe. In late October 1961, Hurricane Hattie, one of the most devastating to have hit Belize, struck the country with extreme winds and a ferocious surge. Hattie caused enormous damage in the then capital, Belize City (which, years later, would prompt the move of the capital inland, to Belmopan), and razed much of the coast and the cayes.
In Caye Caulker, the force of the hurricane opened a breach in the island, physically separating its northern half from its southern half. That wound from the storm, which over the years widened through the action of the water, is today the famous 'The Split': the channel that cuts the island in two and that, over time, became —paradoxically— the most beloved and iconic spot of Caulker, its main place for swimming, sunsets and social gathering.
It's one of those twists of fate: what was born of a natural tragedy ended up becoming the heart of island life. The Split sums up well the spirit of Caulker, able to take things calmly and with good humor even in the face of adversity. Today, where the hurricane split the land, people swim, jump into the sea and toast the sunset, often without suspecting that this festive corner is, in reality, the scar of one of the most fearsome hurricanes in the country's history.
In the last decades of the 20th century, Caye Caulker was discovered by tourism, and especially by backpacker travelers and diving lovers. The closeness of the Belize Barrier Reef —the second longest in the world, inscribed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in 1996— made the island an ideal and cheap base for snorkeling, diving and setting out on the great Great Blue Hole excursion. Little by little, the fishing village filled with hostels, bars, tour operators and travelers from all over the world.
Unlike its neighbor San Pedro, which bet on broader, higher-end tourism, Caulker kept a simpler, more bohemian and cheaper profile. From that identity was born its famous motto, 'Go Slow', which is at once a literal invitation (there are no cars, you get around on foot or by bike) and a philosophy of life: to take things calmly, without stress or rigid schedules. The motto, painted all over the island, became its trademark and a magnet for those seeking to disconnect.
Today Caye Caulker is one of the most beloved destinations in Belize, especially among backpackers and independent travelers. It keeps its sandy streets, its colorful houses, its Mestizo heritage, its seafood cuisine and its leisurely pace, while trying to balance the growth of tourism with the protection of the marine reserve that surrounds it. It is, in essence, an island that learned to make 'going slow' its greatest charm.