Cayos Cochinos are a small archipelago in the Caribbean Sea located off the north coast of Honduras, about 30 kilometers northeast of the city of La Ceiba and south of the large Bay Islands. The group is made up of two larger islands, forest-covered and of non-coral origin —Cayo Mayor (or Cayo Grande) and Cayo Menor (or Cayo Pequeño)—, and a constellation of about thirteen small sand and coral cays, plus submerged shoals and reefs.
What makes the archipelago geologically special is its location on the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef System, the second-largest coral reef system in the world after Australia's Great Barrier Reef. This enormous belt of reefs stretches along the coasts of Mexico, Belize, Guatemala and Honduras, and Cayos Cochinos make up one of its best-preserved stretches, thanks in large part to its status as a protected area.
The two larger islands rise above the sea with relief and tropical forest, which allows them to harbor their own terrestrial fauna, while the small cays are barely white-sand banks crowned by palm trees. That combination of forested islands, sandy cays and living reefs in a small space is what gives Cayos Cochinos its unique character within the Central American Caribbean.
Like the whole Honduran Caribbean, the waters of Cayos Cochinos were part, from the 16th century, of the vast stage of dispute between the Spanish Crown and rival powers. After the Europeans' arrival on the continent, the north coast of Honduras and its islands were nominally under Spanish rule, but in practice they were for centuries a frontier territory, hard to control and very exposed to the presence of traders, smugglers and pirates.
During the 17th and 18th centuries, the western Caribbean was crossed by corsairs and pirates —English, French and Dutch— who used the numerous islands, cays and coves as a refuge, anchorage and base for raiding the Spanish trade routes. The nearby Bay Islands (Roatán, Utila, Guanaja) played a prominent role in these stories, and the small cays like the Cochinos were part of that maritime labyrinth of little-guarded waters.
English interest in the Caribbean coast of Central America was growing: to the pirate presence was added, over time, British influence over the Mosquito Coast and over the Bay Islands, which came to be under British control before their definitive incorporation into Honduras in the 19th century. All that history of colonial dispute is the backdrop to the later settlement of the region, in which the most decisive element for the cays would be the arrival of the Garifuna people.
The deepest and most characteristic human presence of Cayos Cochinos is that of the Garifuna people, one of the most singular cultures in the Americas. The Garifuna are descendants of Africans —who came to the Caribbean through the slave trade or shipwrecks— mixed with Carib (Kalinago) and Arawak Indigenous people of the Lesser Antilles. From that fusion was born, on the island of St. Vincent, an Afro-Indigenous people with their own language, music and culture.
After resisting the British colonial advance on St. Vincent for decades, the Garifuna were defeated and deported by the British. In 1797 they were forcibly moved to the Central American Caribbean and landed on the island of Roatán, off the coast of Honduras. From there they spread along the Honduran north coast and along the coasts of Belize, Guatemala and Nicaragua, founding numerous coastal communities that live mostly from fishing and farming.
In Cayos Cochinos, the best-known Garifuna community is that of Chachahuate, settled on one of the small sandy cays, where its inhabitants live from artisanal fishing in wooden and palm houses. Garifuna culture —its language, its drum music, the punta dance and its cuisine based on fish, plantain and coconut— was proclaimed by UNESCO, in 2001, a Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity, a recognition that covers the Garifuna communities of the region, including those of the Honduran coast and cays.
Toward the end of the 20th century, the growing recognition of the archipelago's ecological value and the concern over the pressure on the fragile coral reef led the Honduran state to protect Cayos Cochinos. The whole archipelago, its waters, reefs and shoals was incorporated into Honduras's National System of Protected Areas under the figure of a marine natural monument, a category intended to conserve natural values of special importance.
The protection seeks to conserve one of the healthiest stretches of the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef System, regulating fishing (establishing no-take zones and limits on fishing gear), organizing tourism and protecting both the marine life and the terrestrial fauna of the larger islands. The management of the area is carried out in coordination between the Honduran authorities and a foundation dedicated to the research and conservation of the archipelago, with support from the scientific community and the local communities themselves.
This status as a protected area explains the character of the destination: unlike Roatán or other Caribbean islands with large tourism developments, Cayos Cochinos keep a minimal infrastructure, with no big hotels or housing developments. Tourism is low-impact, regulated and, largely, community-based, and an entry fee intended to finance conservation is usually charged. The balance between the life of the Garifuna communities, traditional fishing and the protection of the reef is the archipelago's great permanent challenge.
Although its international fame comes from the sea, Cayos Cochinos also harbor a notable terrestrial biodiversity concentrated on the larger islands, covered in tropical forest. The island isolation favored the emergence of particular fauna, and the most famous example is the Cayos Cochinos boa, a population of boa constrictor with a distinctive coloration —in pinkish or light tones— considered endemic to the archipelago and which has become a small celebrity among naturalists and visitors.
In the marine environment, the reefs of Cayos Cochinos are the true spectacle. For their good state of conservation, they harbor hard and soft corals, sponges, sea fans and a rich fauna: reef fish of a thousand colors, groupers, moray eels, lobsters, rays, sea turtles and harmless nurse sharks. This richness makes the archipelago a reference point for scientific research and a prominent site for snorkeling and responsible diving.
The protection of this dual biodiversity —the terrestrial one of the islands and the marine one of the reef— is the reason for being of the protected area. The presence of scientific stations and of reef and species monitoring programs, together with the regulation of fishing and tourism, seeks to ensure that Cayos Cochinos remain one of the most alive and best-preserved corners of the Honduran Caribbean for future generations.