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Big-Game Fishing and Estuaries in French Guiana: A Guide to the Coastal Spots

Published on October 20, 2025 · by Ismael Samuel

Big-Game Fishing and Estuaries in French Guiana: A Guide to the Coastal Spots

The coast of French Guiana is nothing like a Caribbean postcard. There’s no turquoise lagoon here: just a band of Amazonian mud, churned by sediment from the Amazon, stretching over 350 kilometres between the Oyapock and the Maroni. It’s precisely this coffee-with-milk-coloured water that makes fishing in French Guiana a one-of-a-kind experience within France. The estuaries teem with acoupa weakfish and sea catfish, two emblematic species that are as much about sport as they are about Creole cuisine. After several seasons working these river mouths with local boatmen, here’s a hands-on guide to take you from curiosity to your first bite.

Why the muddy coast changes everything

French Guiana resembles no classic fishing destination. The continental shelf, shallow and loaded with organic matter, creates a nutrient-rich soup that’s ideal for bottom fish and estuary predators.

Two species dominate the conversation on the docks:

  • The red acoupa (known locally as “acoupa weakfish”), a feisty fish with delicate flesh, hunted with lures or natural bait near the mud banks.
  • The sea catfish (machoiran), a powerful, abundant marine catfish that delivers muscular fights even for beginners. It’s the safe bet for family outings.

Add to that the coq (a weakfish of the Cynoscion genus), the dog shark in brackish estuaries, and further out, big-game catches such as tarpon, jack and mahi-mahi during offshore trips departing from the Îles du Salut.

Murky water, adapted technique

Near-zero visibility imposes a simple logic: the fish hunt by smell and vibration, not by sight. In practice, that means favouring:

  • pungent natural baits (shrimp, fish chunks, mud worms) for the sea catfish;
  • vibrating soft lures or noisy jig heads for the acoupa;
  • fishing keyed to the tides, the number-one factor here.
Bateaux de pêche amarrés à l'aube au port du Larivot, près de Cayenne en Guyane, sur l'estuaire bordé de mangrove
Le port de pêche du Larivot, près de Cayenne, au lever du jour — © Stephane Lesbats / Ifremer (Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 4.0)

The best coastal spots, sector by sector

The Mahury estuary (Remire-Montjoly, Roura)

About twenty minutes from Cayenne, the mouth of the Mahury is the most accessible playground. The rocky points of Rémire-Montjoly and the approaches to the Îlet la Mère concentrate acoupa and jack. It’s the ideal sector for a first outing: 30 to 45 minutes of navigation from the Dégrad-des-Cannes dock is enough to reach the productive zones.

Kourou and the Îles du Salut

Departing from Kourou (about 1 hour’s drive from Cayenne via the RN1), trips to the Îles du Salut combine estuary fishing on the way out with big-game fishing around the islands. The rocky bottoms of Île Royale and Île Saint-Joseph harbour jack and snapper. A popular combo: fishing in the morning, lunch in the afternoon on an island steeped in penal-colony history.

The Maroni and the Saint-Laurent region

For adventure lovers, the Maroni river offers unique river and estuary fishing by pirogue, on the border with Suriname. Allow about 3 hours’ drive from Cayenne to Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni (250 km via the RN1). Beyond the sea catfish, you’ll be after the aïmara, a formidable freshwater predator. The Bushinenge guides know the side channels where no one else fishes.

The Kaw marshes (Roura)

More geared toward wildlife watching than sport fishing, the Kaw marshes (1 h 15 from Cayenne) remain a worthwhile detour for anyone wanting to combine a line outing with black caimans at dusk.

When to fish: tides and the dry season

Two variables govern the success of an outing in French Guiana.

The season

The dry season, from mid-July to mid-November, is by far the best period: calmer seas, clear skies, easier access to docks and tracks. The long rainy season (January to June, with a brief dry spell in March) makes coastal navigation more unpredictable, without making it impossible.

The tides

The tidal range in French Guiana often exceeds 2 metres. Estuary fish bite mostly:

  • at the start of the rising tide and the start of the falling tide, when the current moves the food around;
  • less well at slack tide, when the water stagnates.

A good guide always sets the departure by the tide time, not by your alarm clock. Download a tide table for Dégrad-des-Cannes or Kourou before booking, and you’ll better understand the time slots on offer.

Fishing with a local guide: the smart move

Without a boat or knowledge of the shifting mud banks, heading out alone is inadvisable. Local guides provide permits, safety, gear and the ability to read the water.

What to expect in terms of prices and duration

Here are realistic ballpark figures observed on site (to be confirmed at booking):

  • Half-day estuary trip (4 h): €90 to €140 per person, gear and bait included, departing Dégrad-des-Cannes or Kourou.
  • Full coastal day + Îles du Salut (7 to 8 h): €180 to €260 per person, often with lunch.
  • Maroni pirogue trip with a Bushinenge guide: from €120 for a half-day, with carbet lodging possible.

Choosing a reliable provider

Favour guides who are registered, insured and hold a coastal navigation licence. A few useful questions before booking:

  1. Are life jackets and a VHF radio on board?
  2. Is the outing adjusted to the day’s tide?
  3. Is the catch “no-kill” or can you take your fish home?
  4. Is the gear suitable for beginners and experts alike?
Embarcation de pêche échouée sur la vase de l'estuaire des rivières de Cayenne et de Montsinéry, bordé de mangrove en Guyane
L'estuaire des rivières de Cayenne et de Montsinéry, bordé de mangrove — © Cayambe (Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)

Preparing your fishing trip to French Guiana

French Guiana is a French overseas department (DROM): you travel with the euro, your ID card, and the +594 phone network. Félix-Éboué airport (Matoury) is the gateway. The yellow fever vaccine is mandatory, so plan for it several weeks in advance.

On the logistics side, a car is essential: the docks at Dégrad-des-Cannes, at Kourou, or the road to Saint-Laurent can’t be reached by public transport. Also bring mosquito repellent, a cap, high-factor sunscreen and closed shoes for the slippery mud.

To combine with your line outing

A fishing week pairs ideally with French Guiana’s must-sees: a free tour of the Guiana Space Centre at Kourou (and, with a bit of luck, an Ariane 6 or Vega launch), the Cayenne market and its Place des Palmistes, the Hmong community of Cacao, or a supervised swim. Our complete guide to French Guiana details day-by-day itineraries.

Where to stay between outings

After a day on salt water under a blazing sun, a comfortable, air-conditioned and well-located place to stay makes all the difference. Hostel Toucan offers holiday rentals and a concierge service in Cayenne, Rémire-Montjoly, Matoury, Kourou and Macouria, as close as possible to the departure docks.

Booking direct brings concrete advantages:

  • direct booking with no platform fees, hence a better price;
  • free cancellation up to 7 days before arrival, handy when rainy-season weather is uncertain;
  • WhatsApp support 7 days a week to point you to the right guide depending on the tide and season.

Discover our accommodation in French Guiana, ideally located for your early-morning departures. And if you own a property on the coast, our concierge service for owners takes care of everything while you fish.

In summary

Fishing in French Guiana has to be earned: muddy water, demanding tides, logistics to anticipate. But the fight of a sea catfish in the Mahury estuary, or the fine flesh of a grilled acoupa in the evening at the carbet, are well worth the planning. Aim for the dry season, book a registered local guide, set your outing by the tide, and set up your base camp in the right spot. The Amazonian coast will take care of the rest.

FAQ

What’s the best time to fish in French Guiana?

The dry season, from mid-July to mid-November, is ideal: calmer seas, clear skies and easier dock access. Whatever the period, set your outing by the tides: estuary fish bite mostly at the start of the rising and falling tides, and little at slack tide.

What fish can you catch on the French Guiana coast?

The stars are the red acoupa weakfish, feisty with delicate flesh, and the sea catfish (machoiran), a powerful, abundant marine catfish. You’ll also find jack, snapper, estuary dog sharks, and offshore around the Îles du Salut, big-game catches such as tarpon or mahi-mahi.

Do you need a guide to fish in French Guiana?

It’s strongly recommended. The shifting mud banks, the tides exceeding 2 metres and the murky water make navigation risky without local knowledge. A registered guide provides the boat, permit, gear, bait, safety (life jacket, VHF) and above all the ability to read the water that’s essential to find the fish.

How much does a fishing trip in French Guiana cost?

As a ballpark, count on €90 to €140 per person for a 4-hour half-day estuary trip, and €180 to €260 for a full coastal day with the Îles du Salut and lunch. Pirogue trips on the Maroni start around €120 for a half-day. Always confirm prices at the time of booking.

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