Ceviche Tours was founded to provide Sustainable Eco Tourism Services. We have a real Love for the Marine Environment that surrounds Isla Mujeres and Isla Contoy. This fragile Reef environment is part of the second largest barrier reef on the planet. Through Education and Photo Identification efforts, it is our goal to be part of a World Wide effort to protect and Preserve the Whale Sharks.
ON THE LAST DAY of March, 2007, as the sun began to dip in the sky, a group of 6 Isleño fishermen, their wives and a few American friends waited anxiously on a small beach of Isla Mujeres Bay, as the artist’s steady hand finished painting the name, CEVICHE II, on Cuco Sanchez’s brand new 29 foot fishing boat.
THE LAUNCHING had to take place before sunset because Cuco’s friend and collaborator, John Vater of New York, was leaving the next day after months of planning the transformation of a bare hull into a first rate fishing excursion boat. “We simply cannot put the boat in the water without the name on it: that would be bad luck”, John explained. Finally as the picture perfect, pink and orange sunset glowed on the horizon, friends heaved the bright yellow craft into the sea amidst splashing champagne and cheers of good luck. In some ways, this was a typical Isleño fishing scenario, but the story behind it is anything but typical, because this launching was only a chapter in the 19 year friendship between two men who say they are bound by “a shared passion for the sea and the marine environment around Isla Mujeres.”
LUIS REFUGIO “CUCO” SANCHEZ has acquired an intimate appreciation for the sea by earning his livelihood as a scuba diving guide, commercial lobster fisherman and sport fishing operator since he arrived on Isla at age twelve. John Vater also learned to love the sea while growing up in Massachusetts, the bayous of Louisiana and later serving in the U.S. Navy. Even now as a busy fashion photographer and entrepreneur in New York, he keeps his boat close by, the Ceviche I (named for John’s favorite Isla Mujeres seafood specialty). The two seamen met by chance during John’s first sport fishing excursion to the Yucatan in 1988, and both men agree, “We clicked immediately.” Unfortunately, Hurricane Gilberto struck the very next day separating the friends for two years. Since then they have fished together several times a year enjoying the abundant resources in the waters of Isla Mujeres. John also studied Spanish so he and his wife Adriana, a native of Colombia, were able to enjoy days with Cuco and his wife Elena among their close knit family and the vibrant community of Isla Mujeres.
WHEN JOHN RETURNED to Isla Mujeres after Hurricane Wilma in 2005, he saw the damage Cuco’s boat had suffered, and the two friends began dreaming about building a better equipped boat that would allow Cuco to compete for a share of the sport fishing and whale shark tourism. In November, 2006, Cuco picked up his 29 foot bare fiberglass hull in Cancun plus two new 60 hp motors. During the following three months, Cuco and twelve talented Isleño craftsmen proved their ingenuity acquired from years of working within the limited resources of a tiny island. Meanwhile, John helped from New York by sending innovative design suggestions. The result of their creative collaboration is a beautiful 100% original craft, custom made right on Isla Mujeres.
IN MARCH, JOHN AND ADRIANA arrived to join Cuco and friends for the finishing touches and to be on board for the launching. “Science proves that destructive hurricanes are also known to generate new life beneficial to the marine habitat,” John reflects. “It was auspicious that our friendship began just before hurricane Gilberto in 1988, and our collaboration on the Ceviche II was born out of the damage caused by hurricane Wilma seventeen years later. Now, I am pleased to report our friendship is stronger than ever.