French Guiana, tucked between Brazil and Suriname on the northeast coast of South America, offers an unexpected blend of Amazonian wilderness, colonial intrigue, and French flair. As an overseas department of France, it uses the euro, speaks French, and has croissants alongside cassava bread at breakfast. Yet just beyond the cafés of Cayenne, vast rainforest stretches for hundreds of kilometers, home to rare wildlife, remote rivers, and Indigenous communities whose traditions have shaped this region for centuries.
One of French Guiana’s most famous sites is the Îles du Salut, or Salvation Islands, where visitors can take a short boat ride from Kourou and explore abandoned prison cells slowly being reclaimed by jungle, walk along quiet trails, and spot capuchin monkeys among the ruins.
French Guiana is also home to the Guiana Space Centre, one of the world’s most important spaceports. Located in Kourou, the facility launches satellites for the European Space Agency and other international clients. Scheduled rocket launches can sometimes be viewed from nearby beaches, and guided tours offer a behind-the-scenes look at the launch pads, control rooms, and massive transport vehicles. It's a fascinating contrast: cutting-edge aerospace technology in the middle of one of the world’s most biodiverse regions.