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Jess McGlothlin

Sometimes Things Go to Hell

June 16, 2020 By Jess McGlothlin

Old ice house and railroad tracks in Celina, Texas.I’d never thought about having a “pivot” section of my business plan for a global pandemic. I never really considered what would happen if I couldn’t leave my home; if I couldn’t get on a plane and get places. Never planned for what would happen when the local market ran out of meat, or we couldn’t be around other human beings.

The business plan, the one I drew up eleven years ago with big aspirations, didn’t really account for what would happen when people became afraid of other people because of something we couldn’t see.

As I kid, I’d written a handful of fiction stories that touched on some of the same themes; words on paper for my reading only. About people adapting when the world changes rapidly and dramatically; surviving when the “ordinary” suddenly doesn’t exist. Can’t say I really expected to live something similar, and yet in a way so wholly unanticipated.

But here we are, in the something-month of a global pandemic, and the old paradigm—the one we’d all built our lives around—is gone. The world shifted dramatically within the space of weeks. New lines were drawn in the sand, new sides were taken. Fear became a fact of daily life for a while; mostly because true facts were scarce and, when they were available, they were buried. The world’s changed, and there’s no rule book.

Red, purple, blue, and pink sunset near Celina in north Texas.

My business, like so many others, is pivoting. Adapting. Changing. I’ll still be traveling as soon as it’s possible; camera in hand and notebook in my pocket. The why isn’t going to change. The how might shift for a while.

The 2020 work schedule was thrown out the window in March, when I got off the plane after a project in Chile, where I’d been wholly unconnected, camping in the Patagonian wilderness and far from the news cycle, and saw a year’s worth of trips, clients, and projects vanish in the space of a week.

It wasn’t a great week.

But we adapt. It’s what we do.

One of my favorite quotes, jotted into a notebook years ago (from a book long since forgotten), is this:

“Sometimes things go to hell – it’s a natural order of things, they simply can’t stay simple. The difference between a pirate and a sad slob of a man who thought he could be one is the nerve and ability to unfuck things when needed.

Or fucking them up, whatever the situation requires.”

And so, piece by piece, I’ve been working on unfucking my business world.

I’ve spent a lot more time writing, confined to my 550-square-foot apartment here in Missoula, working with a few clients I’m very grateful for. I’ve spent more time on video call these past three months than I’ve ever wanted to. My “desk” (in reality a Costco plastic folding table and a balance ball) offers those joining me on calls a scenic view of my camera gear shelving unit and, on occasion, a fly tying vise.

I’ve traveled within the United States to document current events, and caught weird little moment of history through the lens of a beaten camera. Empty airports and empty streets.

I was the only person waiting on the curb at a DFW Airport terminal in April, a camera in hand and a press pass in my pocket. It felt a bit like the apocalypse, but with a sunny wind in my hair and the smell of Texas instead of whatever I’d imagined as a child.

I spent long hours walking the streets of Missoula, seeing people cross the road to avoid waking next to me; worried to pass another human being on the sidewalk. I counted stuffed bears in windows, and soaked in children’s chalk scrawls on the sidewalk. I listened to countless hours of music while my brain worked.

We had an earthquake here in Missoula, on week six or eight or something (they run together now), and I remember watching a picture come off the wall, and watching with an odd sort of detachment. Thinking, “Okay, what next?”

I’m grateful to live near the tiny little airport here in Missoula. Early on I’d lay awake at night, listening for the planes that were due to land. I memorized the flight schedule—at one point less than four flights a day—listening for each incoming plane, and was grateful every time I heard the engines in the air. It meant something was still happening; someone was still flying somewhere. Now, the wildland firefighting planes have joined the other air traffic and I hear more planes overhead. Any time a firebomber with an orange tail crosses overhead I smile; remembering the old World War II firebombers than flew over northwestern Montana when I was a child. These newer planes carry a different sound, but they still bring back memories of a time that, these days, seems very long ago.

We adapt, don’t we? I’m exceedingly grateful to the clients who have shifted to writing work this spring instead of my normal writing / photography combination—you’ve kept me going. And I’ve never been more grateful for the blank page; one day last week I drank a French Press full of coffee and scrawled more than 14,000 words on the page before coming up for air. Nothing that will be published; nothing that will see the light of day. But words on paper, which means they’re out of my head. And that, these days, is a good thing.

One of these days we’ll be traveling again. It’s going to be each person’s decision what travel will look like for them. I’m ready.

I’m not sure what the future will look like, but I know I’ll still be here, camera in hand and notebook in my pocket, looking for stories.

Filed Under: Jess McGlothlin Media Tagged With: 2020, coronavirus, COVID, COVID-19, Jess McGlothlin, Jess McGlothlin Media, photographer, travel, traveling

Orvis Hunt Catalog Cover

May 12, 2020 By Jess McGlothlin

Woman putting out duck hunting decoys in the dark while waterfowl hunting in Pennsylvania, cover of Orvis Hunt catalog.I’ve always had a love / hate relationship with making images in the dark. Nighttime shooting requires full concentration and not a little bit of creativity, usually while navigating some random outdoor setting. In this case, shooting winter waterfowl hunting in Pennsylvania, it involved hiking through marshy swamps in the cold pre-dawn hours to set out decoys and wait for the dawn to break and—hopefully—bring in the ducks.

This image was shot as b-roll during an assignment for onX Hunt photographing / writing about goose hunting in the Northeast, and I’m really pleased to see it make the cover of an Orvis catalog. Just goes to show that frozen fingers are usually worth the trouble!

Filed Under: Published Tagged With: catalog, cover, decoy, duck, hunt, hunter, hunting, Jess McGlothlin Media, Orvis, Pennsylvania., photograph, waterfowl, woman

Taking the Best of UPF Clothing with Men’s Journal

May 4, 2020 By Jess McGlothlin

Slowly, slowly… it’s beginning to feel like spring in the West. Eventually we’ll hit the hot, glorious days of summer (I’m so ready). In anticipation of the eventual arrival of summer, I gathered together a few of my favorite sun protection pieces for Men’s Journal. Give it a read, then let me know what your go-to piece of summer clothing is.

Filed Under: Published Tagged With: article, best, clothing, equipment, gear, Jess McGlothlin Media, list, Men's Journal, summer, sun, sun protection, UPF

New Series: Top 10 Photo Tips for Outdoor Adventurers (Who Find Themselves Currently Inside)

April 8, 2020 By Jess McGlothlin

Spring is here, and summer is on the horizon. Usually, this transition means it’s high time to get out and play. Hikers and backpackers would be logging their first hikes of the season, trail runners would be bemoaning muddy trails, and spring hunters would be preparing for turkey season. For anglers, waders would soon be stowed in favor of wet wading, iced rod guides would become a nightmare from seemingly ages past, and sunburns would be sated with bountiful beers with buddies after a long day on the water.
 
Current events and the disruption of COVID-19 have impacted everyone in different ways. One thing we can all unite around is that, at least for the moment and the months to come, it’s changed the way we recreate. For folks like myself, whose livelihood depends on time spent in airplanes and the ability to travel and work abroad, the past month has been a paradigm-changer.
 
We’ll see how it all shakes out.
For the interim, it’s time to turn our focus from grand international expeditions to the work we can accomplish at home. My 550-square foot Missoula, Montana, apartment has functioned as a makeshift photo studio for some time, but the past month it’s seen overuse (to put it lightly). For those of you with larger homes or even yards to play in (or if you live in spartan quarters like mine and want to get creative), I’ve decided to break down my top ten photography tips. These tips will be shared on my Instagram and Facebook pages, and I’ll likely compile them all here on the blog once the series is finished. 
 
Because really, there’s no time like the present to polish up some skills.
 
Thanks to modern technology, it’s possible to take high-quality images with the phone you carry in your pocket. It’s no longer necessary for casual adventurers to carry around the 20+ pounds of gear professionals often must. Regardless of whether you’re shooting an iPhone or DSLR camera, the key to strong images is how you shoot, not what you shoot.
Men in camo gathered around a computer looking at footage in a wall tent camp while turkey hunting in Montana.
Whether you are an aspiring professional photographer looking to boost your skills or a currently home-bound outdoor recreation enthusiast with a penchant for the artistic side of things, the basics are the basics.
 
Over the next ten days I’ll be sharing a tip each day that you can practice at home. Images from past travels will illustrate each point, but every tip will have something you can practice at home, regardless of whether home is a small urban apartment or a mansion in the woods.
 
Each day, leave a comment and let me know what you learned, what surprised you, or what tactics you’ll take into the field once we’re all roaming the globe once again.

Filed Under: Tips and Tricks Tagged With: 10, class, coronavirus, course, COVID-19, day photographer, education, inside, Jess McGlothlin Media, photography, teach, tips

Chatting with The Fly Fishing Insider Podcast

April 7, 2020 By Jess McGlothlin

I had fun chatting with Greg at the Fly Fishing Insider Podcast a few weeks ago. We chatted about travel, gear, how to get started in the industry, what our industry might look like post-COVID-19, and more. The episode just came out; if you’re looking to burn a few minutes, give it a listen.

Filed Under: Jess McGlothlin Media Tagged With: fishing, interview, Jess McGlothlin, Jess McGlothlin Media, photography, podcast, recording, talk, The Fly Fishing Insider Podcast., travel, writing

Men’s Journal Van Tours: The $900 Pan-American GMC Safari

April 2, 2020 By Jess McGlothlin

Men's Journal article about Zach Lazzari driving a fan and fishing through Central and South America, and fly fishing in Chile with a dog and a van.Had no idea this Chile shoot in February with Zach Lazzari and Skylar Lamont would be the last travel for a while. Most of these assets are on hold for another client, but really excited to see this “Van Tours” feature run on Men’s Journal, talking about Zach and Shale’s epic adventure through the Americas, fishing along the way.

Man fishing a river in Chile and man holding trout caught while fly fishing in Chile.

Zach and Shale are two of the coolest travelers I’ve had the pleasure to meet, and it was such a pleasure to be able to head down to Chile and join them for one of the final weeks of their epic trip. This pair accomplished a hell of a trip over the past couple years… give the article a read for the full story.

Here’s a quick excerpt:

With each road bump, dust puffs up to coat the van’s driver, Zach Lazzari, and his co-pilot, Shale. The 11-year-old dog serves as traveling companion, nighttime guard, curious conversationalist, and convenient icebreaker: She’s an impossibly fluffy red mutt whom Lazzari found a decade ago in a Montana animal shelter. There, in a building full of dogs needing homes, Shale was the only one who ignored Lazzari. He knew it was meant to be.

Jess McGlothlin for Men's Journal. Man relaxing in a GMC Astro Van while camping and fly fishing in Chile.

The pair have been living in Lazzari’s tattered GMC Safari van since September 2018, when his marketing automation job at a Missoula, Mont., tech company began to feel more soul-sucking, and less like a job he could tolerate. He decided it was time to revisit an old dream: take the long drive down to visit the rivers he’d grown to love since his last season working as a fly-fishing guide in Chilean Patagonia in 2016, with Shale as his traveling companion. Along the way, he’d explore new water and fish corners of the world far, far removed from most fly anglers’ purview.

Lazzari quit his job and bought the 1994 Safari, abandoned in a Missoula alley, for a grand total of $900. It took merely a month for a quick build-out of basic living quarters…

I very remember coming back to Santiago after a week pretty well removed from the world and standing, filthy and in need of a shower, in the airport and watching the news. It was the first week of March, and in the space of a few weeks the world had started a dramatic change. Now it’s the first week of April and this trip feels like a lifetime ago. I still have faith that sometime this year we’ll be traveling again, and I’m already looking forward to the next adventure with Zach, Shale, and Skylar.

Thanks for reading, folks.

Jess McGlothlin for Men's Journal. Dog with man and woman in raft while fly fishing in Chile.

 

Filed Under: Fishing, Published Tagged With: article, assignment, Chile, dog, fishing, fly fishing, journalism, magazine, Men's Journal, photography, published, story, travel, trout, van, van life

New Work: Ad for onX Hunt

March 31, 2020 By Jess McGlothlin

Jess McGlothlin upland hunting photograph in an ad for onX Hunt.Quick little post here. Like most of us, like has been fairly turned upside-down these past few weeks. As we all adjust to the new normal of COVID-19, I’ll still be posting a bit here, and certainly on my Instagram. This will pass, like most things do, and some day we’ll be traveling again. Until then, I’ll do my best to provide a little armchair travel on that Instagram feed.

In the meantime, here’s a quick look at a recently-published ad for onX Hunt, using an upland hunting image that was shot on assignment with onX autumn before last right here in Montana.

Stay safe and healthy out there! Here’s to enjoying travel and fishing through an entirely new lens once this passes.

Filed Under: Published Tagged With: ad, hunting, Jess McGlothlin, Jess McGlothlin Media, onX, onX Hunt, photo, photograph, photography, upland, upland hunting

A Quick Note to Those Postponing Trips

March 24, 2020 By Jess McGlothlin

Definitely ready to get back in the field again. Like many of you, my world has changed pretty drastically these past few weeks, and Q2 and even Q3 plans and photo shoots have been canceled or postponed. For small businesses, it’s crushing. But this will pass, like most things, and I’m hopeful we’ll all bounce back in time.

Quick note, folks: if you’ve had to change travel plans due to recent events, please consider deferring your lodge stay or guide trip instead of cancelling. We all know the travel industry is struggling right now, but this virus will pass and one day we’ll be traveling again. Support those people who help make travel moments great, and book for the future.

Okay, PSA done.Jess McGlothlin drone image of girl fishing open highland field in Tasmania.

Image: Tasmania, October 2019.

Filed Under: Jess McGlothlin Media Tagged With: coronavirus, COVID-19, fishing guides, guides, help, Jess McGlothlin, lodges, travel, travels

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It’s always worth waking up before dawn when I’m on a lodge shoot. (Coffee tastes better when it’s still dark out, too.)

Last week in Belize for @elpescadorbelize.
I’ve got just one spot left to join me from Febr I’ve got just one spot left to join me from February 2-7, 2025 in Argentina on the @goldendoradorivercruiser! This mothership-based golden dorado program is a great winter break and offers some of ridiculously fun fishing, excellent cuisine, and comfortable quarters with good company. DM me for more info to grab this last spot; it’s well worth the $4,200.

📷: me and @martinanderssen, last season.
Grateful for wide open waters and the people who c Grateful for wide open waters and the people who choose to make their living on them. 

Image: Belize last week for @elpescadorbelize.
Despite the pretty massive challenges 2024 has bro Despite the pretty massive challenges 2024 has brought, I’ve been so damn grateful to have gotten to meet and work with incredible folks all over the world, in some pretty stellar fisheries. January and February were Argentina, visiting lodges I can’t wait to get back to in a few months to see friends. March was Baja and Las Vegas. April and May were the Darien Gap in Colombia. June brought me back here to Montana to shoot a friends wedding and a couple fishing jobs, and then it all came to a screeching halt with an injury. I canceled eight international shoots in all, spending August and September in Texas having surgery instead of abroad. But November’s brought me back to the road with a return trip to Belize, and I’m keenly looking toward to what 2025 brings. It’s going to be a sprint… and a marathon. A sprinting marathon? We’ll see.

I just know I can’t wait to be back on the water with both new and old friends, capturing stories and chasing fish. 

Thanks for following along, all. Grateful for you.

(Photo credit on the final shot goes to the awesome @highpeaksrep, who caught me on the other side of the camera this past May in Colombia.)
Posted @withregram • @elpescadorbelize Well, tha Posted @withregram • @elpescadorbelize Well, that’s all from me, folks! About to board my flight back to the States. Thanks for following along this week as I’ve been shooting and fishing at @elpescadorbelize. If you’re looking for a fishing getaway this winter, put Belize on your list. This crew will take good care of you. 

If you’re seeking more on fishing, travel, and what happens when the two combine, follow along at @jess_mcglothlin_media. Thanks for joining me this week, and I hope to run into you all down in Belize one of these days!
Ten weeks ago I was learning how to walk normally Ten weeks ago I was learning how to walk normally again after endoscopic spine surgery at @texasback. Four weeks ago I started to slowly add weight workouts back into my PT and training routine. Today, I am on the tail end of my first trip back on the road, on a shoot down in Belize for @elpescadorbelize. Though I’m still a bit limited on my activity, I’ve grateful to have snuck in a few days fishing with friends. This tarpon, caught while fishing today with @jrflyhighbaby and @portillomariano7, isn’t my biggest by a long stretch, but it’s going to forever be a memorable fish as it marks a (still slow) return back to work. 

Some things are meant to be. We were about to reel up and check another spot, and I asked Junior to wait a moment; I wanted to throw one more cast… something just told me it might not hurt. And you know what? It didn’t. This tarpon came up out of nowhere and smashed my home-tied purple-and-white tarpon toad. 

Thanks @jrflyhighbaby for the picture and the day, to @peterdermanmd and his team for a surgery very well done, to @epicflyfish for making a very fun fiberglass rod for tarpon, and to the entire @elpescadorbelize team for welcoming me back… always feels a bit like coming home.
I’ve learned it’s best to embrace and work wit I’ve learned it’s best to embrace and work with the conditions on any given day—with the cameras, fishing, and just about everything else. So when the light is bright, hazy, and full of glare, we adjust and work with it. 

@elpescadorbelize manager @ebenschaefer hooked into a snook a few days ago here in Belize.
Awesome to be back to work, back on the water, and Awesome to be back to work, back on the water, and back in Belize. I’m down at @elpescadorlodge this week doing a bit of photo work and an Instagram takeover for the lodge. 

Yesterday was my first day fishing since injuring my spine in June, which led to surgery September 10. I’m incredibly grateful I’m able to be back on the water (saltwater flats, no less) at 10 weeks post-op—we had this snook (and a lot of his buddies) in the first hour on the water! I’m still on very modified duties (careful of fast boat runs on choppy water, twisting while casting, and bending awkwardly), but being back on the water is good for the soul. 

Y’all know me… I’m usually behind the lens, not in front of it—and I’m happiest there. But consider this post proof of life. 😆 I’m slowly getting back into the field once again. 

Big thanks to guide @mikey_so_fly and Shawn for a good first couple days back on the water. Working at the lodge tomorrow for an architectural shoot, and then have a few more days of fishing. All’s well here in Belize.
And off we go again. I’m finally (and very car And off we go again. 

I’m finally (and very carefully) back on the road, (slowly) resuming work after a summer / fall of injury-surgery-recovery. I’m still somewhat limited in my activities, but am thrilled to be heading to familiar waters at @elpescadorbelize for a week of photography and fishing. The fishing program won’t be quiet my usual—no targeting the big tarpon this trip—but I’ll be plenty happy to play around with other critters. Belize just had Tropical Storm Sara pass through last night, so we’ll see what the conditions hold. Stay tuned this week here on IG for daily IG trip report stories as I get back to work on the flats of Belize.

And if you’re in an airport and see a tall girl with a tan @pelican case covered in fishing stickers, say hello! I have a day of flying and five airports to hurdle through before I hit the dock at the lodge.
Getting close to final call on this trip! If you’re looking for a winter escape or feeling a bit celebratory, come fish Argentina in January. I’ll be at @estancialagunaverde on Lago Strobel January 25 - February 1, 2025, and have a few spots open for anglers. (I’ll also be offering basic photo instruction for those who are interested.) Join me as we fish for massive rainbow trout, enjoy the stunning scenery and epic fishing, and relax with excellent food and lodging. 

Pricing is $7,500 (7 nights / 6.5 days fishing); private room and shared guide. DM for more info.
Cheer on your people. And if the air temp’s belo Cheer on your people. And if the air temp’s below freezing, it just means your beer stays cold longer.

Image: @katmai_sky toasts to a fun, frigid girls’ day on the Missouri River. Montana, March 2023.
Happy 135th birthday, Montana. Image: Missouri Ri Happy 135th birthday, Montana.

Image: Missouri River, Montana. Summer 2013.
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