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Men’s Journal Van Tours: The $900 Pan-American GMC Safari
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.
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.
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.
Dodging Run-off in Northern Idaho
This past weekend I ran off to northern Idaho to join old friend Jake Gates for a bit of rainy-day spring fishing. Jake and I first met six years ago while working the season at Headhunters Fly Shop on Montana’s Missouri River. Mid-way through the season, Marley the stray Border Collie showed up, and she and Jake rather adopted each other, sleeping nights in Jake’s old Jeep at various fishing access points and days working around the shop. Over the years, we’ve all put a few miles on, but have found time to get together here and there to hit the water and catch up.
Here’s an excerpt from Chi Wulff when Marley first came around. I was writing a weekly series entitled “Dispatches from Craig” for the fishing blog, and it’s now an interesting diary of what was a whirlwind of a summer:
The undoubted highlight of the week has been the unexpected arrival of Marley the Border Collie. Marley showed up one morning, hanging around the shop and eventually crashing on the shop floor most of the day. Bearing no collar, it quickly became apparent she had wandered far from home or perhaps been left behind. We posted signs all over town and called contacts in the area, but no one seemed to know where she belonged.
As the days moved on, I showed up to work each day expecting someone to have come and claimed the perky dog. She remained, herding both the vacuum and the lawn mowers diligently, and seeming pretty content to watch as we washed boats and attack the hose whenever it stepped out of line.
One day I could not find her and eventually discovered her in the back of the building, hard at work guarding the two lawnmowers, making sure they didn’t start moving and ransack the shop.
Long story short, shop rat Jake has adopted Marley and she’s currently on a short road trip with him to Idaho visiting family.
So when Jake reached out a few weeks ago with the idea to meet up in Idaho and chase cutthroat, the answer was easy. And despite cold, rainy weather we fished hard, moving through the greenness of a new spring, talking about old times, dreaming about new adventures and—as tends to happen with certain people when on the river—discussing the serious points of life: philosophy, the “why’s” and the state of current events.
Marley remains more of a serious angler than most “fishermen” I know; she carefully watches the line, waiting for the tell-tale movement of a take, and continues to display an intensity on the river that rivals the most hardened angler. She has, however, finally learned what “fetch” is, happily bringing random sticks to play with; her amber eyes watching for the slightest inclination I might want to play her game.
Sitting around a damp, smoky fire, listening to the sound of the river echoing off the cliff behind our campsite, and Markey stalking around in the shadows, I reflected how incredible fishing is. Some of my best friends have been met in the strangest of circumstances; we’ve been united by a common love of the water and the fish that we spend our days chasing. It’s a funny thing when you think about it, but kind of beautiful in its strangeness.
Weekend Vibes
It’s another cold, sub-zero day here in Montana Yesterday, I laid all my fly boxes out on the floor and began the ritual spring sorting of flies. It didn’t help matters—it’s still too cold to fish here locally—but at least I could close my eyes and pretend I was somewhere tropical, eyes scanning turquoise waters for the tell-tale shadow of a fish.
And then I’d look out the window.
Anyway…
Hope everyone is enjoying a relaxed weekend (or charging hard off on some adventure). This image, made during a shoot with Alaska’s Bristol Bay Lodge, will somehow always embody “weekend vibes” for me. Sage, one of the best boat dogs I’ve had the pleasure to spend time with, would raise her head now and then to check on us anglers, sniff for bears and then plop her head back down on my Patagonia dry bag. Keeping the cameras safe, as it were. She was the definition of work hard, play hard, and it was lovely.