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You Booked a Saltwater Trip… Now What?

May 15, 2022 By Jess McGlothlin

As a general rule, anglers are passionate folks. Often our identity rolls right up into our passion for fishing… it becomes a core part of our being. But I’ve found that passion often doesn’t correlate directly into a willingness to put into the work. Spending more time working at saltwater lodges over the past years, I’ve been curious to see a lot of people showing up to their “trip of a lifetime” with no idea of what lies ahead.

There’s something to be said for the unexpected. But it also pays to do a little bit of research before hopping on a plane and flying to another country to fish (or to do anything, really). And I’d argue that if you’re spending a good bit of change on a trip, taking up a guide’s time, and just generally want to have a decent time on the water, a bit of preparation is going to help.

Bonefish fish caught while fly fishing in Belize at El Pescador Lodge.

I’ll preface this piece with the fact that I did not grow up in the salt. I’m a Montana trout girl, who grew up chasing trout and grayling in the waters of the West. I had a few chances to chase salty species as a teen, and then — strictly due to photography work and the place sit takes me — I’ve been able to fish the salt around the world as an adult. For the past decade and a half, I’ve taken notes, learned from guides, and spent many long hours casting in Montana parks trying to perfect my double-haul. I didn’t grow up fishing salt, and I’m still learning. But like all good things in life, it’s worth the effort.

So here are five quick tips to keep in mind if you’re heading to fish the saltwater for the first time:

1) Casting Practice

At least have an acquaintance with the double haul. It’s okay if you can’t do it well, but watch a few videos online, play with it, and understand the benefits of increased line speed and control. Lay a few hula-hoops at 30, 40, and 50 feet and practice casting into them, so you’ll have an idea of distance when your guide tells you, “Ten o’clock, 50 feet!” and the boat’s in chaos. If you’re crushing that drill, string in hula-hoop vertically from a tree, and practice shooting line forward through the hoop. The more you can compress your loop, the better control you’ll have.

2) Understand Gear For the Destination

Not all saltwater fisheries are the same, just as all trout fisheries are a little different. Know what gear is requisite for the place you’re going to fish. I like to travel with a 8 and 10-weight rod — at minimum — both ready with floating and intermediate or sinking lines. I keep both coldwater and tropic saltwater boxes stocked. There’s some overlap in patterns, of course, but have a divide by location helps prevent me from having to pack the entire kit for every trip. Come prepared with terminal tackle (leaders, tippet, etc.) as well… do your research into the location’s fishery. Will you need wire? Maybe. Will you need 80-lb. mono? Possibly. Lodges and booking agencies should supply you with a packing list including suggested tackle, and if you’re on a DIY trip, research online. You’ll likely find some ideas. 

Two men fly fishing in Belize from a panga boat beside a mangrove island.

3) Educate Yourself on the Fishery

Come prepared with at least a basic knowledge of the fishery. There are very few locations these days where you can’t find information online about the fishery and the location… and when I’ve gone on a few exploratory trips with no information online, I’ve still been able to research other waters in the region. Know if there are crocodiles around. Are blacktop sharks an annoyance? What are the tides like? What kind of weather patterns can you expect, and what will the wading conditions be like? An hour of research can help you understand what you’re getting yourself into.

4) Take Care of Yourself on the Water

This seems to be a sticking point for a lot of anglers I’ve seen over the years. It’s easy to geek out over your gear, obsess over the fishing, and then forget that your physical ability is a key part of that equation. Tip number one? Hydrate. Drink a ton of water on the boat. (Side note: get used to peeing while out on the water. Guys, you have a big advantage here. Celebrate it.)

I get through at least one packet of electrolytes on the boat, along with a lot of plain water. I also limit myself to two boat beers a day… it’s too easy to become dehydrated otherwise, and I’d rather be on my top fishing and/or photography game. (There’s always the bar once you’re off the boat, if that’s your cup of tea.) I love bringing along a few caffeinated electrolyte Clif Shot Blocks and sticking them in the cooler. Midday, when it’s hot and miserable, they’re hard, frozen little bursts of caffeine and salt. Voke Tabs are also a great little caffeine hit, and take up virtually no space in your bag. Cover up skin with either clothing or sunscreen, and reapply the latter often. (Especially on the triangle of skin between your thumb, pointer finger, and wrist. That skin somehow always gets burned.)

Permit caught while fly fishing in Belize.

5) Be a Smart Traveler

Common sense seems to be very uncommon these days. Practice basic security measures. Keep only the minimal amount of cash in your wallet, and have at least one backup stash spread throughout your bags in unexpected places. (It’s a good idea to keep a backup credit card in one of these places as well.) Keep both hard and digital copies of all your travel paperwork — passport, visas, booking information, health information, etc. Don’t drink any unbolted water unless you’re absolutely certain it’s safe. Carry a decent medial kit with you (I detailed mine in this two-part blog post); even if you’re in a country where you think you can buy first-aid supplies if needed, what happens if the store is closed? Be prepared to take care of yourself and others. 

6) Bonus Tip: Don’t Be That Guy

By its very nature, fishing is a hit-or-miss activity. When everyone gathers at the bar at the end of the day, the guy next to you might have landed a Grand Slam, where you hardly saw anything other than a single school of bonefish. It doesn’t mean you had a bad guide. It doesn’t necessarily mean the other guy is a better angler. Some days it’s just not your day, no mater how much work you put into it. Fish will be fish. Don’t get pissed off about it. Don’t blame your guide because you “Didn’t see fish.” (Chances are the fish were there, and your guide saw them, but knew you couldn’t cast that far. At the end of the day, the guide can put an angler into fish, but the responsibility of catching falls to the angler’s skill. (Hence Tip #1 being at the top of this list.)

This is all common-sense stuff… just use your head. Most of all, enjoy the trip, and be willing and ready to learn from your guides (to this day, I still carry a little notebook and jot down casting tips or learnings every day I’m on the water). Fishing and travel on their own are two very good things, and when combined, they’re one of the very best things about life. Go forth and enjoy!

Filed Under: Fishing Tagged With: Belize, destination, fishing, fly fishing, help, lodge, saltwater, tips, tips & tricks, travel, travel tips, tricks, tropical, tropics

A Note to Aspiring Writers

April 3, 2022 By Jess McGlothlin

I feel absolutely unqualified to tell anyone how to write, as good writing is a deeply personal thing. But several of you have sent in messages and emails asking about writing, so here we are. While my standard pitch will always be “Pick up a pen and put words on paper… work through it” (just as “Pick up a camera and go” is my advice for photographers), here are three things I always try to keep in mind when writing:

Write like you talk. Stop worrying the words on the page. If you’re looking through the Thesaurus for a fancy-sounding word to dress up your writing, stop. If you wouldn’t use it in spoken English, don’t write it. Think about the cadence of the spoken word. How do you form your sentences? See if you can capture that tempo on the page.

Be honest. Writing—good writing—isn’t for the faint-hearted. You’re putting a private part of yourself out there into the world. It encourages you to do things worth writing about… to get out into the world, meet people, get a little banged up, and tell a story in the process.

Embrace the chaos. Don’t wait for a quiet coffeehouse playing the right kind of music, or for the morning sun to hit your breakfast table just right. Don’t be fussy with your location. Carry a notebook and pen wherever you go, and just pick up the pen. Open the notebook. Poke at the paper a bit. Write. Write a grocery list. Something. Just put stripes of ink on paper. Words will come, and those word will become paragraphs.

 

Filed Under: Jess McGlothlin Media, Writing Tagged With: how to, how to be a travel writer, Jess McGlothlin, Jess McGlothlin Media, tips, tips & tricks, travel, travel writer, writer, writing

Find Space Film with Peak Refuel

March 30, 2022 By Jess McGlothlin

When the guys at Peak Refuel and Muddy Shutter Media reached out last autumn and asked how I felt about being featured in a short film, I had mixed emotions. For someone who makes a point to not be an “influencer” — I’d much rather tell other peoples’ stories — being on the far side of the lens was a new experience. But I respected and like the team, so said, “Why the hell not?”.

This past weekend, this short film premiered up at Sundance Mountain Resort, and I got to spent time with some of my favorite industry folks while talking photography, fishing, hunting, and all the good things in life. It was yet another reminder that good things tend to happen when we step outside our comfort zones.

Big thanks to Peak and MSM for inviting me to be part of this… looking forward to the next adventure!

Filed Under: Jess McGlothlin Media Tagged With: film, fishing, fly fishing, Jess McGlothlin, Jess McGlothlin Media, Montana, Peak Refuel, Peak x Peak, photography, travel, video, writing

Field Ethos Journal: Tasmania’s a Devil

March 23, 2022 By Jess McGlothlin

First two pages of a story about fly fishing Tasmania by Jess McGlothlin in Field Ethos Journal.

Really chuffed to see this piece in the premiere volume of The Field Ethos Journal. I’ve been writing short, online pieces for the FE team and jumped at the chance to pen something longer for their first print issue. And what better to write about than surfing brown trout, snakes alongside awesome trout streams, and some of the coolest fishing-industry folks I’ve come across? Tasmania seems tailor-made for storytelling, and I’m keen to get back one of these days and keep exploring.

Thanks to the FE team for this ten-page feature, including a few gorgeous spreads.

Filed Under: Fishing, Published Tagged With: article, Australia, brown trout, Field Ethos, Field Ethos Journal, fishing, fly fishing, Jess McGlothlin, magazine, McGlothlin, print, story, Tasmania, travel, trout

Talking Fishing and Photography With the B&H Podcast

October 1, 2021 By Jess McGlothlin

It was a great pleasure to sit down with @t.nolan.imagery and the team behind the B&H Photo Podcast — @jrockfoto and @allanweitz — to talk fly fishing, travel, and outdoor photography. I’ve shopped B&H since the beginning of my photographer career, and we had a very fun time recording this podcast! Toby is on top of his game, and we had a fun conversation with the B&H team about our strange little fly-fishing industry, the gear we use in the field, and more. Now we just have to get the same group back together and hit the water somewhere!

Click here to give the podcast a listen, and let me know what other topics you wish we’d touched on.

Filed Under: Jess McGlothlin Media Tagged With: B&H, B&H podcast, fishing, photo, photography, podcast, travel

Andiamo Firenze

September 26, 2021 By Jess McGlothlin

The Arno River in Florence, Italy, with bridges including the Ponte Vecchio.

It finally happened. In early August, after 18 months of relatively steady travel, I finally caught the c-bug. And it knocked me for a bit of a loop. August was largely a blur; sleeping a lot and managing my symptoms solo in my little Missoula apartment. I lost all sense of taste and smell, and things got a little strange for a while. (As always, very grateful for family members in the medical field who could give savvy advice.)

Realistically, it’s a bit of an inevitability, and I’m very glad to now have the natural immunity. It’s amazing what our bodies can do, even if we have to help them along sometimes.

Being sick gave me a lot of time to think. In the last 18 months, I’ve spent less time working in person with teams, and more time staring at a computer screen than ever before. And it’s shitty. Don’t get me wrong — I’m very, very grateful for the ability to be able to work from anywhere, but I’m also a very firm believer in face-to-face work. There’s something about a good, old-fashioned handshake that doesn’t translate over Zoom.

It was also a good reminder to take opportunities while you have them. With a positive test in hand, I had to cancel another stint as the Guest Fishing Director at El Pescador Lodge in Belize. Another trip canceled due to the pandemic. Less human interaction, more time solo in my apartment.

In this age of dehumanization and separation, I realized it’s more important than ever to celebrate those things that are inherently human… Art. Food. Travel. 

And so, as soon as I felt well enough to do so, I bought a ticket to Florence.

Rape of the Sabine Women statue, photographed at night with people in the Piazza della Signoria in Florence, Italy.Why Florence? Why Italy?

I wanted a place totally removed from usual fishing-centric destinations. A place where I didn’t speak the language at all, where I could just wander a city for days, finding my own adventures. Some place with fresh, good food.

Somewhere that would remind me of just how transitory we are.

And so I headed to Florence. I walked miles each day down old cobblestone streets, camera in hand, shooting what I wanted to shoot, not fulfilling a client assignment. I ate gelato every day, and found a new favorite way to cook tripe. I sat under statues that have seen so many centuries pass by; so many pandemics and wars and dramas. I bought coffee and a pastry every morning and sat in the shadow of the duomo, watching the city wake up.

And one day, I booked a ticket to Rome and logged 14 miles on foot, exploring the city. Just because I could.Equestrian statue of Cosimo I in the Piazza della Signoria in Florence, Italy, photographed at night.

I’m back stateside now; actually in Austin, Texas, as I write this, for a quick client trip. I’m missing the tastes, smells… the air in Italy. But getting ready for a very busy autumn — three trips / projects coming up in October alone — and determined to make the most of whatever’s thrown my way.

Life is very strange right now. So find the little victories. And keep fighting for those things that make us human.

Filed Under: Travel Tagged With: 2021, coronavirus, COVID, Florence, Italy, pandemic, photography, solo female travel, solo travel, travel

Talking Photography, Fishing, and Travel With South Africa’s “The Mission” Magazine

April 29, 2021 By Jess McGlothlin

woman fly fishing on stormy day, fly rod and fly at her feet on boat

I had a great deal of fun chatting with Tudor Caradoc-Davies, the editor of South Africa’s “The Mission” Magazine, a few months ago. It was a cold, snowy morning in Missoula and I’d just gotten back in from swimming early morning laps. Tudor, on a warm South African evening, was preparing to go do the same after our conversation… outside, in the sun.

One of the most interesting ironies of the fly-fishing realm is that fishing, really, is a thread that connects people who otherwise would likely never have met. Tudor and I first met in a hotel bar at the IFTD Show, and now have reconnected several years later. It’s always a great pleasure to chat with another writer, and we had fun chatting thanks to the world wide web.

The article was just published, and huge thanks to Tudor and his team for making my mishmash of a life seem like an interesting tale. Give it a read here, starting on page 68, and enjoy a few pictures from around the globe to go along with the tale.

woman taking photo with a drone in Tasmania

In other news, I’m currently sitting on the deck of the Delta Sky Club in the Salt Lake City Airport, on my way back to Belize to work as a fill-in Fishing Director at El Pescador Lodge for a few weeks. I’ll hopefully be sneaking in some photography and fishing time, so stay tuned on social media for updates!

Filed Under: Published Tagged With: article, fishing, fly fishing, photographer, published, The Mission, travel, woman, writer

Back to Belize

March 10, 2021 By Jess McGlothlin

Two men talking on a flats fishing panga boat in Belize while fly fishing.It’s been a hectic Q1. (Okay, really it’s been a hectic year, since the world went topsy-turvy in March 2020.) Now, a year later, we’re still muddling through it.

I was fortunate enough to kick off 2020 with another visit down to Belize’s El Pescador Lodge to continue shooting saltwater fly-fishing imagery. Between hosting a group of anglers for a week, working as a producer for a videographer, and shooting my own work for El Pescador and several editorial clients, it was a hectic visit but—as always—a good one. (Stay tuned for two editorial features about to drop, covering the reopening of Belize and what both travel and fishing look like there now.) The weather was uncooperative for the most part, but we made the most of it and our rain gear got plenty of mileage.

Then it was back to Montana, settling back into what’s become my routine of lap swim in the early morning, come back to the apartment to work until lunch, go for a walk or run, work the afternoon, then rinse, repeat, and do it all over again. It’s feeling an awful lot like Groundhog Day, but there’s light on the (far) horizon.

Two flats bots pangas at the dock at El Pescador Lodge in Belize ready to go fly fishing.

I’ve been asked to head back down to El Pescador in May to fill-in as Fishing Director for a few weeks. Excited to get back down into the salt and slip into the now-familiar routine of what’s become rather a second home. (What is home, anyway? It’s an incredibly fluid concept, and mine certainly isn’t Missoula.)

So, if you’re looking for an escape, come hang and fish at El Pescador in May. I’m not hosting, nor giving a photo school, but would love to see some friendly faces in the tropics. Shoot me a note and I’ll give you the details!

Two Orvis fly fishing rods being rinsed clean after fly fishing in Belize in saltwater.

Filed Under: Fishing, Travel Tagged With: Belize, El Pescador, fishing, fly fishing, travel

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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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