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What Travel to Belize Looks Like Right Now

October 18, 2020 By Jess McGlothlin

I’m just back from a shoot at El Pescador Lodge in Belize—my first international travel since March. This trip was a long time coming; I held a total of five different ticketings since July, as the reopening date for Belize continued to shift back. Finally, on 1 October, the country re-opened and I hopped a plane to head south.

Here’s a brief look at what international travel looks like right now:

  • Step 1: Get a rapid PCR COVID test within 72 hours of your originating (departing from your home destination) flight. I was able to do this in Montana, so the odds are you can do it where you live, too. There are also a number of companies now offering rapid tests by mail.
  • Download and fill out the Belize Health App. You’ll go through a quick questionnaire (it felt similar
    to a customs form, but with additional health questions), and be given a QR code, which you’ll have to show several times upon arrival at Belize City Airport. It took about five minutes to fill out the questionnaire and get my code. This must be done no less than 72 hours prior to your arrival in Belize.
  • My route to Belize was this: Missoula to Denver, Denver to Houston. Overnight in Houston. Then Houston to Belize City. Right now only United and American are flying to Belize (Delta supposedly will resume flights in late November). I’m not a fan of United, but the routing wasn’t bad and the overnight was easy in Houston; I was able to book a Hampton Inn near the airport for about $70. Even before the COVID era, I didn’t have an option to get from Montana to Belize in a single day; my normal routing is on Delta with a red-eye through Atlanta. I’m a die-hard Delta flyer when possible, so I’ll resume that route when Delta is flying to Belize once more.
  • Honestly, I was just very, very happy to be flying and traveling once more. There are a plethora of sanitizing stations in most airports, and I felt very relaxed flying. Airports were still more quiet than they used to be, but are looking far busier than in April and May. I’ve always loved airports, and that certainly hasn’t gone away, even in this weird era we find ourselves in.
  • Upon landing in Belize City, we deplaned and queued up on the tarmac near the airport. Officials were very careful about spacing travelers out on the “social distancing” dots that had been placed on the concrete. I was the sixth from last person out of the airplane after a seat change from United that left me 14 rows away from my Pelican case in the overhead bin (thanks, United). Being at the very end of the line, I waited outside for about 50 minutes before making it inside the terminal.
    • Once inside the terminal, we moved through a “Hospitality Meet & Greet” room, where Belize Tourism Board team members greeted travelers, and verified that we’d downloaded the Health App and had a negative COVID test to present. Those with a negative test and healthy temperature were given a slip of paper with a green star on it. A red mark on the paper indicated that someone would need to take an on-site COVID test (available at a cost of $50 for those who chose not to test in advance).
      I did have a friend not receive his test results in time, and therefore was required to test in Belize City. He said the process was easy, quick, and pretty painless.
    • We were also given bight yellow bracelets to wear during the duration of our stay in Belize. These bracelets let locals know that the wearer is from outside the country. For a while Belize was only allowing travelers to stay at “Gold Star approved” lodgings that met rigorous health requirements, and the bracelets would help identify if anyone strayed off-property. As of mid-October, however, it appears travelers are no longer tied to the Gold Star properties.

      • After the health screening room, we were sent down a long hallway where test results and the Health App QR code were once more verified.
      • Once passing this secondary check, travelers proceed through Customs & Immigration as usual. This part of the process was quick and easy. All told, I was through the airport in about one hour and 45 minutes.
      • I was traveling on with Tropic Air to San Pedro, and so carried my luggage to the Tropic desk. I love this little airline; they accepted my three heavy bags full of photography gear with no questions, and I was sent on through to security for the domestic terminal. There was no line in security, and I quickly passed through.
      • In domestic departures, there was plenty of room for everyone to spread out and relax. I grabbed a cold water and waited about 20 minutes for my Tropic Air flight.

All in all, travel to Belize was easier than I’d expected. People were happy and friendly. I was last in Belize in February, and while the process feels quite different now, eight months (and what feels like several lifetimes) later, it was very doable and an encouraging first international experience after the arrival of COVID.

El Pescador is one of my favorite lodges around the world—it’s homey, and the staff and guides are like family. I’m planning a return trip this winter, and will readily jump through the travel hoops (we’ll see what the world presents us with) to get down to the saltwater flats once again.

And you know what, after seven months of not seeing angling pressure, the fish seemed pretty damn happy to see us, too. See a few images here.

New friends! We were very lucky to have a fun, savvy group of anglers at El Pescador for the opening week.

Filed Under: Travel Tagged With: airport, Belize, Belize City, Caribbean, COVID, current, fly, process, requirements, steps, travel, where

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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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