Stuff We Like Inspired by our Travel
Fishing should be fun. Part of that is art and food and other things that don't put fish in the boat, but nevertheless make you enjoy the process more.
Etsy Unmentionables: Native Tongues
I’m not ashamed to admit that I love Etsy, the online marketplace for all sorts of crafts and collectibles. I’m also obsessed with arapaima (AKA, piraracu), the largest scaled freshwater fish in the world, and one that I intend to chase sooner rather than later with my friend Steve Yatomi.
Non-Charismatic Megafauna
We’ve caught lit-up sailfish by the dozens in Guatemala, no-two-are-alike peacock bass in the jungles of Brazil, and gorgeous leaping rainbows in Alaska – yet some of our favorite catches were of fish that many people would consider “ugly.”
Sailfish Shirts for Dining Out
While we still wear our time-tested sun-protective shirts and shorts on the boat, when it comes to dinner we feel the need to up our game a little bit. It’s not required, but it makes us feel a little bit more respectable.
Tattoo Tuesday Tasty Tuna
Yellowfin tuna are not only reportedly brutally strong, but they’re also one of the prettiest fish around, which makes them prime for tattoos. Here are some of the coolest ones I’ve found.
Measure Twice, Cull Once
There are all sorts of ways to document the length of your catch, including shirts with rulers and regulations built into their design (which may or may not account for shrinkage). Don’t stop there — other options abound.
Cubera Be, Cubera Bop
The stated purpose of our April 2021 trip to Panama is to catch big yellowfin tuna on topwaters, but I’m told that the beauty of the Gulf of Chiriqui is its multispecies bounty, including inshore beasts. Now that I’ve watched 8,342 videos about the place, I’m intrigued by Cubera Snapper, a gamefish that I previously was unaware even existed.
Throwback Shirts for the Hungry and Thirsty Angler
I’m a big fan of fishing t-shirts – I have over 50 of them – particularly if they somehow incorporate a pop culture reference. I’m also a big fan of food, so any time I can combine all of those interests into one comprehensive package it makes me pretty happy. Here are a few of the best ones I’ve seen.
No Picky Eaters
Food is a social lubricant, a way of learning about cultures and showing that you respect them. It’s also thrilling to find a new ingredient, dish or cuisine that you like. Furthermore, if you’re the dude who will only eat hamburgers, at some point you’re going to inconvenience your travel mates.
Know the Rules, Wear the Rules
I’d never heard of Jessie Jessup Apparel company of Florida until I came across their peacock bass t-shirt. If I haven’t already made it clear, I’m obsessed with peacocks and can’t wait to head back to the Amazon – ideally this December, if the damn virus gets out of the way.
Spread Fish It’s the Brooklyn Way
I have fond memories of going to visit my grandparents, who late in life lived on the beach, just about a mile from Sheepshead Bay. “Party boats” which would take you out fishing for a flat fee lined the waterfront along Emmons Avenue, and as a kid I recall later envying the anglers assembled at the base of the Verrazano Bridge as we made our way into Manhattan.
Unboxing My Payara Replica
My 30-pound payara was the fishing highlight of a very good year in 2019, and when my friend Leroy Boss got his replica before I got mine I was more than a little jealous. Two weeks later mine arrived from the great white north and it was truly worth the wait.
Fish or Click?
On our African safari in 2016 we were given an animal and bird checklist and because I’m competitive, it was critical for me to fill my book, to see each and every species. That led me to become really interested in shooting birds (with my camera).
A Year of Fishing Virally
I never imagined that Pete and I would develop a fishing and travel website together. The idea of working with your spouse is scary enough, but writing is his world, not mine. I avoid it like the plague. I didn’t know if we’d run out of things to write about. Would anyone be interested in what we had to say? And it didn’t seem helpful that we started it two weeks before an unforeseen pandemic hit.
Stocking Stuffers for the Traveling Angler
If you’re still stuck on what to get the traveling angler in your life this holiday season you’ve come to the right place. We’ve got suggestions on things that just about any of us can use, no matter where we’re headed or what species we’re chasing. Better yet, for purposes of this piece we’ll impose a spending cap of twenty bucks.
Reading, Writing and Ripping Lips
I’m a self-described book nerd and I have been since I was a little kid. Indeed, coming from a non-fishing family, the written word was my entrance into the sport. My parents bought me a subscription to Field & Stream when I was 9, and one to Bassmaster when I was 13. Reading about all of the different tackle, destinations and personalities lit a fire under me that hasn’t come close to burning out.
Pavo en El Paraíso
Happy Thanksgiving from the Half Cast First Cast staff from the Happiest Place on Earth – Anglers Inn Lake El Salto in Mexico! Wishing you a happy and healthy holiday wherever you are, and we hope next year at this time things are back to “normal.”
Little Red Rooster on the Prowl
I caught several roosterfish in Costa Rica’s Gulf of Papagayo in August of 1995, and haven’t had a chance to catch any more since then. That’s not to say that roosters haven’t been a part of my life since then – I married a chicken-obsessed redhead, so we have a kitchen full of rooster figurines, and somehow ended up naming our hyper Australian Shepherd “Rooster,” too.
No Slack
I don’t remember how I stumbled upon the shirts from online retailer Slackertide, but as an obsessive consumer of popular culture who also happens to fish, it was a godsend. Whether you want Willie Nelson, the Golden Girls, Jonah Hill, Rick James, Magnum PI or Cheech and Chong to accompany you on your next trip to the pond, they’ve gotcha covered.
Put a Little Tooth and Slime in Your Wardrobe
The musky dudes are a different breed. I say that out of respect and a bit of worry for their sanity. I’ve only chased those figure-eightable bastards a handful of times at Lake St. Clair, and have managed to get some of their slime on my clothing, but the whole experience left me questioning why grown men would devote their lives to chasing such evil fish – and that’s on a place where they actually catch ‘em. Woe be to him who spends countless hours on a musky fishery far less fertile.
One Love
I can find no photographic or documentary evidence that famed reggae singer Bob Marley liked to fish despite the fact that he was from a country surrounded by water. In 2012 an Arkansas biologist named a small Caribbean crustacean after him,that’s still not enough to make the connection. Nevertheless, if you’ve been waiting in vain to integrate a little Marley into your fishing game, you can certainly dress the part.