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Egdorf says that women need to see other women fishing before they鈥檙e likely to try it themselves.
Egdorf says that women need to see other women fishing before they鈥檙e likely to try it themselves. (Photo: Jim Klug)

Fishing the Earth’s Last Paradise

In Confluence Films' new release, 'Providence,' Camille Egdorf returns to an Edenic tropical fishery that reopened to boat traffic after a tragic act of piracy

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Egdorf says that women need to see other women fishing before they鈥檙e likely to try it themselves.
(Photo: Jim Klug)

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Piracy wasn鈥檛 part of the fishing scene in Alaska and Montana, where grew up. Neither were saw-mouthed aquatic predators capable of chomping off a human foot. But fishing at Providence Atoll聽means confronting both.

Egdorf traveled there with fellow anglers and , plus production company聽 filmmakers聽Jim Klug, Chris Patterson, and Colin Witherill, to fly-fish the world鈥檚 most pristine tropical flats after they鈥檇 been closed to boat traffic for six years following a spate of attacks from Somali pirates. Providence Atoll is part of the Seychelles, an archipelago in the Indian Ocean 400 miles from Africa's east coast.聽

In October 2015, when the waters were deemed to be safer and the Seychelles temporarily lifted its moratorium on boat traffic, Egdorf, Babich, and Laubscher (who聽guided fishing trips to Providence Atoll prior to the attacks) returned with fly rods. Confluence documented the trip in its fifth full-length feature, , which premiered on聽October 15.聽

Providence Atoll is a fabled place. The relatively few anglers who have cast lines there issued reports of a fishery so healthy and vital that聽it seemed like a throwback to prehistoric time when fish鈥攊ncluding apex predators like giant trevally鈥攕wam in staggering abundance. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the Jurassic Park of the fly-fishing world,鈥 Egdorf told me a few days before the film鈥檚 screening. Bonefish, humphead parrotfish, barracuda, Indo-Pacific permit, giant trevally鈥攖he list of species that thrive聽here goes on and on, because there simply are no people around to mess things up.

鈥淵ou feel like you鈥檙e the only people on planet Earth, at the mercy of mother nature,鈥 Egdorf says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 probably the farthest I鈥檒l ever be from home.鈥

Which is saying something, given that Egdorf guides in Kamchatka, Russia,聽and Christmas Island, just south of Indonesia,聽and grew up in the Bristol Bay fishing lodge that her parents operated in Alaska. She spends a lot of time in far-flung places, but Providence Atoll was next-level. So was the jump from freshwater to saltwater fishing.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a big learning curve for me,鈥 says Egdorf. 鈥淓verything is bigger, faster, stronger, with more teeth.鈥 The 60-pound bumphead parrotfish that she caught in Providence has a beak that hooks hardly penetrate, and it poops green slime when it鈥檚 raised for a photo. Giant trevally are moody, 100-pound predators that gobble prey whole鈥攅ven juvenile turtles and dolphins鈥攁nd aren鈥檛 cowed by anglers.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of adrenaline that comes with going after big game in the ocean,鈥 Egdorf says.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a cool way for me to show other women that they can do this too,鈥 says Egdorf. 鈥淔ly-fishing is a male-dominated sport, but it鈥檚 getting more friendly to women. The development of women鈥檚 waders has been huge.聽Just ten years ago, women wore the exact same waders that men wore, and the fit was awful.”聽In 2013, several companies,聽including Patagonia, Redington, and Orvis,聽sank significant R&D into developing women-specific聽waders. In early 2014, Simms debuted the women鈥檚 G3 Guide Wader ($500), which is built like armor but tailored for ladies. 鈥淚t was a game-changer,鈥 says Egdorf. 鈥淚t鈥檚 durable, and made for the avid angler, but doesn鈥檛 look like a trash bag.鈥

Gear that fits gets more women into fishing. But mostly,聽women need to see other women doing it. 鈥,” herself a well-known guide and author, “has been a very positive role model for the industry,” Egdorf says. “She's聽taught a lot of women and inspired them to take up the sport.”聽

Now it鈥檚 her turn.

Lead Photo: Jim Klug

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