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In the first year, she built four digital magazine issues, each upwards of 200 pages, packed full of how-tos, expressive photography, and personal essays.
In the first year, she built four digital magazine issues, each upwards of 200 pages, packed full of how-tos, expressive photography, and personal essays. (Photo: Erin Wilson)

The Editor of the First Women’s Fly-Fishing Magazine

When Jen Ripple learned the rich history of female anglers, she thought it was about time they had their own publication

Published: 
In the first year, she built four digital magazine issues, each upwards of 200 pages, packed full of how-tos, expressive photography, and personal essays.
(Photo: Erin Wilson)

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Job: Publisher and editor in chief of
Home Base: Dover, Tennessee
Age: 50
Education: Bachelor鈥檚 degree in chemistry from the University of Wisconsin

Jen Ripple didn鈥檛 know what fly-fishing was when she stepped into a fly shop in Ann Arbor, Michigan, ten years ago. She was working for the University of Michigan and, with little else to do during the particularly cold winter, had signed up for a fly-tying seminar on a whim. 鈥淚 liked tying flies, so when the ice was off the river, I started fishing,鈥 Ripple says. Soon she was spending hours each week on the banks of Lake Huron. 鈥淎fter that, I just fell further and further into the black hole that is fly-fishing.鈥

Ripple was a mother of four in a sport that labels participants fly-fishermen, but that didn鈥檛 bother her. After moving to Chicago, she joined another fly-tying group, which was led by the editor of a new Midwestern fishing magazine called A Tight Loop. He hired her to write a column giving a woman鈥檚 perspective on the sport. 鈥淚t was mostly double entendre stuff,鈥 Ripple says. 鈥淥ne article I wrote was titled 鈥楽ex Hatch,鈥 and another one was 鈥楨ight Inches.鈥欌

Feeling stunted, she started looking for fly-fishing magazines aimed at women. There weren鈥檛 any. So, in 2013, without any other media experience, she started her own: DUN magazine, named for the just-hatched stage in the life cycle of a mayfly, one of the most famous flies in fly-fishing. In that first year, Ripple built four , each upwards of 200 pages packed full of how-tos, expressive photography, and personal essays. Every story was written by a woman.

The online issues were met with so much enthusiasm that she decided to make a print issue in the spring of 2017. 鈥淚 was talking with a friend of mine, a very respected man in the industry,鈥 Ripple says. 鈥淗e said, 鈥楯en, that鈥檚 great. You鈥檙e gonna have one magazine, and it鈥檚 gonna be wonderful. But you鈥檒l only ever have one magazine, because there aren鈥檛 enough women that fish.鈥 It didn鈥檛 even bother me, because I knew he was wrong.鈥 The fourth issue, produced by what is now a nine-person staff, hits newsstands this fall.

On the Best Advice She鈥檚 Received: 鈥淚t came from a National Geographic photographer, . He said, 鈥業t doesn鈥檛 matter what they鈥檙e saying as long as they鈥檙e saying something.鈥 I never imagined that the negative criticism out there about DUN was directed at me. I was just happy people were talking about the magazine.鈥

On Her Perfect Day: 鈥淚 would wake up in Punta Gorda, Belize, in this place called the Belcampo Lodge (recently renamed ). It鈥檚 the most beautiful place I鈥檝e ever been to. I鈥檇 walk down to the beautiful little restaurant, get a cup of coffee, smell the saltwater and hear the birds, and look out over the water and see fish right there. Then it鈥檚 into the skiff, racing across the water. You stand in the front of a flats boat with a fly rod in your hand for what seems like hours until the next bonefish or tarpon or permit comes along. You cast to them. And if you miss them, it doesn鈥檛 really matter. There鈥檚 just something about being out on the saltwater. I grew up on a lake in Wisconsin, and my Grandma always said when you live on a lake, you have water in your veins.鈥

On Her Favorite Piece of Gear: 鈥淭丑别 . It鈥檚 a duffel bag that turns into a backpack. I wear it when I fish, and I travel with it. It has a drysuit zipper and is completely waterproof. It saved my life when I was fishing in North Carolina. I was carrying my gear and had my Panga on my back. I slipped down an embankment and fell into a 15-foot ravine, at the bottom of which was the river. My waders immediately filled with water. I鈥檓 a really good swimmer, so I usually don鈥檛 get nervous in the water, but I knew I was in trouble. Then, all of a sudden, I realized the Panga on my back was floating. I turned it around and held it to my front and kicked to the shore. That was scary.鈥

On Her Best Fly-Fishing Tip: 鈥淚 remind myself that fly-fishing isn鈥檛 neurosurgery. It鈥檚 supposed to be fun. So I never get too worked up about it.鈥

On the First Female Fly-Fishing Writer: 鈥淚 love by Dame Juliana Berners. Dame Juliana was a nun of noble birth and wrote the book in 1496. I always thought she wrote it because she was a nun who was bored, had money, and liked to fish. Then I did the research and found out that鈥檚 not true. She likely wrote the book because in 1496, an activity had to be sanctioned by the church in order for you to do it. A priest had to have a document to bless in order to sanction it, and this treatise is that document that allowed her to fish.鈥

On the History of Women in the Sport: 鈥淲hen I first got into fly-fishing, I thought women were new to the sport. Then I found out we鈥檝e been here since 1496, and that the way we tie our streamer flies is attributed to a woman, and that the 鈥榖ait and switch鈥 method we use to catch billfish on the fly came from a woman. A woman was when Teddy Roosevelt fished there in 1878. The story of women in fly-fishing is huge. It gives me and the women in the sport now a foundation.鈥

On the Challenges of Being a Female Editor and Publisher: 鈥淚n the beginning stages, I realized it was just a good old boys鈥 club. Let鈥檚 just say that the ad guy responsible for a big manufacturer isn鈥檛 going to take a deal away from his friend who takes him fishing in the Bahamas, even if I prove to him that I could get him more business. That鈥檚 his friend. I might not like it, but it makes sense.鈥

On Attitudes Toward Women in Fly-Fishing: 鈥淭丑别re is, unfortunately, that vocal minority of men out there who say, 鈥業 don鈥檛 care if women fish. I just don鈥檛 want them on my rivers.鈥 Or, in the fly shop, the guy who says, 鈥楢re you here to buy something for your husband?鈥 But that鈥檚 so small. And it鈥檚 not really the whole reality of the sport, I don鈥檛 think. I spoke at a Chicago fly-fishing convention yesterday and asked for all the women in the audience whose father, son, or uncle got them into fly-fishing to raise their hands. It was like 99 percent of them. Often male figures are the ones who got a woman involved in the sport.鈥

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