We experience predator fishing as a continuous journey, full of discovery, adrenaline, and pursuit. It’s a path that takes us to different places each time, bringing us into direct contact with nature and with our greatest passion: sport fishing lived in a modern, dynamic, and authentic way.
In recent years, we’ve been fortunate enough to turn this lifestyle into a shared project, bringing together four people with the same vision: to tell the story of fishing through images, sounds, and emotions. For us, it’s not just a technique or a hobby, but a way of experiencing the outdoor world, of moving, exploring, and facing challenges in ever-changing environments.
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From the Icelandic lakes of Thingvallavatn, where we chased large lake trout amid lunar landscapes and absolute silence, to the murky, wild waters of Ireland, home to mighty pike, every journey has taught us something. Then there were the Canary Islands, with their rugged coasts and marine predators that put our gear and endurance to the test: seabass and bonito striking with sudden power, giving us moments etched in memory.
What we seek is not just the catch, but the full experience that surrounds it. The journey, the waiting, the unpredictable conditions, the connection with the environment—all of it contributes to creating a story. For us, fishing has never meant stillness or boredom. It’s movement, exploration, and a constant challenge with nature and oneself. It’s the moment when the rhythm slows but attention sharpens, where every detail—a current, a reflection, a sound—can make the difference.
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Our work as videographers fits perfectly into this. Telling the story of fishing through images means balancing two goals that often overlap and conflict: living the moment and, at the same time, documenting it in the most authentic and engaging way possible. Every outing is a double mission: catching our target and transforming those hours of fishing into a story that conveys real emotions.
Behind every video we publish are long, often exhausting days, spent hours on a boat or walking along riverbanks, with changing weather, uncooperative light, and fish that sometimes seem to disappear. But it’s precisely this difficulty that makes everything feel more real. Managing rods, cameras, batteries, drones, sounds, and expectations simultaneously is not easy, but it allows us to tell fishing in a way that’s different—closer to the visual and dynamic language of other outdoor sports.
We want to show that sport fishing can also be cool, that it can speak to new generations through a modern language built on powerful images, genuine emotions, and deep respect for the environment. For us, a well-told fishing session is not just video content: it’s a way to show how rich this sport is in values and how it can bring people closer to nature in a time when we are too often distant from it.
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We live in an era where surfing, downhill biking, climbing, and many other outdoor sports are associated with a lifestyle of freedom, adventure, and connection with the elements. We believe predator fishing deserves the same recognition. It’s a discipline that requires knowledge, technique, sensitivity, and respect. Every choice, from the type of lure to the handling of the release, reflects environmental awareness that goes beyond the sporting act.
Over time, we hope the collective image of the angler will change. Too often, they are still seen as someone who waits, a static figure, almost on the margins of the sporting world. We want to help tell a different truth: that of someone who wakes up before dawn, faces harsh conditions, travels kilometers for a single fish, and does so with absolute respect for their surroundings.
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The modern angler is not an isolated person but part of an active community that observes, studies, exchanges ideas, and strives to leave a positive impact on the environment they operate in. Fishing, when approached mindfully, is a form of deep connection with nature. Every released fish, every piece of litter collected, every care for the habitat is an act that speaks louder than a thousand words.
We hope this approach becomes increasingly shared, and that sport fishing begins to be appreciated as a true outdoor discipline. More interested people mean more awareness, more attention to ecosystems, and, we hope, more resources to protect them. Nature has faced major setbacks in recent years, and if our passion can help—even in a small way—to reverse this trend, then all our effort will have been worth it.
In the end, for us, fishing is not just a passion, nor just a job. It’s a language. A way to tell stories about nature through our experiences, our images, and our emotions. It’s the thread that connects people who love water, fish, and everything around this world. And this is exactly what we want to keep doing: telling the story of fishing in a new, authentic, modern, and vibrant way.