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The Pride of Bristol Bay: The life and times of Grizzly Safaris’ Jerry Jacques
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF GRIZZLY SAFARIS’ JERRY JACQUES
BY BJORN DIHLE
When Jerry Jacques was 17, he ran away from California and hitchhiked to Alaska.
He had heard stories of his greatgrandfather and grandfather prospecting, trapping and living in the far north and he intended to follow in their footsteps. He spent the summer in Talkeetna guiding raft trips, but that fall, since he was still a minor, the state troopers sent him back to California.
A year later, after graduating from high school, Jerry was back in Alaska. His dream was to guide rivers in the summer and photograph wildlife in the winter. He had heard his grandfather had built a cabin near the headwaters of the Iliamna River, so he put together a light kit and hired a pilot to fly him in to spend the winter in the wilderness.
There’s never a dull moment when Jerry Jacques is leading Alaska wildlife photography tours to get within snapping distance of Bristol Bay’s iconic brown bears. Jacques left California at 17 for the excitement of the Last Frontier. (GRIZZLY SAFARIS)
TODAY, JERRY AND HIS family own and operate Grizzly Safaris (907-571-6524), based out of Jacques Adventure Lodge in the village of Iliamna. They specialize in guiding photographers after the region’s incredible population of brown bears. Going from a teenager nearly starving to death in the wilds to having a successful ecotourism business has been a long, interesting and lucky journey for Jerry. After surviving that first winter, Jerry was in a desperate state.
The river broke up in May and not long after, a Dena’ina man named Kevin Jensen appeared outside the cabin. Kevin had taken his boat as far up the Iliamna River as he could, spotted the smoke from Jerry’s cabin and went to investigate. Kevin promptly took Jerry home to Pedro Bay, a village on the eastern edge of Lake Iliamna where Kevin and his family lived.
“Kevin brought me into his parents’ home and said, ‘I found a stray Gussak. Can we keep him?’ The Jensen family saved me, brought me in and taught me everything I know. I was so lucky to be brought in and taught the Native way,” Jerry said.
The Jensens’ ancestors had lived in Iliamna Lake country since time immemorial. Carl Jensen, Kevin’s dad, suggested that Jerry join him in guiding sport hunters after the region’s brown bears and Dall sheep. There was good money in it, and Jerry’s dream of being a wildlife photographer hadn’t penciled out, so he signed on.
Carl was a man of many trades. Besides being a hunting guide, he fished Bristol Bay during the sail-boat era, worked as a mechanic and ran the Pedro Bay post office with his wife Marjorie. Shortly before Carl passed on in 2016 at age 87, he was awarded Elder of the Year by the Bristol Bay Native Corporation.
Guiding hunters was lucrative but, after a while, Jerry couldn’t stomach it.
“I have no problem with hunting if the animal is being fully utilized, but I found myself rooting for the bears and not my hunters. I just got tired of seeing bears die. I shut down my business and didn’t know what I was going to do next,” Jerry said.
One thing that Jerry did know is that the Bristol Bay watershed – between the incredible runs of salmon and its population of brown bear and other wildlife – is one of most incredible and ecologically spectacular places on Earth.
“I’ve traveled all over. Nothing compares,” Jerry said.
IN THE EARLY 2000s, Jerry called up renowned wildlife photographer Art Wolfe to see if he was interested in coming out to photograph bears. There was not much of a market for bear viewing back then, but Jerry and Art hit it off. Soon other photographers began booking trips. Today, bear photo trips account for 95 percent of Grizzly Safaris’ business, with
The family-run Jacques Adventure Lodge in the village of Iliamna is the home base for some of the best fishing and wildlife
Some of the star attractions you’re bound to get close to on a Grizzly Safaris trip. (GRIZZLY SAFARIS)
catch-and-release sport fishing making up the remainder. They specialize in flying small groups from their lodge to a variety of locations in Katmai National Park and the nearby wilderness. Around 90 percent of their clients are repeat customers.
Jerry enlisted the bears to help raise his son, Caleb, and it has paid off. Caleb might give Davy Crockett a run for his coon-skin cap. By 12, he was guiding bear-viewing clients on his own. Now 21, Caleb is the lead guide for Grizzly Safaris.
“Growing up, it was always one adventure after another. Brown bears are the most unique top predators on Earth. It’s amazing to see one in person. It’s awesome to see the joy on our clients’ faces and help them have that experience,” Caleb said.
Grizzly Safaris also offers trips to photograph walruses, wolves and birds. When asked if they’d ever consider offering a trip for cryptozoological photographers who want a picture of the famed Iliamna Lake monster, Caleb just laughed.
“I’ve spent every day staring out at the lake hoping to see it. It is a huge disappointment. I can’t call myself a true Alaskan until I see it,” Caleb said. ASJ
Jerry (right) and his son Caleb, the lead guide for Grizzly Safaris, often lead wildlife photographers such as Art Wolfe (center) to capture the majesty of Bristol Bay’s bruins. “It’s awesome to see the joy on our clients’ faces and help them have that experience,” Caleb Jacques says. (GRIZZLY SAFARIS) Editor’s note: Learn more about Grizzly Safaris at alaska-grizzlies.com and follow them on Instagram (@alaska-grizzlies). Pride of Bristol Bay is a free column written by Bjorn Dihle and provided by its namesake, a fisherman-direct seafood marketer that specializes in delivering the highest quality of sustainably caught wild salmon from Bristol Bay to your doorstep.