The reality of this “dream job”
Mark Twain famously said: “Find a job you enjoy doing, and you’ll never have to work a day in your life.” And while that certainly rings true when I’m pointing my tele-lens at giraffes on a safari in Botswana, or bouncing around a luxury camp in Antarctica to capture a magazine story – a typical workday isn’t always as rosy.
What you don’t see on Instagram are the moments in between. While well-timed updates may make it look like travel photographers are always on the move, there are often long spells of thumb-twiddling between gigs. There’s the stress of chasing tight deadlines, the long, lonely days away from family and the constant jet lag you’re fighting between flights. There’s the mental load, too, of running a freelance business – the endless negotiations of usage rights, budgets and anxiety about clients who could suddenly stop responding or invoices that take forever to get paid.
And when you are on a job, it’s certainly no vacation. Days are often long and tightly scheduled – there are pre-dawn alarms to catch the light at sunrise, recces in the midday heat and late dinners that double as shoots. Before you can slip into bed, there are backups to be made, emails to be responded to and next-day shoot schedules to be reviewed. And since you’re not working in a studio, like many other photographers do, you’re always dependent on weather, access and permissions – often frustratingly so. The risk of burnout is real, especially when travel becomes constant instead of special.