Growing up landlocked in Missouri, it wasn’t until college that his ocean soul came alive. “I spent a year in Australia and realized that people actually live on the beach and that was it for me,” says Bryce. Although his true love was marine science, he earned a degree in finance from SMU and worked as a stock trader in the Dallas / Fort Worth area, all the while dreaming of the ocean. “I subscribed to Scuba magazine and any time I made some money, I would go to Mexico or Costa Rica for the weekend and go scuba diving,” he recalls.
Eventually Bryce moved to Fort Lauderdale and spent four months training to become a scuba instructor. When he was done with his course work he had two job offers. One in the Caribbean and the other on Kaua‛i. While in the process of deciding one of his instructors, who had lived on Maui for 30 years, told him, “You belong in Hawai‛i.”
Bryce spent almost two years as a scuba guide and instructor on the Napali Coast and one day his boss handed him an underwater video camera. “The moment I was underwater with that camera in a cavern with a pregnant white tip reef shark, I was thinking this is why I became a scuba instructor.” says Bryce.
Next Bryce and his wife Jen headed to S.E. Asia where they spent a year back-packing and scuba diving with sharks on remote reefs. “We carried hardly anything with us except for a few clothes. Our back packs were 90% scuba gear,” says Bryce.
Still in search of a way to support himself while doing what he loved, Bryce kept applying for jobs, but a degree in finance didn’t get him anywhere. “I only heard back from three people and they told me that even people with Ph.D.s would have trouble getting these jobs. So I wrote this guy Samuel Gruber who’s a legendary shark scientist with a sob story about how nobody would give me a job and how much I loved sharks,” says Bryce.
Gruber gave him a chance and in three weeks Bryce was in the Bahamas. “We were working with lemon sharks, bull sharks and tiger sharks, catching and tagging them and monitoring their diets. It was an amazing experience. I fell in love with the science,” says Bryce.
After working with sharks in the Bahamas, Bryce was inspired to seek a Ph.D. in Zoology from U.H. Manoa. “Unfortunately, we lasted 36 hours in Honolulu. We'd never been to the Big Island and we decided to go there for a week. We came to Kona and that was it,” says Bryce.
Those hours of observation and filming were transformed into a series of intriguing stories that, to the delight of the passengers, became the daily reef ecology class on the Fairwind. Bryce talked about these creatures as if they were his family, which in a sense they were. “Behaviors make it interesting and correlate to our daily lives. We changed lives with that class and inspired people to care more about the ocean. They still have it on the Fairwind. I'm pretty proud of that,” says Bryce.
The time he spent on the Fairwind and in Kealakekua Bay were foundational for him. “I started to see the reef differently. Every little component and nook and cranny. I'd go to 120, 130 feet by myself and I would just sit. That time I spent in Kealakekua Bay by myself every day just brought me to a level that I don't think I could be who I am today without that,” says Bryce.
All the while he was observing and filming in Kealakekua Bay and giving fish classes on the Fairwind, Bryce still had his sights set on marine science cinematography. “I'm trying to figure out how to film for National Geographic. If I wasn't going to get a Ph.D., I wanted to film the guys who have Ph.D.s. I started to build a library of behaviors and I started getting calls from film crews for fill-in stock footage,” says Bryce.
“I sailed from Egypt to the Sudan on this multi-million dollar yacht and it felt like we just lit money on fire the whole way. Then a few weeks later I was on a job doing a shark film with a National Geographic scientist and he says, 'If I only had 7000 more dollars, we could have three more tags and we could have gotten all this extra information’,” says Bryce.
Stunned by this revelation, Bryce and his OPA partner Sean Dooley devised a plan to, “Pick amazing places in the world and present them to yacht owners. We would recommend that they bring these scientists who are the world’s biggest manta ray expert and the world’s biggest shark expert of that area. We would spend all day diving and doing work and then at night we'd have these incredible dinners. At the end of the trip these billionaires would be like, 'How do we save this place?',” says Bryce.
What’s really special about the connections Bryce makes is that he honestly wants to learn about and understand other perspectives. He worked two years creating a Discovery Channel t.v. series called Fish Mountain (never aired) by spending time on Hawai'i fishing boats going out to the Cross seamount. “I went and met all these local commercial fishermen who are under fire big time here every single day and I asked them to tell their story. I wanted to know what's going on out there and I didn't want to judge,” says Bryce. “I wanted to understand why people do things in certain ways and by doing that I think I've broken through barriers and walls,” says Bryce.
While on that boat, Bryce was able to make a direct connection between think tank and action. Senator Clayton Hee, Stefanie Brendl and many others had been working hard on SB 2169, a shark finning ban, which was eventually signed into law. “I get this email from Stefanie Brendl that the vote is on the next morning at nine and she was wondering if I could get any of the influential people on the boat to help us with this? I went to Sylvia told her what was happening and said, ‘If I could deliver 50 or 60 world class signatures, that would be pretty powerful’. And she said, 'I love it. That's why we're here. Let's do it.',” says Bryce.
Before the Flood (Oct. 2016). Leonardo DiCaprio’s latest climate change film.
Whale Like Me (2017) Six years in the making, a film about the multi-nation whaling controversy.
Sea of Hope (Jan. 2017). A film about the creation of newly protected areas in U.S. waters, including Papahanaumokuakea.