Adventure
ArchiveA new art piece in an English café lets patrons use recycled Tour de France memorabilia to sound off on America’s most infamous cyclist.
(And is thrown off a cliff in the process)
Colorado's ski areas differ on enforcement
The squad's new conditioning coach, Toni Beretzki, is turning power into performance with a retooled fitness plan
A documentary on our deep connection to the mountains and the challenges of exploring nature in a sustainable way.
List scores cuisine, financial, and social qualities
NYC marathon doubles its security budget
Beaches, wetlands, and bays benefit.
Rangers and Petco investigating
China concludes helicopter tournament
Many question their effectiveness
Will not be banned from cycling
Brothers complete South American leg
102 permits issued for the state's 22 mountain lions
Carlos Burle rides estimated 100-foot wave
Reef shark strikes off northwest coast
Refuses to leave or slaughter
Maine extends hunting season to reign in population
Historic tandem jumps from 32,000 feet
Facing a future in which big, cold winters are becoming as rare as monoskis, some titans of the snowsports industry compared notes.
Show kicks off this weekend
Cause respiratory problems
Not environmentally conscious
Charges of hooliganism remain
Government shutdown delayed search
Report on most bike-friendly communities released
Watch North America's largest bird
The film, directed by anthropologist Pegi Vail, takes a critical look at how and why we inadvertently love places to death.
German daredevils set new benchmark in extreme unicycling.
Oregon police have eyes in space
Ed Whitlock sets another world record
No wonder he's smarter than your honor student
Project aims to illustrate low-impact living
The American's Vuelta victory might be one of the greatest performances in the history of the sport—if only it hadn't taken place under a cloud of doping suspicion. Horner maintains he's clean, and released six years worth of blood data to prove it. But his troubles just won't go away.
To anti-doping authorities, it's the best way to ferret out cheaters in a wide range of sports. To cyclists and other athletes, it's a way to prove you're clean when critics claim you aren't.
Inside Ted Ligety's masochistic plan to take over the ski universe, starting with the Sochi Olympics
Slovakian Aeromobil tests its first prototype
Police deciding whether to prosecute
The longest scarf knit mid-stride
Identification now required at many events
BRANDED CONTENT: Peter Metcalf has transformed his company, Black Diamond, into one of the fastest-growing and innovative outdoor-gear and apparel makers in the world. Here he talks about their most radical product yet, a next-generation avalanche airbag-equipped backpack.
Kamchatka, east of Siberia. As the curtain rises on the new frontier of adventure outfitting, attendees include your guide (he's the one with the armored vehicle), the local businessman (he's the one with the machine gun), the UN environmentalist (he's the nervous-looking one), and your fellow tourists (they'll be arriving any moment now). Please enjoy the show
In the southern Appalachians, one man found that he could stoke a new generation of trail workers with some very old technology.
Chocolate lab suffers heart attack
Scientist study 1.8-million-year-old skull
Feeling irritable? We recommend the outdoors.
The Substantial Media House crew, lead by Evan Garcia, Fred Norquist, and Anton Muller paddle through some of Norway’s gnarliest water in their latest episode.
Cam Zink sets mountain bike record
Tracking devices will help curb poaching
So much for urban bike commuters
Red Bull releases new footage
Canadian man has visited more than 190 countries
A new study in mice sheds light on addiction
Shutdown keeps vegetables on the vine
Group was exploring off-limits area
Stormchasers are risking everything to get closer to tornadoes than ever before. Last spring, during the deadly Oklahoma City outbreaks, they got more than they bargained for. Read the full story.
Roadie Tom Vanderbilt was curious about the branch of his sport that resembled equal parts Crossfit and Tough Mudder. So when a cyclocross clinic came to a nearby town, he was among the first to sign up, and one of the last to realize that mastery wouldn't come easy.
Motivated by adventure, science, and awe at the power of nature, stormchasers are risking it all to get closer to tornadoes than ever before. Last spring, during the deadly Oklahoma City outbreaks, they got more than they bargained for.
Advertising life-saving gear
In 1962 in Haiti, Clairvius Narcisse was certified dead and buried. Days later, he was raised from the grave by a sorcerer and became a will-less zombie slave. In 1980, a Haitian psychiatrist found him. In 1983, a Harvard ethnobotanist discovered the secret of his poisoning. And in 1985, a reporter traveled to Haiti to (literally) unearth the true story.