Adventure
ArchiveEscaped its pen at the Dakota State Fair
Photographer captures pictures from plane
Friendliest city also named
At age 14, Zak Noyle took his first photo at a Hawaiian shore break. By 25, he was a senior staff photographer at Surfer. We checked in with him several accolades and awards later, on his 27th birthday.
These sports aren't necessarily deadly, but they certainly instill an imminent sense of death—which is what makes them so thrilling and why we can't look away.
Will be dropped from plane at 14,500 feet
Protects against diabetes and heart disease
On July 1, 2012, Davey du Plessis set off on a roughly 4,000-mile source-to-sea expedition down the Amazon. Two months and a third of the way in, he was attacked and left in the jungle to die. This is his story, as told to Joe Spring.
Made of fat and wet wipes
Was working as instructor in Oregon
Doubts the performance of most athletes
Saved by carrier backpack
Will tow 2,000 pounds of bricks
Where can I swim, and is it going to kill me?
Dams removed from Western rivers get the lion share of attention, but nearly 100 dams have been removed from waterways in Northeast since 1991.
Man who visited every country sums up his journey
Will be clearing weeds for our forefathers
Nepali team will monitor climbing, permits
A week outside resets your body's biological clock
UNC professor and CU student play concert
Will cease to sanction mountain bike events through the body
Have caused at least one death
More animals have been spotted in recent months
The big surprise about the return of great whites to the birthplace of Jaws? No one’s freaking out.
Attempting to bridge the gap
Tourists forced off the beaches
Rep claims animal was playing
One of the worst massacres in mountaineering history happened this summer in Pakistan. Will it happen again?
Dominates last day of competition
Alejo Muniz wins $100,000 in a wave-less finale, and eight spectators are arrested in a riot.
Four riders appeared on the list of 1998 positives
Returns home a hero
In California, Oregon, and Washington
Woman dies of heat exhaustion
Will soon swallow site of 'The Phantom Menace'
French Senate releases full list
Humpback was looking for sardines
Names released by Le Monde
How old are most Tour de France winners? At 34, could I even be a contender?
In talks to revive the women's event
Conservationists concerned about the ecosystem
Thousands planted by legalization activists
French Senate plans to release 1998 dopers' names
SeaWorld has called the new documentary Blackfish, about its treatment of orcas in captivity, “shamefully dishonest, deliberately misleading, and scientifically inaccurate.” But the co-writer argues that the facts speak for themselves.
Attempting to remove doping suspicions
Denies doping Jamaican Sprinters
Environmentalists angry over video
Obviously illegal, probably impossible
The Chokecherry/Sierra Madre wind farm promises to spin up enough electrons to power a million homes, but the project is also a poster child for the fears and anxieties renewable energy can bring to rural America— and to anglers.
We go shoulder to shoulder in Los Angeles’s Marathon Crash Race, a 4,000-strong underground scrum
New program rolling out in Dubai
Pearls of the Sky honor fallen leader
Why is Europe dominating the United States in meteorological prognostication? Follow the money.
Australian surfer David Scard, 37, runs Kirra-based World Surfaris’ Stealth Travel Club, which whisks surfers to the biggest waves at a moment’s notice. His success rate: 100 percent.
After Sandy, attention turned to fortifying New York City. But another location on the eastern seaboard faces a more immediate threat.
Challenges take on captive orcas