Adventure
ArchiveParties meet at Base Camp after fight broke out
Will resume after fixing waterlogged phone
Fell while descending from summit
Drowned off Northern California
Six skiers and snowboarders were buried alive last Saturday in an avalanche many called predictable. One survived. As details of the accident trickled out—their high level of experience and position in the ski industry—it became impossible not to ask: How did they end up in Colorado's deadliest slide in 50 years?
A run circulated the venom
All spectators to be screened
All other attempts have all failed
Conservation groups to fight plan
Headfirst, Gorilla Rapids included
Also "most enjoyable"
Taking a close look at Avishek Sengupta’s death, and why water obstacles—not electric shocks—may prove to be the most dangerous
Mountaineer Garrett Madison has summited Everest with 28 clients in the last four years and is one of the world's top expedition guides. He shares his first update of the Everest 2013 season from Base Camp.
We still don't know exactly what happened between John and Ann Bender on the night of January 7, 2010. But photos of the couple give insight into their isolated lives and their lavish, ultimately deadly dream.
Ready for the 2013-14 season
Embraced dynamite and snow making
In 2003, Dan Bigley lost his sight when a grizzly mauled him on Alaska's Russian River. Ten years later, he's back outside, working to give his children the outdoor life that he almost lost.
Pinned a rider against a trash bin
The climate activist was released yesterday after being incarcerated for 21 months
Says he was 'unjustly enriched' by sponsorship
Had prompted oil spill concerns
Brisk walking still a grey area
Plans to plant them worldwide
Found submerged in water obstacle
Climate change driving industry up
Boston Marathon wheelchair winner victorius
Dutch researcher crusades against pants
New equation calculates speed from footprints
Made first ascents of Castleton Tower, Naked Edge
We may never know how 21-year-old rafter Kaitlin Kenney died on the Colorado River, but we will never forget why she went
Fell overboard on surfing trip
Claimed as artifacts in Turkey
Horns valued at $650,000
British cyclist won't return for the Commonwealth Games
Activist will hold big event on Earth Day
Des Plaines river expected to crest on Friday
While a federal agency works to remove the grizzly bear from the endangered species list, opening the population to hunting, conservationists worry
Washington snowpack still hazardous
AAA releases annual study
9 people changing the face of global adventure
Controversial NOAA report under fire
22 tons of the meat hits a protected reef
Plan angers original supporters
Mined, dammed, and sucked dry: The annual list of of the country's most endangered waterways is out—and it isn't pretty.
Corticosteroids found in four samples
As ski season wraps up, we ask 10 big guns to predict the future of the sport
The accident occurred in Alaska's Hoodoo Mountains
Eating everything, science helpless
When the Florida Wildlife Commission offered $1,500 for the most Burmese Pythons caught in the Everglades in a month, they had no idea that almost 1,600 would-be wranglers and a cabal of journalists would flock to the cypress swamps for what turned out to be more of a reality-TV audition than a good ole-fashioned bounty hunt. Now that the dust has settled, what
30 dogs dead or missing in southern Idaho community
Making way for another UNESCO site
Would have barred unsanctioned races
Katherine Giles was 35
Beef, pork cuts to be renamed
Victim was on a fishing trip
Teaches 100,000 students along way
I got doored by an oblivious driver. Thankfully I just bruised my leg, but it busted my bike pretty badly. Anyways, I’m about to receive some cash from the driver’s insurance company that’ll cover the x-ray bills and then some. Do I have to pay taxes on it?
Two American climbers started the Centro de Escalada Urbana with a vision: to give kids from one of Rio de Janeiro’s poorest neighborhoods a leg up by teaching them to climb the cliffs near their home. Before they were done, they would blaze new routes up Rio’s granite walls, weather the death of a friend, and see the social order of one of Brazil's biggest slums turned upside down.