NEW MEMBER OFFER!

Get 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

LEARN MORE

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Adventure

Adventure

Archive

The key to staying warm and stuck to the ice? The right stuff.

We're looking for a reader to take on the role of Chief Inspiration Officer.

Published: 

ROLF POTTS busts open the myths of travel writing.

Published: 

The skipper talks about the new BMW Oracle trimaran.

Published: 

Survivorman LES STROUD talks about venturing into the world's harshest environments alone, and the importance of a good harmonica.

Published: 

The rooster. That’s what makes Rossignol‘s Mike sweater cooler than all the vintage ski apparel out there ($150; rossignol.com). Rossignol Mike Sweater            …

Published: 

Wear Nobis‘s hyper-cool Teabag and all other beanies will start feeling a little insecure ($45; nobis.ca). Nobis Teabag Hat          …

Published: 

Scott‘s Witness goggles are some of the best all-conditions spherical shields we’ve tested ($90; scottusa.com).

Published: 

For winter, classic is always in style. Eddie Bauer’s down High Mesa vest is retro without trying too hard ($99; eddiebauer.com). Eddie Bauer High Mesa Down Vest              …

Published: 

Ice axes are dead weight, until you need them. CAMP‘s aluminum-alloy Corsa is just seven ounces—and worth every one ($110; camp-usa.com).

Published: 

Deserts tend to be, well, dry. But there's still sometimes water to be found—if you know where to look.

Published:  Updated: 

Carbon offsets are cool, but they don't really make ski resorts eco-friendly. So says the Aspen Skiing Company's Auden Schendler—whether the rest of the ski industry likes it or not.

Published: 

A quarter-century after his now classic record of a trip down America’s two-laners, Blue Highways, William Least Heat-Moon is back in the driver’s seat. And though he’s given up sleeping in his ’75 Ford Econoline for places more along the lines of a Holiday Inn Express, he’s still a helluva…

Published: 

Fallen trees outnumber fallen men in Ron Rash’s fourth novel, but not by much: The title character, a pretty young timber baroness who carries a rattlesnake-eating eagle on her arm and is about as sweet as Lady Macbeth, sees to that. Set in 1920s North Carolina, on the front lines…

Published: 

After a half-century on his hands and knees, poking at bugs, Harvard ant geek and acciden­tal eco-celebrity E.O. Wilson, 79, is back with The Superorganism: The Beauty, Elegance, and Strangeness of Insect Societies (W.W. Norton, $65), co-written with Bert HÖlldobler. It’s a follow-up of sorts to their 1991 Pulitzer Prize…

Published: 

DEAR MISTER PRESIDENT: Congratulations on winning the election. I always knew you would win, and not that other guy. I told all my friends that. You can ask them. Jack Handey Offers to Be an Ambassador Mister President, let’s get down to business. One of your first jobs,…

Published: 

Weather or not, here comes the TIV 2!

Published: 

In November, the Banff Mountain Film Festival returns for its 33rd edition, with some 500 screenings in 30 countries. Here's a look at how high-altitude cinema arose from low-rent beginnings.

Published: 

By 2010, Denver-based Jet Pack International hopes to release the first commercially available jet pack. The forthcoming T-73 model is already five years and 100 pairs of burned shoes in the making.

Published: 

An American is the best female skier in the world. Better start paying attention.

Published: 

I climbed Rainier in June of 2008 and hated the plastic boots. I’m returning to Rainier next summer and looking for a good pair of non-plastic boots that take crampons. What do you suggest? Dayton Baltimore, Maryland

Published: 

My 12-year-old daughter gets very cold at night when we’re camping. We are backpackers and tend to camp just under treeline between May and October. She currently uses a junior polyfill bag with an inflatable pad and some good long underwear. What could we do to keep her warm and give us a peaceful night’s sleep?

Published: 

1. Most frontside skis are too precise and exhausting for freeskiing. Not the pared-down CX 80, which does away with heavy add-ons like complex binding plates for a more responsive feel. It’s ten millimeters fatter than most, but its World Cup­–inspired…

In the Store: If you’re buying just one pair of skis (and not building a quiver), look for a set that matches your style of skiing and the terrain you frequent 70 percent of the time. And don’t be afraid to upgrade: Buy skis slightly above…

ON THE LEFT Columbia’s moisture-wicking Omni-Dry Mountain Tech Thermal Base­layer. ($60; columbia.com) Few‘s acrylic Moa Hunter Sweater, for the bold. ($54; few.co.nz) Aigle‘s lightweight Polartec recycled-fleece Walker Track Jacket. ($105; aigleusa.com Obermeyer‘s insulated Tungsten Jacket is tricked out…

In guitar god Ted Nugent’s new book Ted, White, and Blue, an addendum to Blood Trails 2 and God, Guns, and Rock & Roll, “The Nuge” plays political advisor and addresses issues ranging from John Lennon’s call for peace to “soulless, ugly, Planet of the Apes, anti-American, brain-dead” health…

Published: 

BRETT DENNEN talks to Outside's RYAN KROGH about backpacking, fishing, and his new album.

Published: 

You'd better be: You just paid $87 for your lift ticket. Follow our preseason fitness plan and make last year's halfhearted half-days a distant memory.

Published: 

Kelly Slater takes time out after his ninth World Surfing Championship to answer a few questions

Published: 

John Long was living the greatest adventure of his life, sailing home from San Francisco to his native Ireland. But when his beaten and bruised body was found floating off the lawless, empty coast of Chiapas, it was a scene that sailor and author David Vann knew all too well.

Published: 

If you thought the drilling frenzy out west was temporary, think again. But there's a right way to do it, and it's up to the next president to lead the charge.

Published: 

Thomas Friedman's climate-change manifesto is bound to be a bestseller. And that's a good thing.

Published: 

Like the father he hardly knew, Kye Petersen is out to conquer the biggest mountains around

Published: 

Before Lost’s Jack Shephard—before even the Skipper and Gil­ligan—there was Robinson Crusoe. Now NBC is bringing the original desert-island castaway to television. Crusoe, premiering Friday, October 17, stars Philip Winchester (Flyboys, Thunderbirds) as the ship­wrecked Brit who learns to live off the land while warding off pirates and cannibals. COLE…

Published: 

What gets 50 miles per gallon but not a second look in the U.S.?

Published: 

A legendary animal showman says he's going to reinvent the zoo. Too bad his vision sounds a lot like the circus.

Published: 

Like it or not, the kings of action sports have a new hobby. It involves fast cars, big air, and piles of sponsor cash.

Published: 

This month, NASA astronaut and mountaineer John Grunsfeld, 49, will blast into orbit carrying a 9x12 Zeiss Maximar B folding camera that belonged to his friend Bradford Washburn—a pioneer of aerial photography and Alaskan mountaineering who passed away last year at 96. The camera is the same one that Washburn took on his 1937 expedition to Canada's St.

Published: 

Descendants of Shackleton's 1908 South Pole crew set out on another attempt

Published: 

Bike-friendly Congressman Earl Blumenauer talks to Outside’s Matthew Fishbane.

Published: 

Dean Potter talks to Outside's Ryan Krogh about freeBASEing the Eiger.

Published: 

I'm looking for a watch for my husband that offers ski features, such as number of runs, speed, vertical for individual runs, and total vertical. Measuring distances would be good, too, as he is also a runner. I'm willing to spend up to $500 and would like it to look good (maybe something in titanium). Debbie New York, New York

Published: 

Photo Gallery

Published: 

A boy with dwarfism. A man with dorkism. Whenever Ross and I hit the trail, things have a way of not working out.

Published: 

The future is highly explosive

Published: 

Paul Theroux rides the rails with a Eurasian encore

Published: 

The guy many consider the most talented snowboarder in the world (check out That’s It, That’s All, on DVD in September) prefers Ayn Rand to South Park? Favorite Books: Atlas Shrugged (1957). “Rand writes about [finding] the power of self through will. People underestimate themselves.” Films: Zeitgeist:…

Published: 

Thanks in large part to Al Gore, environmental documentaries have moved from low–rent anonymity to bankable cinema. These three DVDs get the entertainment/inspiration balance right.

Published: 

New York chef Tyler Florence has a fresh backdrop now that he's moved to Mill Valley, California. The host of the Food Network's Tyler's Ultimate embraces his new coastal lifestyle with two cookbooks, the Kitchen Handbook and Dinner at My Place, both due out this fall. Here are five tips from Florence to keep you dining in the open air long into Ind

Published: 

Breaking down the commercial formulas that make fall's new adventure–TV shows seem very familiar

Published: 

It's the only way to save the crown jewels of American public land

Published: 

This month's 560–page Fallen Giants, by professors Maurice Isserman and Stewart Weaver, is the most exhaustive narrative history of Himalayan climbing to date. It's also the subject of this month's quiz. Pencils out—begin!

Published: 

A Patagonia scion helps reinvent his family's company as a surf brand

Published: 

A bachelor and two housemates (plus chickens) versus a married man with an infant (plus onesies). Who saps more watts from the grid? Armed with a new device that monitors their real-time energy use, Grayson Schaffer and Christopher Keyes engage in a carbon-footprint smackdown—squarely on the grid.

Published: 

Earlier this year, the prince met with members of Cycle of Life, a British biking charity that was about to depart on a 5,000-mile ride through Africa. Reporter CHARLIE NORTON was on hand for the royal send-off.

Published: 

Shaun White, the snowboarder, skater, and now fashion designer (!), recently launched his new casual line with Target. Following the big-box store’s other celebrity releases, the “Shaun White” line is mostly sporty T-shirts and hoodies, printed with graphics drawn by White’s brother, Jesse. Kind of makes us wonder whether anyone…

Published: 

Our picks for the shows you can’t miss at the folk rocker’s favorite outdoor venues.

Published: 

Video and Gallery

Published: 

Going off the grid, one Gatorade-soaked onion at a time

Published: 

A field guide to this summer's sporting do's

Published: 

But heroin, meth, and thuggery are. Can skate pioneer and Dogtown legend Jay Adams set himself straight?

Published: 

A British freediver attempts to counter her archrival by swimming a natural tunnel on a single breath

Published: 

In the tradition of the 1986 Run-D.M.C.–Aerosmith collaboration, rapper Ludacris and raunch-rocker Tommy Lee will star in Battleground Earth, a reality show premiering Sunday, August 3, on Discovery’s Planet Green. The premise: The bad boys tour the country in biodiesel buses and tackle “eco-challenges” along the way. At one point,…

Published: 

A 20,000-mile round-the-world motorcycle jaunt should be enough to cure any midlife crisis. Which makes us wonder about Ewan McGregor. Three years after his circumnavigation of the globe—seen in the 2004 film Long Way Round—the Scottish actor got the itch again. This time, he and friend Charley Boorman set off…

Published: 

Pro kayaker Berman, 29, made a name for himself by hucking hundred-foot waterfalls. But this fall, he's attempting his most daring feat yet: running for the legislature, as a Democrat in Washington State.

Published: 

“You go ahead and get this race out of your system,’ my wife told me. ‘But I don’t want to get a call from Butte saying your butt’s bleeding.”

Published: 

Meteor showers have been letting me down for years, but this time I'm getting myself to the right dark place on a perfect night. Celestial bodies, it better be good.

Published: 

The 15 things you must know about this year's Olympics in Beijing

Published: 

We need your help! Vote here on Outside‘s October 2008 cover. Outside October 2008 Cover Poll The two choices for Outside's October 2008 cover. Click Here…

Published: 

A degenerative nerve disease is destroying the body of Jeff Lowe, one of climbing's greatest athletes and innovators. He's seen hard times before, on mountains and in life. But how do you keep going when there's no way up?

Published: 

It's the antithesis of the bleached-out, overfished reefs that divers find around the world—a place where the sea is still bursting with life, and hope for the ocean endures. Pull on a tank in Indonesia's remote Raja Ampat and witness diving's final frontier.

Published: 

Team Slipstream thinks it can save cycling with a drug-testing program unlike anything else in sports. I wasn't so sure—until I wound up living with their team captain at the Tour of California. Pass the remote.

Published: 

But it isn’t because of my dance moves: my life at the helm of a Colorado River latrine raft

Published: 

The West’s desperate water shortage may get a year’s reprieve. Last winter’s epic snowpack—in some places the biggest since the 1960s— is fueling the best whitewater season since the invention of self-bailing rafts. The timing couldn’t be better: 2008 marks the 40th anniversary of the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act.

Published: 

Traveling to Canada no longer comes with a discount, but our neighbor still has eight times as much wilderness as we do

Published: 

Behind The Scenes

Published: 

Bemoaning our cultural wipeout

Published: 

It's hot. Why not spend that midday siesta reading?

Published: 

Get dialed for summer's coolest sport

Published: 

It's Games time. Hit the couch—or don't—for some Olympian flicks.

Published: