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Adventure

Adventure

Archive

When forecasts called for a massive tornado in central Oklahoma in 2013, storm chasers flocked to the area. Then all hell broke loose.

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Sponsor Content: Luminox

Undersea explorer Scott Cassell is on a mission to bring the ocean’s mysteries to the surface.

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The backcountry is a place to be respected, regardless of where you are. Safe zones, beacons, and communication led to the success of this rescue.

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As a full-time science student at Depaul University in Chicago, Michaela Kiersch trains at First Ascent Climbing to prepare for her weekend road trips to Red River Gorge.

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Mountain Biker Patrick Rasche lives between the metropolitan and industrial sections of Ruhrpott, Germany. It's not quite the hotbed of biking he was hoping for.

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One day when Amber was nine years old, her father was photographing Pipeline and sustained terminal head trauma.

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The two neighboring Colorado giants are snapping up ski areas around the country, positioning themselves as the two titans of North American resort operations

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This year, the Appalachian Trail Conservancy estimates that 3,400 individuals will attempt a thru-hike, making it one of the busiest years in the trail’s history. We met up with a few of these hopefuls as they set out.

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For the last 30 years, American Rivers, a nonprofit advocacy group out of Washington, D.C., has been calling attention the plight of the country’s rivers. Today, the group released its annual Most Endangered Rivers report, a catalogue of the ten rivers in America most threatened in 2017.

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From kayaker and filmmaker Mike Mckay, 'Jondachi' tells the story of young man and his connection to the Rio Jondachi in Ecuador.

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Exploration of these mountains isn’t new, but it wasn’t until five years ago that the first traverse of the entire range was completed, by Chase Norton, then a PhD student at the University of Hawai’i.

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Harlem's first cycling studio aims to be a safe haven for women and people of color

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In 1978, a historic expedition put the first women—and first Americans, period—on the summit of Annapurna, the world’s tenth-highest peak. Despite their triumph, the deaths of two climbers stirred controversy. In an oral history weaving together the perspectives of key team members, Sherpa high-altitude staff, admirers, and critics, Katie Ives discovers that debate still lingers—as does the expedition’s power to inspire.

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Mountaineer and guide

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Endurance cycling was Mike's life, and he died on March 31 doing what he loved. I'll always remember him as a no-nonsense guy who was quick to reach out with advice to other cyclists around the world.

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Activist and lawyer

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Here's what we learned about the state of the outdoorswoman in 2017 and the still-prevalent gender gap in the outdoor world

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As a woman in climbing, I occupy two worlds: one defined by strength and grit, the other by beauty and traditional ideas of femininity. It’s something I still struggle with.

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After bursting onto the scene as a teenage gym rat, Beth Rodden became one of the most accomplished climbers of all time. Here, for the first time, she opens up about the price of perfectionism, the kidnapping that almost grounded her, finding love again after her marriage to big-wall prodigy Tommy Caldwell, and balancing motherhood and rock.

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Alpine ski racer

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How a bold women’s climb of a Himalayan giant shocked the world and forever changed mountaineering

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Short of breath from the elevation and scenery, The Trippin Fellas enjoyed incredible hospitality and exposure to a culture drastically distinct from the western civilizations they call home.

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At the cover shoot for the May issue of Outside, we asked 10 of the most influential women in the outdoor world a handful of questions about life, success, and happiness.

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At the cover shoot for the May issue of Outside, we asked 10 of the most influential women in the outdoor world a handful of questions about life, success, and happiness.

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t the cover shoot for the May issue of Outside, we asked 10 of the most influential women in the outdoor world a handful of questions about life, success, and happiness.

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Watch to see how activist and lawyer Tara Houska answered.

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The company will work with KSL Capital Partners to form a new business to manage the resorts

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At the cover shoot for the May issue of Outside, we asked 10 of the most influential women in the outdoor world a handful of questions about life, success, and happiness.

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The curious and backpacking-friendly life of Brent Nearpass, whose art is antlers and mounts

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The author moved to the United States at eight years old and took her first camping trip soon after. The outdoors became an escape from the stressors of being a new American and a reminder that enjoying nature can be a privilege in itself.

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We've summited the highest mountains and plumbed the deepest points of the oceans, but underwater cave diving promises a new age of exploration

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Legislators are considering sticking out-of-state cyclists and mountain bikers with a $25 fee—and a side of humiliation

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Survival isn't about copying the stuff you see Bear Grylls do. Here's what should you do if you're caught outside in extreme weather.

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In this episode of Redington's Find Your Water series, the crew takes us to Billings, Montana, an industrial town with incredible access to the outdoors

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Wandering the Sonoran Desert in search of the chiltepin—the ancestor to domesticated chile peppers—with MacArthur genius Gary Paul Nabhan

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Some days it's a paradise and others it's a jungle of hell. Yet for Dr. Scott Saleska and his students, that's just the reality of conducting science in the rainforest.

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Tried-and-true stuff that will let you go farther and stay out longer

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The star climber opens up about her kidnapping and finding love after a broken marriage

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As a polar explorer, I've spent more than a year of my life living on the ice in one of the harshest environments on the planet. And I love it.

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The spring Everest season is shaping up to be an exciting one: Ueli Steck is returning to complete an epic traverse; Kilian Jornet wants a speed record; and the mountain will be packed with climbers who didn't get to attempt the summit in 2014 and 2015.

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As more hikers take on the 2,190-mile route each year, Lyme disease intensifies its spread across the eastern U.S.

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Blood Road documents pro mountain biker Rebecca Rusch's mission to uncover the details of her father's mysterious death

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At the Suzuki Nine Knights event in Italy, Andri Ragettli landed the first Quad Cork 1800.

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With the help of Kris Tompkins, Chile is setting aside more parklands than the U.S. has in a long time. The Trump administration should pay attention.

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In this predominantly Muslim country, women are shredding waves—and the patriarchy

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Sean Chuma is one of the best aerialists in professional BASE Jumping. As an instructor, he's spent countless flights performing acrobatic maneuvers that he attributes to his love of superman.

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With a real bummer of a winter up in Minnesota, a few locals including Andrew Kilness are making the best of it.

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Several recent bear attacks on riders have public lands managers working out solutions to prevent more of the brutal encounters

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It's destructive, beautiful, and critical for our ecosystem

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Ranchlands is a Colorado-based ranching and land management company that stewards more than 300,000 acres of rangelands across the American West in partnership with landowners. While meat is often considered the primary product of ranchers, conservation is the product for Ranchlands. Since 2000, the organization’s management style, which focuses on restoring vegetation and wildlife—primarily cattle and bison—in addition to community engagement and education, has been celebrated as a model in conservation circles.

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Last weekend, the North Face’s Chile brand put on Latin America’s biggest—and loudest, and rad-est, and rowdiest—bouldering competition.

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What ruins one man's day can transform another's

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Ryan Knapp is a weather observer and meteorologist at the Mount Washington Weather Station in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Winters are windy, icy, and frigid. Summers aren't much better. We called him up to ask what it's like to be knocked down by wind and how he endures working in some of the world's worst weather.

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For almost 40 years, Don MacGorman has launched truck-sized data balloons into storms while enduring drenching rain and potentially lethal hail. For the National Severe Storms Laboratory physicist who literally wrote the book on lightning, it's all just another day's work.

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The trail systems are immense, and the access is unparalleled.

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It's about time we had emojicons for climbers! For the past year, I’ve been working on creating one.

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'Negative Infinity' follows rider and co-director Brandon Semenuk as he shreds through an incredibly lush forest.

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While we were typing away at our computers, Olle Regner just styled one of the most epic lines we've seen all year.

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This 1990 BMY 5-Ton Military Cargo Truck was easily one of the coolest plus-sized adventure mobiles we saw at Overland Expo East last fall.

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The Black Mamba Anti-Poaching Unit is a group of women who patrol this reserve and surrounding communities, unarmed, in search of poachers.

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A former EPA administrator breaks down what’s at stake with the president’s proposed 31-percent cut to the agency’s budget

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Obama was supposed to safeguard Oregon’s Owyhee Canyonlands with a National Monument designation, but when that didn’t happen, its supporters were left wondering. What’s next?

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The fight for Standing Rock took the media by storm in November 2016. From cell phones to news cameras, images of violence, protest, and unrest surfaced on every major media outlet.

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In South Florida, cane toads are so numerous that they seem to be dropping from the sky. They're overtaking parking lots and backyards, can weigh almost six pounds, and pack enough poison to kill pets. Why the surge?

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From filmmaker Tom Welsh, The Problem of the Wilderness is a film set to the poem of environmental activist Bob Marshall.

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These two bought a Syncro and spent 3 years building it up before hitting the road for two years (and 51,500 miles). Wow.

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The craziest rock-climbing event in the world happens annually in the Ozarks of Arkansas, in a u-shaped canyon with enough routes for 24 straight hours of nonstop ascents. They call it Horseshoe Hell, but don't be fooled: for outdoor athletes who love physical challenges with some partying thrown in, it's heaven.

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Watch to see what life is like during the world's wildest climbing event.

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After years of damage and abuse, the skier's bones have a few things to say

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Bob Kingsley runs a luxury backcountry hut in the San Juans. Yes, it gets lonely—but he wouldn't want to live anywhere else.

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After winter sheds its skin and spring begins to emerge the roads through Alta Murgia, one of Italy's National Parks, display incredible almond tree blooms.

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The Dakota Access protests made headlines, but there’s a bigger war being waged against pipelines across the country that threaten our favorite parks and forests

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It's safe to say the light of day and a little rain was a welcomed sight after spending so much time underground.

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Last year Mike Hopkins brought us the epic first edition of Dreamride, and lucky for us, he decided to give it another go with Dreamride II.

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First a massive wildfire, then record flooding, and finally the Pacific Coast Highway was knocked out

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The Grand Canyon is a river trip above all other river trips. Normally done over the course of weeks or months, a few members of the U.S. Men's Rafting team decided to set a new speed record; 34 hours.

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Athletes who love climbing outdoors aren't positioning themselves to perform well at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Here's why.

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Longtime storm chaser and timelapse director, Mike Oblinski decided to remove all color except for black and white in his video, 'Pulse'.

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