Gear
ArchiveSick of carrying a heavy cooler into rugged or hard-to-reach spots? Igloo has you covered.
A lush hideout just a few miles from the city
The coolest outdoor toys don't always cost a fortune
In Jay Blahnik's first extended interview since Apple hired him to help launch the Watch, the company’s director of fitness for health technologies insists activity tracking is overemphasized, elite athletes have a sitting problem, and the real breakthrough apps for the device will probably be created outside of Cupertino.
If you want clean, safe water in the backcountry, this is the only purifier you should be buying
This may be the coolest car-camping stove we've ever seen
Columbia just reinvented the rain jacket, and it works great
Lighter, softer, and more stylish than we thought possible for a performance top
The portable shower has gotten a much-needed reboot
Gear companies from around the world released their brand-new summer 2016 products this week at Outdoor Retailer in Salt Lake City. We pored over all of it, and these five products—from a brilliant new water filter to a totally reinvented waterproof jacket—were our top picks for Gear…
In a time when “enduro” has become a tired epithet, the Nomad virtually reclaims the genre with downhill manners equal to any big bike and a weight that rivals many trail machines
Don’t feel like making friends with bears and raccoons? Keep your campsite locked down with these simple tips.
Sports Bra: A groundbreaking invention that lets women participate comfortably in a range of vigorous athletic activities.
Rubbermaid Bin: A polyethylene storage container commonly used for gear.
Double Plastic Mountaineering Boot: A highly reliable style of footwear that prevents frostbite in alpine environments.
Camouflage: A varying pattern of earth-colored prints designed to obscure the wearer from view, worn by hunters and members of the U.S. military
Jacques Cousteau: A French explorer and arguably the most prolific marine scientist and ocean conservationist of the 20th century.
Denali Jacket: A popular performance fleece garment made by the North Face and commonly seen on mountaineers and college students.
Duct tape: A cloth-backed metallic gray adhesive that fixes anything worth saving.
Teva sandal: A water shoe that came to define a generation of river athletes.
The raw materials that make up the tools for hiking, running, paddling, skiing, and cycling. These 36 building blocks are indispensable to the design and function of gear, from mankind’s first wool layer to the latest lab-born membranes. (Some things just look better in print. To see this in all…
Tough-ass pants: A term for rugged work trousers that are particularly good at handling abuse.
SUP: Short for stand-up paddle-board, a stable floating platform that combines the cool of surfing with the practicality of a spin workout.
BMW GS: An iconic adventure motorcycle introduced in 1980 to compete in the Dakar Rally race, the famed long-distance off-road endurance event.
A tubeless tire tool that will fix holes too big for sealant
What do world-famous pilots like Jeb Corliss and Joby Ogwyn have in common? They all wear suits sewn by Tony Uragallo, a garden-loving designer who helps daring men zoom through the sky.
Dropper Post: A mountain-bike component that can be raised or lowered with a button mounted on the handlebars.
Chamois: A diaper-like pad first used by cyclists around 1900 to prevent saddle sores and chafing on their nethers.
Utility bike: A bicycle built for hauling children, gear, or grocery bags full of organic quinoa and local honey.
Chip timing: The practice of using a small wearable transmitter to track race participants’ times at regular checkpoints along a course.
You can now use clipless pedals with sneakers when you want to ditch your bike shoes
Crowdfunding: A method of raising capital to launch commercial ventures in which small individual donations are made through an online platform.
Tech binding: A lightweight binding system that transformed backcountry skiing and put telemarking on the path to obsolescence.
Direct to Consumer: A business model in which a company sells its products via its own website, catalog, or store, reducing retail markup and passing the savings along to the consumer.
Dithering: The intentional degrading of a satellite’s signal to discourage unauthorized use, which deterred citizens from tapping into the Department of Defense’s Global Positioning System, or GPS, for ten years.
Carabiner: A gated aluminum fastener used with rope and other equipment to arrest rock climbers’ falls.
Bill Bowerman: A legendary Oregon track coach who cofounded the shoe company Blue Ribbon Sports in 1964; 14 years later, it became Nike.
CamelBak: A hands-free hydration system that can be carried in a backpack.
Base-Camp Duffel: A large, 155-liter bag often seen loaded on yaks in Nepal’s Khumbu region for a few simple reasons: it can take a beating, it has straps that convert it into a backpack, and mountaineers know that it can carry all their gear.
Royal Robbins: Climber, businessman, and archetype for the modern clean-climbing ethic, which espouses the use of removable protection instead of pounding pitons into rock.
Lifa Shirt: The first commercially available base layer made from polypropylene, released in 1970 by Helly Hansen.
Rollerblade: A roller skate with soft, linearly arranged wheels offering fast, smooth glide.
Gear companies know how to make packs lighter, jackets more waterproof, and skis burlier. The only problem: young people couldn’t care less.
Leatherman: A multitool invented by Tim Leatherman after wishing he had a pair of pliers while working on a rust-bucket Fiat with a pocket knife during a 1975 European road trip.
Surfboard Fin: A structural element, usually made of wood or fiberglass, attached to the bottom of a surfboard to aid maneuverability.
Double Vacuum: A technology dating back to 1892 that suspends one container inside another, leaving a small amount of air between the two to insulate the inner contents from external temperature changes.
Lifetime Warranty: A company’s promise to repair or replace an item that breaks.
USGS Topographical Map: A detailed representation of a landscape, created by the United States Geological Survey, and a rare example of something every bit as beautiful as it is useful.
A rapid sequence of radical innovations, such as appeared in cycling between 1984 and 1987, the sport’s Age of Enlightenment.
Pulaski: A wildland-firefighting tool that combines an ax and an adze and is used to clear brush and small trees.
Fly rod: A skinny stick, usually 6 to 13 feet long, used in conjunction with a reel, a line, and hand-tied simulations of in-sects to catch fish.
Velcro: A two-piece fastening material that features hooks on one side and a swath of loops on the other.
Backcountry.com: Online retailer of a wide range of outdoor gear.
Helmet: An apparatus designed to protect the wearer against head injuries.
Gary Fisher: A major figure in the development of mountain bikes.
Sick Footie: A visual recording worth replaying for others.
Wetsuit: An insulating garment that allows individuals to spend more time in cold water.
Jack O’Neill: A former commercial fisherman widely credited with inventing the neoprene wetsuit.
These innovators-in-chief changed the way we play
Blimp-tired bicycles were developed for one of the most grueling endurance races in the world. But then everyone else realized how much fun they were.
A sturdy, purpose-made fishing boot that has become the gold standard of footwear in the 49th state.
Garmin Forerunner 201: The world’s first all-in-one GPS-enabled running watch, released in 2003 by Kansas navigation company Garmin.
The original American road-trip trailer, designed in 1931 by Wally Byam, was inspired by Charles Lindbergh’s Spirit of St. Louis.
The most valuable currency in gear marketing of the past 40 years.
Vibram: A vulcanized-rubber sole that revolutionized footwear.
The Perfect Size Wheel: An elusive and controversial hoop that allows mountain bikers the ability to optimize progress over rocky terrain.
Swiss Army Knife: The world’s first consumer multitool, designed by cutler Karl Elsener with two blades, a screwdriver, and a can opener.
Waffle: A repeating inverted cube shape adopted by sporting-goods manufacturers, beginning with Nike, which used the pattern on the sole of its iconic waffle trainer.
Founders of the Recreational Equipment Co-op (REI), which the couple started in their West Seattle home in 1938 as a way to help climber friends gain access to cheaper ice axes and harnesses by ordering bulk gear from Europe.
A cooler company whose two-inch-thick, double-walled products are so effective that its creation, in 2006, began a new era in rafting.
Jeremy Jones: A pioneering big-mountain snowboarder and snowboard designer.
Telescoping front forks and articulating rear frame triangles that absorb bumps and shocks.
Gone are the days of rangers in fire lookout towers. Now, mountain-top cameras are being used to spot smoke and flames.
Fat shoes: Shoes with roughly 20 millimeters of foam underfoot
The brand of zipper that is likely keeping your britches up at this very moment. Headquartered in Tokyo, 81-year-old YKK (short for Yoshida Kogyo Kabushikikaisha, which translates as Yoshida Company Limited) was founded by Tadao Yoshida, who started making custom zippers to take advantage of breaks and…