Everything
It could be yours for the right price
A crude guideline for randy athletes
If you look, you can find lots of well-made kit for outdoor adventures
From years of research and safety concerns to pre-jump jitters and malfunctioning engines, these exclusive outtakes show how it all went down in Baja
We witnessed sad sharks, baby bison in danger, and more puffins than any one person deserves to see in a day—and we've determined which streams you should watch.
How did a North Carolina waterpark become ground zero for a mysterious water-borne amoeba that kills nearly every person it infects?
A tribute to Vancouver's North Shore, featuring rider Stephen Matthews.
A new book examines sex-specific fueling, the role of female hormones in performance, and why you're probably not eating enough carbs
How the upstart parenting meet-up Hike it Baby has quietly gone national
Flying around like Marvel superhero Iron Man might not yet be possible. But as wingsuit flyer, pilot, and real-life human rocket Rex Pemberton demonstrated this past June in Mexico, it's no longer a sci-fi fantasy either.
Coldhouse Collective's latest film follows British climber Leo Holding on the Mirror Wall in Greenland.
Pilot Fedor Konyukhov touched down in Bonnie Rock, Australia, having circumnavigated the globe in record time
For the fifth episode, we've got an unreleased tune, "Trapdoors" from Grandparents
The greatest thing about the Pacific Northwest is how much accessible adventure hides in the creases of its maps.
You need the right gear to go trail running, skiing, or mountain biking. You really need the right stuff if you spend weeks fighting infernos in the middle of a forest.
Enough to power the Eiffel Tower for three days or run a home on solar for 27,000 hours, to start
Magnetoreception could be a latent human sense, silent for millennia but accessible with training. Is it worth developing—or even possible?
Plus, Lance Armstrong’s favorite on-the-bike snack
What riders eat to make it through the world’s toughest bike race
Beautiful and functional
This tool belongs in your pocket at all times
The Republican Party's justification for selling off public lands holds no water. Just ask President Reagan.
A Hollywood stuntman who’s leapt out of planes for “Godzilla” and “Iron Man 3” will attempt his greatest, craziest feat yet—on live TV
How has eating changed at the world’s biggest bike race? We made it our mission to find out.
Laramy Ridley, Jason Tuberville, and Nathan Proctor prove that Arkansas is a whitewater mecca.
'The Gift' is a short film from TRUE MVMNT and The Colorado Running Ranch that explores the beauty of distance running.
Next Exit is a new series from Teton Gravity Research and Freehub Magazine that highlights the best mountain bike communities on the planet.
The latest film from More Than Just Parks takes us to Grand Teton National Park, the less-crowded, yet still stunningly beautiful neighbor to Yellowstone.
Butt sores, huge waves, and being in the middle of nowhere barely scratch the surface
Is heat better than altitude? The science seems to say so.
Tunes that’ll help power you through a workout or find zen during a long trail run
For those days when you need a boost on the water
Introducing your new favorite mobile pizza maker
Jurek will pace Meltzer for part of the run
With a top speed of 187 miles per hour, the Bentayga is the fastest SUV ever
Got a squirter? The Parabelt can stop it.
Halfway around the world, fly-fishing scientists are unraveling the secret lives of giant steelhead—one cast at a time
Change is coming—in equipment, in the way we watch it, and even in the way we define what it is
A techy update to the retro-awesome Polaroid
Ten pieces of affordable kit that you'll want to pack every time you head into the woods
Hundreds of millions of dollars are being poured into the burgeoning indoor climbing industry. Will the influx of cash help these gyms finally go mainstream?
A list of essentials vetted by a wilderness first responder
The next evolution of topographic maps will be 3-D interactives that show how rivers change and landscapes erode with centimeter precision
Two new companies want to bring the bike shop to the rider—in totally pimped-out vans, of course
Adam Briggs, a passionate fell runner from the UK, has undergone more than 60 surgeries, including a heart transplant
This is what happens when you enlist fly-fishermen on a scientific quest to save one of the world's last great steelhead populations
Alone, deep underwater inside a sunken ship, with only minutes to survive, Michael Proudfoot's survival story might be the most epic to date
Our hats go off to Froome for an incredible performance thus far. But what happened to everyone else?
I worked, exercised, and slept in the same Polygiene shirt for eight days to find out just how well it could fight my BO. The good news: My wife didn't want to kill me after a week.
The sport will return to the 2016 Olympics after nearly a century, and Carlin Isles is the player we can't wait to watch
The Darién Gap is a lawless wilderness on the border of Colombia and Panama, teeming with everything from deadly snakes to antigovernment guerrillas. The region also sees a flow of migrants from Cuba, Africa, and Asia, whose desperation sends them on perilous journeys to the U.S. Jason Motlagh plunged in, risking robbery, kidnapping, and death to document one of the world’s most harrowing treks.
Maine’s North Woods would make the perfect addition to the parks system—with mountains, streams, and stunning views. So what’s taking the government so long?
You can finally climb the oldest neighborhood in Los Angeles
Physical resilience, mental toughness, and embracing both the highs and lows
This clip is a preview of an hour-long film that Australian newsmagazine Dateline will air on September 6 on Jason Motlagh's expedition through the Darien Gap, using footage shot by Motlagh and videographer Roger Arnold.
Two North Carolina fishermen venture out to some of the state's most remote fishing holes.
Meet Beeline Bikes, a mobile bike shop that brings bike repair to your doorstep.
The places you'll never be able to afford and the ones so welcoming, you can move in tomorrow
In his latest novel, Dave Eggers follows Josie, a former dentist escaping the loss of her practice and a divorce, and her two children, Ana and Paul, as they take a road trip through Alaska. In this exclusive excerpt, they break into an abandoned ranger’s cabin to wait out a wildfire and hide from a man who Josie is convinced is pursuing them.
And they’re faster than ever before
A rare penthouse in Manhattan's Gramercy Park neighborhood is sitting on the market, waiting for a buyer
A quarter century of digging under ice sees winners, losers, and an Irish billionaire teaming up with De Beers
To find out, we compared four iconic Tour climbs with their stateside equivalents
Some academics argue that picture taking enhances rather than ruins moments. I couldn't agree more.
Our favorite stuff from the past seven days
Lili Wright's debut novel is a fast-paced, immersive exploration of place and cultural veneration of the sacred object
What are Cleveland’s riot police doing in mountain bike gear?
An insulated backpack that will keep your favorite beer cold on the trail
The go-anywhere, do-anything teardrop trailer
Watch to see how this rooftop tent from Tepui won us over
Sponsored by Senators Mike Lee and Orrin Hatch, the Human-Powered Travel in Wilderness Areas Act would give local land managers the discretion to allow mountain bikers into wilderness areas
When Cecil, the magnificent, 13-year old, black-mane lion was killed by an American dentist on an illegal trophy bow hunt last year, the world responded with shock and horror. Photographer Brent Stapelkamp, 38, was the last person to fit Cecil with a GPS satellite collar and to photograph him, just a month before he was killed.
The OARS founder and conservation icon was among the first to run non-motorized river trips down the Grand Canyon
Scouts Rickard Sjöberg and Stephan Dombaj explore a forgotten river in the jungles of Costa Rica
A thorough exploration on the role and history of photography in our parks, including works from the legends like Ansel Adams and Imogen Cunningham.
Scott Swaney, a former oilman and current badass a couple years shy of 70, has more first descents in Death Valley National Park than anyone on earth. He spent the past decade looking for everything from tight canyons to massive drop-offs and is believed to have led or been involved with 203 of the 258 first descents in the park. Swaney has burned through partners who couldn’t stand the heat and hard labor of exploring his hellish playground, but he continues to recruit new ones, eager to keep exploring. This spring, photographer Ian Tuttle, who had never canyoneered, stuffed his camera—a film Mamiya 645 AFDii—into a backpack and followed along.
In search of the best backcountry espresso machines
Insurers face $2.8 billion in claims, industry group says
The TSA pulls out all the stops for the July 4 holiday. But can it last?
No indulgent selfies or boring landscapes here. These Instagram accounts showcase the trail like you've never seen it before.