Is It Still Safe to Visit the Grand Canyon Now? Here’s What to Know About the Wildfires.
The Dragon Bravo blaze at the Grand Canyon is one most devastating wildfires in National Park history. What's open and still safe for travelers?
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The Dragon Bravo blaze at the Grand Canyon is one most devastating wildfires in National Park history. What's open and still safe for travelers?
High speed, high price—and highly enjoyable
We interviewed Veronica Aimee Chik after she redpointed ‘Fish Eye’ on July 8 in Oliana, Spain, to find out how she pulled it off and what’s next for this motivated climber.
With a model for every rider and an industry-leading warranty, Troxus has you covered no matter what the road ahead holds
The Ciele ATShort is designed for jumping in a lake during a run, but handles being soaked in sweat just as well
From tools to survival skills, we're here to offer expert advice that will equip you to take on the outdoors like a pro
We’re not asking why you run 100 miles, but we’re going to need some tea.
We put this season’s best outdoor Bluetooth speakers through their paces indoors and out, on wet days and dry days, beaches, tailgates, and patios. These seven emerged as our favorites.
Located in the Yellowstone’s Porcelain Basin, the new thermal feature is believed to have appeared on Christmas Day
Feeling frazzled? Getting outside can help.
If you want to learn how to fall asleep earlier, follow these ancient Ayurvedic principles that can help you get more restorative sleep.
Outdoor organizations may offer etiquette guidelines, but they don't always tell you what you really want to know. Here are some tips from our editors.
Campfire therapy is simple: the idea is to use the fire ring’s healing and soothing benefits to help people open up while navigating trauma.
July and August provide dazzling, nearly all-night views of the core of our spiral galaxy, a luminous bulge of stars, dust, and gas.
I gave myself a mission: walk straight out of the front door of the suburban house where I’m living and keep walking all day, until I found adventure or felt better—whichever came first.
By choosing to be laid to rest beneath a tree, families create living memorials that honor their loved ones and the planet.
Original maker of the multitool is launching a new range of (very nice!) pocket knives and fixed outdoor blades. I’ve been testing them for weeks.
The most influential digital designer you've never heard of found an anecdote to the noise on Japan's ancient walking routes
Yes, you need to wash your down jacket. No, you don't need a fancy machine to do it. Here's how to clean your insulating layers at home.
After a near-fatal bike crash in April 2024, ultrarunner David Roche decided to go all in chasing big goals. Five months later, he shattered the Leadville Trail 100 record and now has his sights set on winning Western States.
—In April 2024, David Roche’s body was on a beeline toward death. Thrown off his bike by a turning car, Roche flew 100 feet into a fence. A concussion, a broken wrist, and stitches ensued, but so too did the lingering effects of a near-death experience, that strange and wildly scary reminder of fragility that feels all the more terrifying when one is blessed with a body that has never had to be reminded of such a thing.
For Roche, that accident was what led to his fuck it moment: a decision to live his life as a demonstration of love, grit, and joy. While recovering, Roche decided that he needed to go big. Fuck the haters. Climb the mountain. Do the thing. And he did. He won the historic Leadville Trail 100 just five months later. It was his first attempt at the distance. He set a course record.
When I first spoke to David Roche in February 2025, it only took him about 30 seconds to mention death. “Everything,” Roche told me over the phone, “starts with death and impermanence.” It was a jarring introduction for someone whose public persona feels so overwhelmingly positive. Love, kindness, awesomeness, even huzzah—these words punctuate Roche’s social media posts, his Strava runs, and, recently, the texts and emails he sent my way. “So excited,” he emailed me, with four exclamation marks, when I told him I was flying out to Boulder, Colorado, to spend some time with him. And yet, as he told me over the phone, he is always subject to entropy, the unalterable process by which each of us, and I do mean each of us, is heading on that beeline toward death.