A New Study Shows Wearable Tech Still Isn’t As Accurate As Your Own Perception
Your watch or wearable isn't actually the most accurate way to determine how hard your last workout was. This completely analog method is.
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Your watch or wearable isn't actually the most accurate way to determine how hard your last workout was. This completely analog method is.
Not even a Colorado thunderstorm could diminish the stoke from the second annual event, writes our articles editor
Go beyond the beaten path with an uncommon adventurer who uses his 2025 Toyota 4Runner to creatively map the country’s most wild and wondrous locations
The seismic activity on May 29 was much smaller than the July 2024 explosion that closed Biscuit Basin
Stargazing shot up in popularity during the pandemic. If the Oregon Outback gains sanctuary status, it will be the largest such reserve in the world. Plus: nine other Dark Sky sites that will blow your mind.
A new generation of quirky outdoor brands like Skida and Pit Viper has found inspiration and community in the rolling hills of northeast Vermont.
I wish the Near Zero Adventure Bundle had been around when I started backpacking
Work up a thirst—and then toast the outdoors—on the Smokies’ top hikes, rides, and more
Colorado Parks and Wildlife advised dog owners to keep pets on-leash when walking in moose habitat, and to choose trails with good visibility
Search and rescue teams recently conducted 13 helicopter rescues over a seven-day span. A SAR leader blames the uptick on a detour to a vital hiking route.
Make it harder than ever for thieves to steal your bike with these 6 locks, from U-locks to home storage.
Tyler Andrews shares details from his aborted attempt at the Mount Everest speed record. The American is making a second attempt at the FKT later this week.
Many endurance athletes don't eat enough protein. Here's what you need for optimal performance and recovery.
Explore the world's best bike tours—from the French Alps to New Zealand's gravel—and discover top outfitters for your next dream trip.
The travel guide talks about his new favorite way to see Europe and imparts some sage advice for getting the most out of a trip.
Mount Everest’s Icefall Doctors, the workers who build and maintain the route through the Khumbu Glacier, pursue a livelihood rooted in tradition and danger
Neuroscientist Andrew Huberman partnered with Roka to design a red-tinted lens, which block rays of light that keep you activated at night.
Take it from a professional trier-of-new-things: taking up a new outdoor pursuit can change your life—and the more hurdles you face in doing so, the more reasons you have to try.
There’s no debate that one of the ten essentials you should bring into the backcountry is a first aid kit. What goes into that kit, however, is up for debate.
Timber thieves are a slippery bunch. Here's how cops uncovered an underground criminal ring in spanning the Pacific Northwest and cracked down to protect the state's ancient trees.
Deep in the night on August 4, 2018, a trio of timber cutters bushwhacked into a steep valley thick with brush, wearing headlamps and carrying a chainsaw, gas can, and a slew of felling tools. Their target, a trifurcated, mossy bigleaf maple, towered above Jefferson Creek, which gurgled down the narrow ravine floor that drains the Olympic National Forest’s Elk Lake. Justin Wilke, the band’s captain, had discovered the massive tree the day before and dubbed her “Bertha.”
Wilke had established three dispersed campsites in the Elk Lake vicinity, some 20 miles from the nearest town of Hoodsport, Washington, over the previous weeks. By day he scouted for the most prime bigleaf maples. He had illegally felled at least three in the area since April, but he considered Bertha the mother tree.
A carpenter by trade, Wilke, then 36, dabbled in odd jobs in construction, as a mechanic, on fishing boats, and in canneries, but like many across the peninsula’s scattered hamlets, he’d been a logger since his hands were sure enough to wield a chainsaw. A tattoo the length of his left arm read “West Coast Loggers,” his tribute to a heritage that began with his grandfather.
Honest work had grown scarce. Wilke and his girlfriend were camping on a friend’s property just outside the national forest to trim expenses and lived on his earnings from cutting illegal firewood and selling poached maple. The situation wasn’t tenable. He was hungry, and he needed a windfall.
Closing in on Bertha in the darkness alongside Wilke were Shawn “Thor” Williams and Lucas Chapman. Thor had just sprung from a stint in prison two weeks earlier. A 47-year-old union framer, Thor had also dabbled as an MMA fighter and debt collector and carried a litany of past convictions ranging from assault and burglary to unlawful imprisonment. He hoped the job would deliver him back to his daughter and sometimes-girlfriend in California. Chapman, 35, was Wilke’s gopher, hired primarily to watch the campsites during the operation. The three were high on methamphetamines.