The Latest

Sonya Wilson Has Been Lifting Up Deaf Climbers for a Decade

The Californian Who Builds—and Rips on—1930s-Style Surfboards

Slacklining Is All About Mental and Physical Balance

Indonesia’s Raja Ampat Is Brimming with Life

Mountain Bikers Head to San Francisco Streets for a New Take on the Sport

Search for Ancient Fossils at Badlands National Park

This New East African Cycling Team Offers Riders International Exposure

An Outside Conversation with ‘In the Shadow of the Mountain’ Author Silvia Vasquez-Lavado

While Other Dogs Are at the Park, Willie the Wiener Is Training for His Next Race

Let This Video Be the Last of Your Screen Time Today

This Cycling Team Is Working to Be Carbon Neutral in 2022

Canada’s B.I.G. Initiative Empowers Women to Achieve Their Climbing Goals

Chris Froome Isn’t Just Back—He Wants to Win the Tour de France

These Women Are Making Space for Femininity in Climbing

Braveheart Runners Gives New Energy to Kenyan Runners’ Racing Dreams

It Isn’t Always Easy to Be a Female Climbing-Gym Owner

Live Like You’re Dying: The Story of One Skateboarder’s Battle with Cancer

‘Not Just a Boys’ Club’ Kicks Gender Stereotypes in Climbing to the Curb

How Hazel Findlay Used a Kitchen Essential on a Difficult Climb

The Island of Senja Is a Mountain Biker’s Dream
Inside a Custom Land Cruiser Camper
Get full access to Outside Learn, our online education hub featuring in-depth fitness, nutrition, and adventure courses and more than 2,000 instructional videos when you sign up for Outside+.
When Alex Milan and Mathilde Treille from Lyon, France, decided to take on a two-year road trip of the Americas, they chose to do it in one of the most legendary overland vehicles of all time: a 1996 70 Series Land Cruiser. They cut and stretched the Cruiser to fit a custom aluminum-frame camper built by Milan, who runs a French camper company called Cartech. We caught up with the two of them at Overland Expo West to check out their highly customized rig, complete with abundant storage space for gear, climbing holds to reach the roof, and plenty of stickers.