Nature

UST Creative Manager Talks Fatherhood, Societal Pressures, and His Love of the Outdoors

Increasing Diversity in the Outdoors One Hike at a Time

This National Forest in Florida Is a Tropical Paradise

Utah’s Fishlake National Forest Is Magic in the Fall

Preserving Washington’s Shrub-Steppe

Light Painting Under the Night Sky

The Hills Are Alive with the Sounds of Bugs

The Rivers That Come Alive at Night

A Letter to Humanity from Mother Earth

The Fight to Save Louisiana’s Coastline

Meet California’s Best Big-Tree Hunter

Saving the Last Great Super Tuskers

A Reminder of Beauty in this World

Three Waterwomen on Conserving the Ocean

Chasing Down the Northern Lights

Salvage Woodworking Is Green and Beautiful

A Search for Vanishing Dark Skies

Iceland Is Unlike Anywhere Else on Earth

Paddling the Olympic Peninsula

How I Survived a Rattlesnake Bite
‘The Moon in Motion’
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+.
On August 21, 2017, people across the U.S. turned their eyes toward a solar eclipse. With cameras spread across the Tetons and into Idaho, photographer Phil Hart captured this experience and has whittled down the footage to these two minutes. The Moon in Motion is ten days and two years’ worth of shooting and editing in the making.