Top 15 Spots to Camp in Colorado
From supported campgrounds to dispersed places with stellar stargazing, we found the best places to sleep outside in the Rocky Mountains.
From supported campgrounds to dispersed places with stellar stargazing, we found the best places to sleep outside in the Rocky Mountains.
No camp stove? You can still whip up a hot meal with these tips.
Five ways to measure your progress trail running across surfaces, distances, and routes
Kids change a lot of things—including how happy strangers are to see you (and your tiny passenger) biking by
Curated adventures to experience the best of the Lone Star State
The 2024 North Pole season was canceled after the main runway at Barneo Ice Camp cracked. The American guide still has ambitions to return to the planet’s northernmost point.
Explore the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness with these tips from an experienced local canoeist and outfitter
Walking across deserts and mountain ranges taught the author important lessons on friendship, compassion, and understanding others
Toyota’s lineup of mid-size trucks all share the same platform. We tease out why you should choose one over the other.
If you're searching for an active running community with lots of run groups, Austin, Texas, is the place to be
Spoiler alert: It’s not aromatherapy candles or a trendy diaper bag
Meet Blowhole, an Alaskan husky—and Iditarod finisher—who got miffed at a musher and chomped her brake lines. (Allegedly. Because a lot of people think this Internet-famous pup is innocent.)
Short workouts can make you stronger, but longer workouts are better for building muscle, according to new research
Every great adventure needs a staging area. Here they are, from simple and affordable to dreamy and luxe, in unbelievable locations, with endless terrain to explore and a warm bed to return to at night.
‘Everest, Inc.,’ a new book from veteran outdoor journalist Will Cockrell, documents the mountain’s transformation, first by Western guides and climbers, and now by Sherpas and Nepalis
Embarking on four days of total blackout, inside the sensory equivalent of a tomb, our writer went on a dark-cave retreat, the same one as quarterback Aaron Rodgers
Bags, tools, and little extras to make camp feel like your home away from home
In this episode of the 101, Bryan Rogala tours cameraman Corey Leavitt’s new 2002 Dodge Ram 2500 build-out. Here's how Leavitt spent months gutting and renovating it.
Movies don’t get much better than surfer-heist popcorn flick ‘Point Break’ (1991). Movies don’t really get much worse than surfer-heist popcorn flick ‘Point Break’ (2015). What happened?
Federal prosecutors allege that Charles Barrett—a prominent member of the Northern California climbing community who goes to trial for aggravated sexual abuse next week—is a serial offender with a shocking history of violence, harassment, and intimidation. An exclusive investigation into his life and alleged actions raises troubling questions about the dangers women continue to face in the outdoors.
When Bonnie Hedlund first started dating Charlie Barrett in 2005, every day was Valentine’s Day.
She would come home from work to find her driveway sprinkled with rose petals, placed there by Barrett, an exceptionally talented rock climber and boulderer based in Northern California. Love notes were hung from trees with messages like “Keep going beautiful girl.” He put more notes inside Hedlund’s cabin, which sat on forested land near the Truckee River. When the weather was right, Barrett sometimes set up a romantic space on the porch, with a table and chairs, candles, dinner for two, and a mattress. He made CD mixes and wrote poems on beautiful stationery.
Barrett, then 21, was 12 years younger than Hedlund. When she was introduced to him by a mutual friend, she never thought of dating as an option because of their age difference. But then he started randomly showing up at her cabin, making his interest clear. He was attractive—tall and dark, with broad shoulders and a big smile—and attentive in a way she’d never experienced. Better still, some of their best times together happened in her favorite place: the outdoors.
“The climbing was phenomenal,” she says. “We would do amazing climbs nearly every day.”
Like Barrett, Hedlund was an accomplished sport climber and boulderer, and she had been ticking off difficult routes on the east side of the Sierra Nevada since the late 1980s, before the region became widely known as a bouldering destination. The couple, along with their core group of Tahoe-area friends, did routes together constantly. As the relationship grew stronger, Barrett moved in with Hedlund and her dog, a rescued wolf hybrid.