Trail Chef: Editors' Choice, Breakfast Recipe Edition
Staff experts share their hearty trail pancakes and choco-banana French toast
Staff experts share their hearty trail pancakes and choco-banana French toast
Almost too close to call...
LowePro CompuRover is the outdoor photographer's best friend.
For a rough day on the trail, wear Patagonia's stable Scramble 35 daypack.
Roll, carry, or tote around your gear with the versatile High Sierra Overpass Wheeled bag.
The North Face Base Camp Series duffel is reliable through the worst dragging, zipper-yanking and rain.
Durable and lightweight, the Granite Gear Ultraflight 115 will keep you rolling.
Use and abuse the tough Mountain Hardware Juggernaut Series luggage.
In which we examine the unseemly link between backpacking and nasty junk food.
Because a good baselayer is hard to find
Trek across the roof of the Andes, mix in some trail riding–on bike and horseback–and climb a 19,000-foot volcano.
Test your scrambling skills–plus sea kayak, rock climb, and scuba dive the Gulf of Orosei Coast.
Weave through the Dolomite's limestone daggers.
Hike to South America's acropolis.
See azure seas from rocky peaks.
Air at home can be more harmful to asthmatic kids than outdoor air
Traverse the unknown end of the Alps–by trail, canyon, and cliff face–on this demanding journey in and around Triglav National Park.
The Sarawak Chamber at Gunung Mulu National Park in Malaysia has over 186 miles of caves.
Humor on Africa's high point courtesy of the British tabloids
Think the Empire State Building is tall? Try this waterfall on for size.
The Gray Whale swims thousands of miles to mate- and you were complaining about picking up the dinner bill.
Zebras, wildebeest and rhinos all call this Tanzanian volcanic caldera just another place to eat.
The white, fluffy, subzero-temperature-loving polar bear is the world's largest ursine.
Millions of years ago, these crazy rock formations were formed in Turkey due to volcanic activity.
You better stand back if this Sicilian island volcano starts to spurt.
The smart, social, and friendly mountain gorillas take the heavyweight title.
From jaguars to river dolphins, Amazonian animals are diverse.
Head to Northern California's Redwood National Park for a glimpse at these giants.
There is a reason the native's call it Sagarmatha, meaning "head of the sky."
Trekker-friendly glacier is largest in the Alps.
Superheated water sprays from Yellowstone ground.
If your going to Chile's Atacama Desert, don't forget the sunscreen.
There is nothing like the African lion.
Trek through the earth's wildest mountain range.
Fiery volcanoes, 40-ton mammals, otherworldly caves–in this explorer's guide, we'll show you where to find the most mind-blowing backcountry features on the planet. By Marcus Woolf
Nepal's Annapurna Circuit doesn’t offer lavish huts, extreme solitude, or sumptuous cuisine. So why is it still number one? Let us count the reasons.
Hike, paddle, and swim narrow canyons before running class IV rapids on an inflatable boogie board.
Though intended for high fashion rather than high peaks, could tape glasses be an ultralight solution waiting to happen?
Trek between Buddhist villages, raft Himalayan whitewater, and ride an elephant in the shadow of 8,000-meter peaks.
I've been backpacking for ten years and have never had any pain in my legs, but recently I've been getting a severe pain down the front of my legs and swelling in my feet. What could I be experiencing?
Snowboarder found thanks to Twitter and iPhone, but partner doesn't survive
Walk, bike, and raft between a string of glaciated peaks; then ladder-climb 2,500 feet up a sheer rock face.
Backpacker's interactive maps make planning your Yellowstone expedition easy
Float, backpack, and mountain bike Canada's wild west coast.
Do campfires deter bears?
A group of Arizona scientists wants your help tracking wild plant and animal behavior in 2009
In a brief appearance at the Interior Department's headquarters, the president reinforces his commitment to America's great outdoors
Check out The Backpacker Editors's author page.
Montana's park losing its namesake sooner than predicted
We're wiping out forests more literally than we think
Colorado Springs sets a minimum $100 fee for uninjured hikers who get up but can't get down
National parks will get $750 million from the economic stimulus package--but how should they spend it?
Getting a jump on the spring hordes
Do urban backpackers--travelers who fill the streets of New Zealand and beyond--qualify as legit backpackers?
Possible move of Forest Service from Agriculture Dept. to Interior could spark controversy
Video and internet comments from a fatal accident bring home the typical quandaries of big mountains, weather, group size and rescue expectations.
Eddie Bauer-sponsored expedition will take Ed Viesturs, Dave Hahn, and Peter Whitaker on a landmark Everest expedition
2008 winner brings muskrat skinning to outdoor competition
Scientists find an 'Alps-sized' mountain range two miles beneath Antarctic ice sheet
The first installment of our new weekly series on all things camp food
Government steps up and widens habitat for endangered species
Americans love soft toilet paper, but at the expense of old-growth forests
Collared female wanders over 1,000 miles from national park
Need a new bag? Put on a thimble and head to outdoor fabric store
Part of it's climate impact reducing strategy is to eliminate its carbon footprint.
South Korean climber survives avalanche, broken bones, and a cold, exposed night in Yosemite
UK man takes kayak to work
X-Ray pictures catch man trying to smuggle Australian snakes to Bangkok in suitcases
Obama says energy issue is critical and calls for action
Archwood Flextrek 37 Trillion pack just might blow your mind
Bear sleeping bag gets campers in the mood for hibernatin'
Probably not—but an intriguing image resembling the lost, sunken city pops up on Google Ocean
Rob Hart, inventor of the popular Crazy Creek Camp Chair, died after a ski accident near his Montana home.
National Park celebrates birthday all year with trails and music
...at least, it is as far as the New Zealand department of customs and biohazards is concerned.
Sometimes collecting poo is the fast track to free fuel
Be conscious and conscientious, and be the change you want to see in the world
Agency hopes to build aggressive regulation policy after investigating links to human health risks
Floppy disc-era wilderness adventure comes to the iPhone
Bright, light, and rechargeable--the perfect camp lantern is here. Green Editor Berne Broudy breaks down why this lamp made the EC cut. 2613919215001