Outside Magazine
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Outside is an American magazine focused on the outdoors. The first issue was published in September 1977. Source
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| Scope | National, Consumer |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Country | United States of America |
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| Frequency | Other |
Recent Articles
Search ArticlesI Rode a Mechanical Bull on a Floating Rodeo—and It Was Every Bit as Wild as It Sounds
A mechanical bull, floating dance floor, baby goats, and country music turned an ordinary day on Lake Travis into one of the most delightfully over-the-top summer events in Texas. My legs are clamped around the shoulders of a rotating black bull with glowing red eyes and plastic horns that could gouge a chunk out of someone’s rear end. I glance around—no dusty rodeo arena or wood-clad bar, just a bunch of waves lapping against a rocky shoreline.
She Got Stranded on a Brutal Colorado 13er. Her Packing List Is a Lesson in Backcountry Survival.
When a seasoned hiker injured her knee on Colorado’s chossy Broken Hand Pass, her 13-hour rescue in the dark became a testament to why prep isn't just for beginners. The hiker's 13-hour rescue required a helicopter and 24 responders from two volunteer teams (Photo: CCSAR) On July 12, an experienced hiker found herself in a situation that most people fear.
As the Boundary Waters Burns, A Piece of Myself Is Lost, Too
Minnesota’s Boundary Waters have played an integral role in writer Stephanie Pearson’s life. Pearson recently had to flee the wilderness due to surging wildfires, and she discusses the physical and emotional toll of losing the outdoor place you love.
What Does a Tour de France Rider Eat in a Day? We Break Down Their 8,000-Calorie Menu. Original
Tour de France riders are prime athletes who eat like a pack of wild animals. The world’s best cyclists eat anywhere between 5,000 and 8,000 calories a day at the Tour. That’s two to three times the guideline intake of a sedentary adult. But this isn’t gluttony. It’s survival. Riders might burn more than 6,000 calories in just one stage of a race defined by superhuman acts of performance that require superhuman feats of fueling.
9 American Alpine Spirits That Bring the Outdoors to Your Glass
After a day on the trail, cocktail hour could be a simple slug of whiskey. But why not drink in more of the natural beauty that was, after all, the point of getting there? With a new wave of alpine spirits, American distillers are making that proposition pretty irresistible.
I Contracted a Mystery Illness Rafting in the Grand Canyon. Here’s What It’s Like.
Three days after his Grand Canyon rafting trip, Matthew Wappett was in the ER. He tells Outside what it’s like to battle the mystery illness baffling National Park Service rangers and the medical community at large.
Vandals Smashed The 95-Year-Old High Rock Cabin Overlooking Mount Rainier. Hikers Are Refusing to Let It Die.
Just weeks before volunteers were set to complete the decade-long restoration of Washington’s High Rock Lookout, a 95-year-old fire lookout near Mount Rainier, vandals ruined their final push. Someone broke into the cabin and shattered its windows, kicked in a door, and tossed valuable material off of a cliff, leaving the restoration crew to pick up the pieces.
This Artist Is Painting the Pacific Crest Trail, One Gorgeous View at a Time
A California landscape artist is thru-hiking the iconic trail with his art supplies in his backpack. Every day, he stops and paints another picture of an iconic vista, breathtaking wildflower, or scenic forest. Kevin Gleason is painting the Pacific Crest Trail this summer (Photo: Kevin Gleason) Kevin Gleason, a Santa Barbara, California-based painter and former high school art teacher, is hiking the Pacific Crest Trail this summer.
Officials Have Canceled All Boundary Waters Canoe Permits Amid Surging Wildfires. Now What?
Forest Service officials closed shuttered public access to the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness (BWCAW) on July 14 due to surging wildfires across Minnesota. The decision is part of a 3.9 million-acre closure across Superior National Forest due to encroaching fires, and the unusually hot and dry conditions. The news was announced in a public release, which did not provide details on when the region will reopen to the public.
A Timeline of What Happens to Your Body When You Stop Running for a Few Days to One Month and Beyond
There are occasions when we all get sick, injured, or too busy to run. That’s life. But for runners, it’s a hard part of life to accept. When we take time off running, we tend to panic, worried that we are losing fitness. It’s not an unreasonable fear. A landmark study called the 1966 Dallas Bed Rest and Training Study put five healthy college students in hospital beds for 20 days, with only one brief respite for a shower.