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The Summer 2025 Issue

国产吃瓜黑料 Magazine is back with a new look, new stories, and a fresh perspective on all things outdoors. Read along as we meet the real Albert Lin, explore the hidden corners of Downtown Chicago, learn how to build a ride-or-die outdoor community, and visit Kazakhstan for one of the rowdiest games ever played on horseback.

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riding an eMTB in the mountains

Are Analog Mountain Bikes a Thing of the Past?

Electric mountain bikes are no longer anomalies on the trail, and some say they鈥檒l soon outnumber traditional bikes. If you feel like that escalated quickly, you鈥檙e not alone.

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The Benefits (and Drawbacks) of Adult Beginner-ness, With Mirna Valerio

Take it from a professional trier-of-new-things: taking up a new outdoor pursuit can change your life鈥攁nd the more hurdles you face in doing so, the more reasons you have to try.

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A woman in a flannel shirt talks to the camera in a gear shed

What You Really Need in Your Backcountry First Aid Kit

There鈥檚 no debate that one of the ten essentials you should bring into the backcountry is a first aid kit. What goes into that kit, however, is up for debate.

The Thieves Didn't Leave Fingerprints. Detectives Used Tree DNA To Convinct Them Instead.

Thieves Are Making Off With Olympic National Forest's Rarest Trees

Timber thieves are a slippery bunch. Here's how cops uncovered an underground criminal ring in spanning the Pacific Northwest and cracked down to protect the state's ancient trees.

Deep in the night on August 4, 2018, a trio of timber cutters bushwhacked into a steep valley thick with brush, wearing headlamps and carrying a chainsaw, gas can, and a slew of felling tools. Their target, a trifurcated, mossy bigleaf maple, towered above Jefferson Creek, which gurgled down the narrow ravine floor that drains the Olympic National Forest鈥檚 Elk Lake. Justin Wilke, the band鈥檚 captain, had discovered the massive tree the day before and dubbed her 鈥淏ertha.鈥

Wilke had established three dispersed campsites in the Elk Lake vicinity, some 20 miles from the nearest town of Hoodsport, Washington, over the previous weeks. By day he scouted for the most prime bigleaf maples. He had illegally felled at least three in the area since April, but he considered Bertha the mother tree.

A carpenter by trade, Wilke, then 36, dabbled in odd jobs in construction, as a mechanic, on fishing boats, and in canneries, but like many across the peninsula鈥檚 scattered hamlets, he鈥檇 been a logger since his hands were sure enough to wield a chainsaw. A tattoo the length of his left arm read 鈥淲est Coast Loggers,鈥 his tribute to a heritage that began with his grandfather.

Honest work had grown scarce. Wilke and his girlfriend were camping on a friend鈥檚 property just outside the national forest to trim expenses and lived on his earnings from cutting illegal firewood and selling poached maple. The situation wasn鈥檛 tenable. He was hungry, and he needed a windfall.

Closing in on Bertha in the darkness alongside Wilke were Shawn 鈥淭hor鈥 Williams and Lucas Chapman. Thor had just sprung from a stint in prison two weeks earlier. A 47-year-old union framer, Thor had also dabbled as an MMA fighter and debt collector and carried a litany of past convictions ranging from assault and burglary to unlawful imprisonment. He hoped the job would deliver him back to his daughter and sometimes-girlfriend in California. Chapman, 35, was Wilke鈥檚 gopher, hired primarily to watch the campsites during the operation. The three were high on methamphetamines.

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