Nicholas Hunt Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/nicholas-hunt/ Live Bravely Thu, 12 May 2022 19:07:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cdn.outsideonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/favicon-194x194-1.png Nicholas Hunt Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/nicholas-hunt/ 32 32 Visit Any National Park for Free This Saturday /adventure-travel/national-parks/heres-how-visit-every-national-park-free/ Thu, 18 Apr 2019 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/heres-how-visit-every-national-park-free/ Visit Any National Park for Free This Saturday

The fee-free day kicks off the annual National Park Week

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Visit Any National Park for Free This Saturday

America鈥檚 national parks are hosting a weeklong party starting this Saturday, and the best part is that we鈥檒l be the ones getting gifts鈥攊n the form of听free entrance to over 400 parks. The fee-free day kicks off the annual National Park Week, which this year runs from April 20 to 28听and includes themed days like National Junior Ranger Day, Military and Veterans Recognition Day, Earth Day, and , where you can check out some of the that have partnered with the NPS to raise funds to promote research and restoration projects, help rehab historic structures and trails, host special events, and generally help promote and protect the parks.听

It typically costs between $10 and $35 per vehicle to enter most parks that require a fee鈥攁nd those prices are set to increase $5 to $15 in 2020. If you can鈥檛 make this weekend鈥檚 fee-free day, don鈥檛 worry鈥攜ou鈥檒l have 听this year: when the NPS celebrates its birthday on August 25, National Public Lands Day on September 28, and Veterans Day on November 11. Or you can always snag an annual for $80, which grants access to over 2,000 federal recreation sites, including听national parks and wildlife refuges, and covers amenity and day-use fees in听national forests and on BLM land.听

Don鈥檛 know which park or parks you should visit? Here鈥檚 that typically have entrance fees. And for some extra inspiration, we鈥檝e polled the 国产吃瓜黑料 staff on their all-time favorites.听

Shenandoah, Virginia

I spent a lot of time growing up near in Virginia鈥檚 portion of the Blue Ridge Mountains. My family would always hike Old Rag mountain on Thanksgiving, and I love all the small historic towns鈥攁nd their English-style pubs for post-hike听beers鈥攜ou pass before you get on the park鈥檚 curvy Skyline Drive. Plus,听this stunning, empty countryside is just a couple of hours from Washington, D.C. 鈥擬ary Turner, deputy editor

Mesa Verde, Colorado

The first time I ever experienced the high desert of the Colorado Plateau was here. I was in third grade, and I鈥檝e been hooked on its stunning landscape ever since. definitely isn鈥檛 one of the places you go to get away from the crowds, but it鈥檚 easy to tune that out while you鈥檙e pondering the ruins and looking at Sleeping Ute Mountain or over the San Juan Basin from the mesa top.听鈥擱yan Van Bibber, senior editor听

Acadia, Maine

Maine鈥檚 island topography may not be all turquoise water and white sand beaches, but the rocky coastline is stunning in its own way. , on the state鈥檚 Mount Desert Island, has everything I love packed into just a few miles: amazing sea kayaking, small but rolling peaks, granite cliffs to rock-hop, and, best of all, seals.听Oh, and good craft beer and in Bar Harbor. 鈥擜riella Gintzler, assistant editor

Mount Rainier, Washington 听

is definitely my favorite听for sentimental reasons. I grew up in sight of the peak, learned to ski ten听miles south of it, and hiked through its dense forests and alpine meadows throughout my childhood. The mountain was the first big peak I climbed, and it鈥檚 always held an听emotional pull for me. It feels like home and the wildest place in the world all at once 鈥擜bigail Barronian, assistant editor 听

Dry Tortugas, Florida

Technically a place can鈥檛 be your favorite if you haven鈥檛 been there yet, but I鈥檓 obsessed with . I dream of spending the day snorkeling along Fort Jefferson鈥檚 moat wall and camping on Garden Key鈥檚 white-sand beach for incredible stargazing. Best of all, the park听is accessible mainly by ferry鈥攚hich serves $4 frozen rum drinks. 鈥擜leta Burchyski, associate managing editor

Great Sand Dunes, Colorado听

Tucked into a corner of the stunning San Luis Valley at the foot of the Sangre de Cristo mountains, is my favorite for two reasons. First, there are few things more fun than sand sledding on a $10 plastic saucer from Walmart (or wherever else you source a cheap ride). And because it鈥檚 hours away from any major city, commercial airport, or interstate, it鈥檚 one of the less crowded national parks. 鈥擜xie Navas, digital editorial director

Cuyahoga Valley, Ohio

Don鈥檛 worry if you didn鈥檛 know that there was a 鈥攎uch of the country doesn鈥檛 either. And we Ohioans like to keep it that way. The park is riddled with beautiful sandstone cliffs, waterfalls, and historic canals, and it鈥檚 a perfect place to spend a Saturday with your family. So if you鈥檙e a local听or just visiting the area, don鈥檛 miss this little-known national gem. 鈥擡mily Reed, video producer

Sequoia and Kings Canyon, California

Sure, west of Fresno have massive redwoods, but they鈥檙e also gateways to the High Sierra, where trees give way to granite monoliths. If you head to the 8.4-mile听round-trip听Monarch Lakes Trail near Mineral King Valley, you鈥檒l be treated to views of the Great Western Divide and Sawtooth Pass. But be sure to bring a tarp to wrap the undercarriage of your vehicle if you plan on听leaving your car at the trailhead鈥攃ute but curious marmots have been known to munch on fuel lines, radiator hoses, and more. 鈥擜li Van Houten, editorial fellow 听

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A Day in the Life of a Mountain-Bike Trail Builder /outdoor-adventure/exploration-survival/day-life-mtb-trail-builder/ Sun, 11 Nov 2018 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/day-life-mtb-trail-builder/ A Day in the Life of a Mountain-Bike Trail Builder

No matter where their next project is or what kind of trail they're building, the best part of the job has always been the same.

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A Day in the Life of a Mountain-Bike Trail Builder

Clayton Woodruff, vice president of 听(PTD) in Bentonville, Arkansas, misses digging in the dirt. When he joined the mountain-bike trail-building company in 2010, just a few years after his brother,听Nathan, founded it in 2007, he鈥檇 spend up to six months a year either in the seat of a miniature bulldozer, literally cutting new singletrack out of the raw earth, or following behind the machine, shovel in hand, to smooth it out. It was just him, his brother, and a few close friends back then. Today听the company has about听30 employees, and Woodruff spends most of his work hours behind听a desk, not heavy machinery.

鈥淚 was just telling someone that I鈥檝e gone soft these days because, I鈥檓 like, Oh man, I need air-conditioning,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut there is a lot less job stress when you know all you have to do听is build stuff.鈥

And no wonder. On a typical day for Woodruff, there鈥檚听planning to be done, designs to be drawn, employees to manage, subcontractors to be hired, and an unbelievable amount听of red tape to cut听through. While a ground crew can knock out about听a听mile of new trail in a couple of hours if the conditions are right, it can take years to get the necessary erosion-control plans, environmental-impact reports, and other paperwork approved before a single shovelful of dirt can be moved.

Compared to that, actually is fairly simple. He and the other designers will look听at a topographic map听and start laying out possible routes based on the contours of the land and the scenic听overlooks听and听features they want riders to enjoy. Once a route has been determined, they鈥檒l walk it and mark it听with brightly colored survey flags, adding switchbacks and doglegs along the way to ensure the slope of the trail doesn鈥檛 exceed an erosion-friendly 10 percent grade. Then, using a combination of experience and intuition for what听makes听a听trail fun, the crew member manning the mini bulldozer simply starts cutting a track from flag to flag.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 where skill comes in,鈥 Woodruff says. 鈥淲e compete听against landscape construction companies for projects, but you almost have to be a rider to be able to go into the woods and visualize what that trail鈥檚 going to look like. If you take that knowledge out of it, you鈥檙e just digging in the dirt.鈥

From there, the rest of the crew follows on foot,听wielding听hand tools to spice up the route and make sure it rides the way they want. That can mean ten- to twelve-hour days on the ground for weeks at a time.

Gaining that level of expertise, both at the office and in the woods, was a long journey for a company that began听almost by accident. But looking back now, it seems a little like fate. If you鈥檙e not a mountain biker, you probably know听Bentonville听as the听home of听Walmart鈥檚 headquarters. If you are a mountain biker, you know听that the sleepy Ozark town, population 35,301, is听becoming听one of America鈥檚 singletrack meccas (which you can read about here, here, and here). But that wasn鈥檛 always the case. When Clayton and Nathan were growing up in these hills, most of the mountain biking they could find was either on old dirt-bike tracks or trails built illegally in the woods.

Then in the mid-2000s, Nathan, who was working toward a career in education, helped build听a few routes at a , and when Bentonville started thinking about creating听some new, downhill-style bike trails, his name sort of popped up for the job. From there听he founded PTD听and took on any project he could find, often subcontracting for larger organizations like the 鈥檚 trail-building division and sleeping in dingy RVs in parking lots听to save money while working gigs. As the company grew, so did Bentonville and America鈥檚 demand for quality singletrack, and听PTD has since built trails everywhere from Bend, Oregon, to Baja California Sur, Mexico.

One key to this success could be the brothers鈥櫶齛pproach to their industry. That is, while they are very much your stereotypical mountain-biking bros who love drinking beer and shredding on their bikes, they鈥檙e all business when it comes to their work.

鈥淢ountain biking has this听culture around it that鈥檚 not taken seriously,鈥 Woodruff says. 鈥淚f I was giving advice to someone looking to do what we do, it鈥檇 be to send in a professional e-mail and r茅sum茅. If somebody just sends 鈥榃hat鈥檚 up bro? All this seems chill,鈥櫶齀鈥檓 not inclined to hire that guy.鈥

Today听20 of PTD鈥檚听30 employees听work full-time year-round. It鈥檚 their听professionalism and institutional knowledge that lets them juggle the seven听to ten听projects they take on each year.

But no matter where their next project is or what kind of trail they鈥檙e building, the best part of the job continues to be听the same. No, it鈥檚 not getting paid to ride (though Woodruff admits that鈥檚 pretty great, too)鈥攊t鈥檚 riding听their new trail with friends or clients for the first time.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just high fives all around,鈥 he says.

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A Newbie’s Guide to Outerbike /adventure-travel/destinations/newbies-guide-outerbike/ Mon, 22 Oct 2018 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/newbies-guide-outerbike/ A Newbie's Guide to Outerbike

How to make the most of your three-day weekend in bike demo heaven.

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A Newbie's Guide to Outerbike

It used to be that if you wanted to try out the latest and greatest mountain bikes all in one place, you had to know someone in the business who could sneak you into , the industry-only trade show in Las Vegas. 鈥淎ll our guests wanted to go,鈥 says Mark Sevenoff, who owns the Moab, Utah鈥揵ased mountain bike touring company 听with his wife, Ashley Korenblat, former president of the International Mountain Bicycling Association. 鈥淧eople really want to be able to try that $10,000 Yeti before they plunk down for it.鈥 So the couple thought why not create their own demo event right after Interbike鈥攐ne that was open to everyone who wanted to come? With all the companies already in Vegas with fleets of demo bikes, it would be easy for them pop over to Moab.

And so, in 2010, was born. Far from your typical demo day at your local shop, the annual three-day event sees giant firms like Cannondale and Specialized, high-end shops like Yeti and Evil, and direct-to-consumer brands like Canyon and YT bring their newest rigs to one of the sport鈥檚 most iconic locations for a single purpose: to help you find your dream ride.

Over the years, the Outerbike has become part party and part gathering of the clans and has expanded to include additional locations, like Crested Butte, Colorado, and Sun Valley, Idaho. This week, it will travel east of the Rockies for the first time with an event in Bentonville, Arkansas, from October 26 to 28, meaning a whole new region of the country can get in on the action. If this is your first time attending, there are a few things you should know to make the most of your weekend in bike demo heaven.

Fight the Sticker Shock

At $240 for an , attending Outerbike is not cheap. However, with demos at most bike shops running close to $100 a day and bike shuttles for trails like Moab鈥檚 Magnificent 7 starting around $25 per person, the event is actually quite a deal. You just need to test two bikes and take two shuttles to break even, and it鈥檚 easy to beat that goal in a single day.

Make a Wish List

There are plenty of brands and bikes to test, but there鈥檚 always a line at the gates for the 9 a.m. start and plenty of competition throughout the day to get on the year鈥檚 hottest new rides. Coming prepared each morning with a list of the bikes you鈥檙e most excited to try will save time and guarantee you land at least one. That said, be open to surprises. If all the bikes on your list are checked out, that鈥檚 the perfect opportunity to fall in love with something completely unexpected.

Skip Lunch

OK, not really. With the miles you鈥檒l be logging, you鈥檒l definitely want a midday fuel-up. But while everyone鈥檚 chowing down on the (surprisingly tasty and healthy) lunches included with each pass, the bikes they were just testing are up for grabs. If you missed your dream ride during the morning rush, this is your second-best chance.

Establish a Test Loop

You鈥檒l be tempted to shred as much different singletrack as you can, thanks to unlimited chairlifts and/or shuttles depending on the location, but if you鈥檙e serious about finding the perfect bike, consider creating your own test loop near the venue so you can directly compare lap times and ride quality. 鈥淐hallenge yourself and pick a gnarly climb or tricky roll in on the edge of your comfort zone,鈥 Sevenoff suggests. 鈥淵ou may not clear听it on one bike, but on another, it could be super easy.鈥

Demo the Direct-to-Consumer Brands

Canyon, YT, Norco, Fezzari, and other direct-to-consumer bike manufacturers are putting out some seriously good rides at seriously good prices. Check out our review of YT鈥檚 Jeffsy. But since you can鈥檛 pop down to the shop for a test ride, events like Outerbike are the only real way to know how those bikes fit and perform before you buy.

Don鈥檛 Just Wait in Line

鈥淏e involved,鈥 Sevenoff says. 鈥淭alk to the demo people. Every brand is different, but most will let you know right away what they have in stock so you don鈥檛 waste time waiting until you鈥檙e at the front of the line.鈥 If you鈥檙e friendly, some may even take your cellphone number and text you when the bike you want is in, he says, and other brands, like Ibis and Yeti, have started taking reservations.

Pack Your Tools

With mechanics to set up each bike to your liking and a patrol out on the trails to fix flats and other mechanical issues, it鈥檚 easy to just go out and ride. But being able to take care of your own flat tire won鈥檛 just save you time; packing a full kit, including a multitool and shock pump, will let you dial in the bike while you鈥檙e out on the trail. Nothing ruins a test ride like a rear shock that鈥檚 accidently way too stiff or a brake lever that鈥檚 out of prime position.

Bring Your Own Bike

Part of Outerbike鈥檚 attraction is the ability to show up with little more than your kit and ride some amazing trails without having to pack your bike for a long drive or flight. But riding your own steed on the听test loop is a great way to establish a baseline against which to compare the rigs you鈥檝e been drooling over. Plus, with your own bike in tow, you can extend your trip well beyond the weekend, Sevenoff says. For example, the day before the Moab event kicks off, Outerbike offers shuttles of听the world-famous Whole Enchilada trail, more than 7,000 feet of descent in 27 miles.

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Sierra Nevada’s Push to Brew Sustainable Beer /adventure-travel/destinations/north-america/sierra-nevada-sustainable/ Wed, 15 Aug 2018 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/sierra-nevada-sustainable/ Sierra Nevada's Push to Brew Sustainable Beer

Craft beer plus sustainability equals success.

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Sierra Nevada's Push to Brew Sustainable Beer

Sierra Nevada Brewing has a long history of using sustainable technologies at its Chico, California, production facility. In fact, that building was the first to earn a TRUE Zero Waste designation by Green Business Certification, meaning at least 90 percent of its waste is reused or diverted from landfills, says Brian Grossman, Sierra Nevada vice president and son of the company鈥檚 founder. The brewery鈥檚 eastward expansion to a second facility in Mills River, North Carolina鈥攁 small town just south of craft-beer mecca 颅Asheville鈥攑rovided a rare opportunity: the chance to build green from the ground up. 鈥淵ou have to be willing to look at yourself and ask, How can we get better?鈥 he says. 鈥淪o we implemented some unique engineering philosophies. Everything is very straight and linear, which requires a lot less energy. But it鈥檚 also a new construction that allowed us to use new technology.鈥

(digidreamgrafix/123RF)

The result? Three years after the Mills 颅River facility opened in June 2013, it received its own Zero Waste designation and became the first LEED Platinum production brewery in the nation. It鈥檚 the first building in the world to receive both designations. Earning them was no easy feat. Platinum is the highest LEED ranking and requires excellence in least 80 points in categories like transportation infrastructure and light pollution. And being a brewery, Sierra Nevada faced some unique challenges, Grossman says. 鈥淭he energy modeling had never been done before. It took a while to get the engineers to understand the how and why of what we did.鈥

(digidreamgrafix/123RF)

The company isn鈥檛 the only brewery striving for sustainability. At least seven facilities have some level of LEED certification, and others are putting the emphasis on water conservation and advocacy. Which makes sense when you realize that it usually takes six gallons of water to brew one gallon of suds. But Full Sail Brewing in Hood River, Oregon, uses less than three gallons, thanks to special mash filters, a hot-water recovery system, and other innovations, which together reduce its annual water consumption by 4.1 million gallons. On the advocacy side, organizations like the Natural Resources 颅Defense Council鈥檚 Brewers for Clean 颅Water, the Nature Conservancy鈥檚 OktoberForest, and the Oregon Brewshed Alliance foster resources awareness by hosting informational pint nights, organizing volunteer cleanups, and sending letters to Congress. That鈥檚 worth raising a glass to.

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How to Brew a Cup of Coffee No Matter Where You Are /outdoor-gear/tools/how-brew-cup-coffee-no-matter-where-you-are/ Tue, 01 Aug 2017 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/how-brew-cup-coffee-no-matter-where-you-are/ How to Brew a Cup of Coffee No Matter Where You Are

Six tips from James Freeman, coffee drinker extraordinaire and founder of Blue Bottle.

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How to Brew a Cup of Coffee No Matter Where You Are

Brewing great coffee doesn鈥檛 have to be complicated. The key? Go with a pour-over. While the term may evoke images of mustachioed baristas, this highly portable, completely analog tool is easy to learn how to use and just at home on the trail as it is at your local caf茅. We asked James Freeman, founder of the globe-spanning coffee roaster听, to help us dial in our pour-over technique.

#1. Pick Your Beans

This step is really all about personal taste, of course. Not surprisingly, Freeman recommends , because it鈥檚 the company鈥檚 most forgiving blend to brew under difficult circumstances鈥攍ike your backcountry campsite.

#2. Dial in the Proportions

Don鈥檛 think you can just dump some grounds into the pour-over cone and call it a day. Aim for a ratio of ten parts water to one part grounds and you can鈥檛 go wrong. That said, when in doubt, add more grounds. 鈥淐offee is like butter,鈥 Freeman says. 鈥淢ore is almost always better than less.鈥

#3. Grind Your Own

Skip the preground beans. Thanks to small, portable hand grinders like the , you can have freshly ground coffee pretty much anywhere, no electricity required. For a pour-over, stop grinding when the grounds reach the consistency of coarse sea salt.

#4. 鈥r Don鈥檛

If you鈥檙e really trying to shave weight in your pack, check out , Blue Bottle鈥檚 line of single-portion preground beans wrapped in proprietary, oxygen-free packaging to guarantee the grounds stay fresh for six months. We dig this stuff.

#5. Filter Right

A good filter shouldn鈥檛 taste like anything, so forget the brown ones you find at your local grocery store unless you prefer your roast with a hint of cardboard. Freeman recommends . Be sure to wet the filter with hot water and dump the excess liquid before adding the grounds.

#6. Master the Four-Part Pour

A good pour-over requires four additions of hot water. The first, an outward spiral starting at the center, should saturate all the grounds and take about 15 seconds, followed by 30 seconds to let the coffee drip. The second, which should last about 20 seconds, starts at the filter and spirals inward to stir the grounds. When the water level in the filter drops to the top of the grounds, repeat this pour and wait until the filter is almost completely drained before repeating it one last time.

Enjoy.

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The Race to Collect Glacier Ice Before It’s Gone /outdoor-adventure/environment/core-work/ Tue, 11 Jul 2017 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/core-work/ The Race to Collect Glacier Ice Before It's Gone

Microscopic air bubbles inside glaciers can be read like the rings of a tree, providing climate data going back thousands of years. But as the world鈥檚 glaciers melt at an unprecedented rate, researchers are scrambling to preserve that data before it鈥檚 gone forever.

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The Race to Collect Glacier Ice Before It's Gone

Microscopic air bubbles inside glaciers can be read like the rings of a tree, providing climate data going back thousands of years. But as the world鈥檚 , researchers are scrambling to preserve that data before it鈥檚 gone forever. Two years ago, a coalition of European universities and researchers founded , a group assembled to extract multiple ice cores from some of the planet鈥檚 most vulnerable high-mountain glaciers. The scientists will study a single core from each site and store the rest in Antarctica for future testing.

Last summer, Ice Memory researchers pulled three cores from Mont Blanc that could prove invaluable for understanding how climate change, pollution, and even diseases like the Black Death have affected Europe. The group鈥檚 next venture, which at press time was on track to be completed in June, is even more daunting: they鈥檒l climb 21,102-foot Bolivian peak Illimani and drill data out of its glacier, one of the Andes鈥檚 most threatened. The 15 scientists on the two-month expedition must be proficient in high颅altitude climbing and able to work around the clock. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 do this kind of research if you鈥檙e not a mountaineer,鈥 says Ice Memory cofounder , an engineer with the .

Here鈥檚 how they鈥檒l pull it off.听


The Mountain

The site of the mysterious Eastern Air Lines plane crash in the 1980s, Illimani is a massif of three 20,000-foot peaks. The team will acclimatize around La Paz for three weeks before moving to the drill site, a few hundred feet below the summit.

The Ascent

Thirty local porters and guides will haul more than two tons of equipment, including a specially designed ice drill, nearly 6,000 feet up from base camp. Just below the drill site is Stairway to Heaven, a roughly 60-degree pitch where fixed ropes are mandatory.听

The Site

Located at 20,670 feet, the drill site is on a flat glacial expanse between two peaks. Though it鈥檚 important to work as fast as possible to limit time at elevation, the 15-person crew will require 15 days of continuous drilling to extract the samples.

The Drill

Designed for high颅altitude operation by , of Columbus, Ohio, the drilling system weighs 176 pounds and breaks into eight pieces for transport. Fully assembled, it stands nearly 12 feet tall and can ex颅tract cores as deep as 820 feet.

The Cores

Just under four inches in diameter, the three 475-foot cores will be cut into one-meter, 15-pound logs to ease transport and storage. Insulated boxes are too heavy to carry up the mountain, so the cores will be stored in a snow cave until porters can bring them to base camp in cardboard sleeves.

The Descent

Transporting 5,500 pounds of ice down the moun颅tain must be done at night to minimize melting. Each trip will take about five hours, and with a maximum load of four segments per porter, the descents will require nearly two weeks to complete.

The Cold Chain

A series of refrigerated vehicles and storage facilities links the Andes drill site to the research lab in Grenoble, France, and the ice cores鈥 final home in a snow vault in Antarctica鈥攁 24,000-mile journey. The cores won鈥檛 reach their destination until at least 2021. If the chain fails at any stage, the data in those cores will be lost.

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How Mountain Biking Is Saving Small-Town, USA /outdoor-adventure/biking/how-mountain-biking-saving-small-town-usa/ Mon, 15 May 2017 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/how-mountain-biking-saving-small-town-usa/ How Mountain Biking Is Saving Small-Town, USA

From Nevada to Minnesota, hollowed-out mining towns are seeing economic revitalization on trails and tracks that attract mountain bikers from far and wide

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How Mountain Biking Is Saving Small-Town, USA

Nearly 50 years ago, the iron mining companies that were once the backbone of Crosby, Minnesota鈥檚 economy pulled the plug, leaving behind a scarred landscape of open pits and piles of unwanted red dirt. The area soon became an illegal dump that looked more like Mars than Earth, and the town became the kind of place where visitors locked their doors as they drove through.听Then in 1993, the mines and the surrounding land were designated a state recreation area to preserve their mining heritage, and the state cleaned it up as best it could, hauling truckfuls of garbage out. But no one visited much, and the area sat mostly forgotten and untouched. Over the next two decades,听the land recovered, Crosby did not.

. Members of an off-road cycling club from Minneapolis, 125 miles away, took one look at the red dirt landscape and fell in love. The 200-foot-tall听piles excavated during mining operations created a site ripe for trail building, and with the help of the , those cyclists successfully lobbied the state to create its first mountain-biking-focused state park. After local volunteers built a demo trail, the Department of Natural Resources hired a professional crew to put in 25 miles of flowing, technical singletrack, creating .听

鈥淲e call it Cuyuna Gold, the wonder dirt for mountain bicycling,鈥 says Aaron Hautala, volunteer president of the , the local IMBA club responsible for maintaining the trails.听
听听
Almost as soon as the trails opened in 2011, Crosby was designated a bronze-level听IMBA ride center, a title which honors large-scale mountain biking facilities with trails for every skill level and rider type. Suddenly, tourists began arriving in town with bikes strapped to the back of their cars, Hautala says. The local bike shop鈥檚 map of visitors鈥 hometowns filled up with pins in nearly every state of the Union.

There鈥檚听data documenting the trails鈥 economic impact, too. According to a survey conducted by Hautala鈥檚 club and听IMBA, 25,000 cyclists a year ride the trails, adding an estimated $2 million to the local economy. That same survey predicts that number will increase to $21 million once the trails are expanded to the planned 75-mile total. 鈥淚t鈥檚 become this thing where people are like, 鈥榃ow, we鈥檙e coming back,鈥欌 Hautala says.

Lakeside cabins designed to replicate 19th century mining shacks.
Lakeside cabins designed to replicate 19th century mining shacks. (Courtesy of True North Basecamp)

Fifteen new businesses have opened in Crosby since 2011, and the only thing that鈥檚 changed, Hautala says, is the singletrack that now winds through the woods outside town. There鈥檚 a , a yoga studio, two wood-fired pizza joints, and the , which caters to cyclists with six bike-in, lakefront cabins. More importantly, many of the business were started by young people who moved to the area or chose to stay because they see potential in the trails.听

Crosby is not alone. All across the county, single-resource towns are building trails where they once harvested timber or mined ore to attract a new source of revenue鈥攎ountain bikers. 听 听

鈥淲e鈥檙e an untapped resource,鈥 says Andy Williamson, who manages and as the organization鈥檚 director of program development. 鈥淭he idea of dirt bag mountain bikers going to places and sleeping in their cars isn鈥檛 really relevant anymore. We want to really experience the places we visit, and the communities that really embrace that are the ones that can take full advantage of us.鈥

According to a 听of more than 1,400 cyclists across the country, 62 percent of mountain bikers travel to ride, make an average of two trips a year, and spend about of $382 each trip. So at a relatively cheap $50,000 per mile of top-flight, professionally-built mountain bike trail, the return on investment can be 鈥渢ruly amazing,鈥 Williamson says.

Oakridge, Oregon, has become a poster child for the movement. Once a thriving lumber town in the heart of an old-growth forest, Oakridge took a nosedive in the 1990s after the local mill closed. In 2004, it received a grant to develop a trail plan, and the city began working to brand itself as mountain-biking destination. Today, it has over 380 miles of trails in the surrounding mountains.听y, mountain bike tourism generates as much as $5 million in direct spending each year.

鈥淭hat whole , mountain biking, and recreation,鈥 Williamson says. 鈥淓verybody from the mayor to the little ukulele shop in town are all at the table saying, 鈥楾his tourism is good for us.鈥欌澨

In Michigan, Copper Harbor, a former mining and port town on the Upper Peninsula with a population of just 108, . Weaverville, California, a former gold rush town then logging center reinvented itself again in the mid-1990s as an off-road biking destination specializing in long-distance trails. It now hosts several and in . In the South, it鈥檚 estimated the 22 miles of trails outside Anniston, Alabama, a former steel town in the tail end of the Appalachians, could generate $2 to $6 million dollars in economic impact annually. And in Northern British Columbia, another secured $1.5 million in grants to in an effort to attract visitors, and it鈥檚 working.听

鈥淚t really seems like a case of … if you build it, they will come,鈥 says Martin Littlejohn, executive director of British Columbia's Western Mountain Bike Tourism Association. 鈥淸But] it鈥檚 not just a tourist attraction, it is part of the local fabric.鈥澨

Nine other mostly resource-based towns in the region have also turned to mountain biking, Littlejohn says, to not only diversify and improve their economies, but also attract and retain young, skilled workers by improving quality of life. Their efforts were rewarded this year with a northern edition of the popular significantly raising the area鈥檚 profile as an outdoor recreation destination, and while there is no economic data yet for what effect mountain bike tourism has had there, that shows visiting mountain bikers in Squamish to the south spent $10 million and supported $15.6 million in economic activity in the province in 2016. 听 听

Even big cities like Chicago are buying in. Located in the city鈥檚 South Side on a former slag dump for heavy metals and other byproducts from nearby steel foundries, the 听combines ecological restoration with singletrack, gravity, and flow trails. 鈥淚t would be upwards of $200 million to remediate [the site],鈥 says Jay Readey, the interim director of , a coalition of companies and organizations supporting the park鈥檚 development. 鈥淭hat just wasn鈥檛 feasible, so to cap it and build a bike park on top of it is fantastic.鈥

More than 1,000 people showed up for opening day last November, which Readey hopes is a sign of things to come. 听

Chicago's first venture into eco-recreation, the 300-acre Big Marsh park, combines ecological restoration with singletrack, gravity, and flow trails.
Chicago's first venture into eco-recreation, the 300-acre Big Marsh park, combines ecological restoration with singletrack, gravity, and flow trails. ( )

Back in Crosby, Hautala听isn't satisfied. He wants to not only expand the trails, but also wants Crosby to increase its amenities and become the mountain biking equivalent of a ski town. He wants mountain bikers to spend days there, not afternoons. And he wants to create a community so cool that some of those tourists stop being tourists and make the move.

The rest of the town seems to understand听this, too. With the help of a matching grant, a community fundraiser just brought in over $1 million to help expand the trails.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the biggest thing,鈥 Hautala says. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 stay status quo to what you were before.鈥 听

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Is It Time to Franchise Our National Parks? /adventure-travel/national-parks/it-time-franchise-our-national-parks/ Thu, 27 Oct 2016 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/it-time-franchise-our-national-parks/ Is It Time to Franchise Our National Parks?

For decades the Property and Environment Research Center has extolled the virtues of free market environmentalism. Could their ideas actually save our parks?

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Is It Time to Franchise Our National Parks?

It feels wrong to have the words “franchise”听and “national parks” in the same sentence. The pairing evokes听images of the Golden Arches over the Grand Canyon and standing in line for a Frappuccino in the shadow of Half Dome. But with the National Park Service facing a decades-long maintenance backlog that has swelled to $12 billion, budget shortfalls, crowding complaints, and accusations of widespread sexual harassment, it might be time to consider听a free-market approach.

That鈥檚 the pitch from the听Property and Environment Research Center, a conservative think tank in Montana that claims to have a听way to solve the budget woes: dissolve the Park Service in all but name and run each park as its own standalone business.

Adopting a free-market approach would free each park from adhering to a national agenda subject to bureaucratic procedures, says PERC founder Terry Anderson. Currently, most of the Park Service鈥檚 budget comes from yearly congressional appropriations ($2.9 million in 2016). Under PERC鈥檚 proposal, each franchise owner would have an economic incentive to protect a park鈥檚 natural resources and provide improved roads, easier access, and better facilities to draw in more customers鈥攁nd they could do it without all the red tape.

Say Yellowstone National Park wants to build a new bathroom in Lamar Valley to cater to more visitors听or the park needs a little extra money to cover its ever-increasing operating costs. It currently has to get the approval of Congress and the president. As a franchise, on the other hand, the park could address those problems immediately. 鈥淚t would still be called Yellowstone National Park,鈥 Anderson says, 鈥渂ut in the office upstairs the owner would ask: A, are we living up to the franchise agreement? And, B, can we find more efficient ways to manage the park? Are we really giving the consumer the product he or she wants?鈥

They鈥檇 have the money to do it, Anderson says. As he points out in , Yellowstone could cover its operating costs with an $11 daily fee for each visitor. (Currently, seven-day passes can be had for $30 per car.) The Great Smoky Mountains National Park鈥攂y far the nation鈥檚 most visited national park鈥攃urrently has no entrance fees but could cover its operational costs by asking visitors to spend $2 each per day.

This isn鈥檛 the libertarian dream of privatizing the parks or transferring control of them to state governments that鈥檚 recently been tossed around by Tea Partiers and Charles Koch鈥檚 Cato Institute. 鈥淭his is a serious strategy to add value to the NPS brand and protect new areas without spreading the NPS budget any thinner,鈥 PERC research fellow and Montana State University adjunct instructor Holly Fretwell 听on the proposal published by听the George Wright Society, an interdisciplinary non-profit dedicated to the parks and other protected places.

The theory goes that the Park Service, as we know it today, would take a backseat to each individual park owner. The government would still own the land and the name, Anderson says, and the Park Service could act as a sort of corporate office to maintain some broad,听uniform operational standards.

鈥淭hat franchise agreement [would say] you can charge prices and that you can run it for a profit,鈥 Anderson says. 鈥淏ut there are certain things you can鈥檛 do. If you are a franchisee of McDonalds, you can鈥檛 tear down the Golden Arches and put up purple shooting stars.鈥 But what about, say, installing a tramway over Old Faithful? 鈥淭hat would be an atrocity,鈥 and, as such, outlawed by the corporate office, Anderson says.

Similar partnerships already exist. George Washington鈥檚 home has been maintained by the Mount Vernon Ladies鈥 Association for 150 years听and environmental organizations like the Nature Conservancy and the Audubon Society protect tens of thousands of acres,听which the public can enjoy. But Anderson doesn’t want to stop at non-profit organizations. Free-market incentives would drive each park to double down on what works for it and toss the rest, he says.

In an email, a Park Service public affairs officer said the service doesn鈥檛 comment on outside policy proposals听and reiterated that the parks belong the to the American people. But mainstream environmental economists are not ready to dismiss this brand of free-market environmentalism.

鈥淚 am not going to say that is a good idea,鈥 says Matthew Kotchen, a professor of economics at Yale who focuses on the intersection of policy and public and environmental economics. 鈥淏ut I could see how you would think that would be an interesting thing to consider.鈥

Budget shortfalls may be just the sort of problem free-market environmentalism is capable of solving,听because of its comparably modest scale and number of parties involved. And as Kotchen points out, parts of the parks are already privatized. Over 500 Park Service concessioners have contracts to run food, lodging, and transportation services as well as tours and equipment rentals. But relying on the free market to address bigger environmental problems like air pollution in parks wouldn鈥檛 work, Kotchen says. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 think of one example where it would work on a large-scale problem.鈥

There is more to be gained from our national parks than economics. The Park Service wasn’t formed to function as a revenue source, and the natural beauty and experience can’t be measured with any metric of economics.听Under PERC’s model, what’s to incentivize听individual听owners to encourage听outdoor ethics听or to foster听appreciation for nature among a diverse demographic听of visitors? Doesn鈥檛 privatization undercut the guiding principal of the parks to protect our nation鈥檚 most spectacular places for future generations to enjoy? Anderson doesn鈥檛 think so.

鈥淲e can couch our arguments in the context of intrinsic values,鈥 Anderson says, but in the end, it鈥檚 us with all our needs and desires that have to make these decisions. 鈥淭he question is, where do we fight out those competing demands? Do we do it in a market place听or do we do it in the halls of Congress?鈥

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Report: Rob Young Received Unauthorized Assistance in Trans-America Attempt /running/report-rob-young-received-unauthorized-assistance-trans-america-attempt/ Sat, 01 Oct 2016 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/report-rob-young-received-unauthorized-assistance-trans-america-attempt/ Report: Rob Young Received Unauthorized Assistance in Trans-America Attempt

An independent investigation finds it implauside that the British ultrarunner completed the attempt without outside assistance

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Report: Rob Young Received Unauthorized Assistance in Trans-America Attempt

A report released today investigating听Robert Young鈥檚 attempt to break the trans-American running record concluded听that he spent large portions of his journey riding in a support vehicle.

The British ultrarunner听began his attempt last May in Huntington Beach, California, but soon came under scrutiny after a post on the website Letsrun.com accused him of cheating鈥攕pecifically, taking occasional breaks in his van as it continued moving at the pace of a runner.

Drawing on data from Young's two smartwatches, the investigators identified discrepancies between his听pace and his running cadence, or the number of steps he took over听a certain period of time.听According to the report,听nearly half of his running sessions had a cadence which corresponded to a slow walk, rather than a jog, even though, at times,听his watch indicated he was traveling faster than nine minutes per mile.听

鈥淚t is unequivocally impossible for a runner to maintain a pace of 9 min/mile or faster with cadence values this low,鈥 the investigators conclude. 鈥淭he data strongly suggest that the TomTom watches cannot have been worn by a runner during these sessions鈥攖hey must have covered the distance without the taking of steps, which implies inside a vehicle for all or part of the logged session.鈥

Additionally, using the pace and cadence data, investigators calculated his step听length and found that during 82 individual run sessions, it would have been greater than two meters. For comparison, a marathoner running at three-hour pace would have a step听length between 1.3 and 1.5 meters, according to the report.听What鈥檚 more, his step length was greater than 20 meters at least 35 times.听

(Chris Winter)

Young听cooperated听with the investigation鈥攚hich was听commissioned by Skins, the running apparel company that sponsored Young鈥檚 attempt鈥攑roviding听an听interview and turning over听his watches, tacking data, and handwritten logs.听Investigators听Roger Pielke Jr of the University of Colorado鈥檚 Center For Sports Governance and Ross Tucker, a professor of exercise physiology of the University of the Free State,听began their research听in July.听

Tucker and Pielke also noted that after the Letsrun.com post,听Young's data suddenly moved back inline with what would be expected of someone attempting the run: his step lengths and cadence returned to normal. His pace also slowed considerably.听They conclude this rules out the possibility of watch malfunction.听

Young, for his part, is steadfast in maintaining his innocence but admits mistakes were made.

鈥淭here were times the watch was inside the vehicle where I forgot to put it before heading back out,鈥 he says, although he contradicts himself on this point in the report, maintaining that he wore a watch every time he ran. 鈥淏ut everyone in that vehicle was tired. We all made mistakes, but it was all made in good faith.鈥

As a result of the investigation, Skins has dropped Young as a sponsored athlete, saying in a press release that the company wants to remain consistent with its 鈥渧alues of championing the true spirit of competition.鈥

Young plans to attempt the record again, this time with more independent observers鈥攑eople with 鈥渁 lot of clout behind them,鈥 he says, adding that he must first win back some good faith and plans to start by running the six-day Sri Chinmoy race in New York next year.

鈥淚 think I have to prove myself,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd I don鈥檛 think it can happen with just the one race. It will take a while.鈥

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The Only Things You Should Read, Watch, and Do This Week: August 21 (National Parks Edition) /culture/books-media/only-things-you-should-read-watch-and-do-week-august-21-national-parks-edition/ Fri, 19 Aug 2016 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/only-things-you-should-read-watch-and-do-week-august-21-national-parks-edition/ The Only Things You Should Read, Watch, and Do This Week: August 21 (National Parks Edition)

The books, articles, archives, and other happenings on our radar

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The Only Things You Should Read, Watch, and Do This Week: August 21 (National Parks Edition)

The Web can be a cluttered place, but we're here to make it better.听Every week, we'll pick only the best stuff and give you the rundown on what you should be reading, watching, listening to, and then some. This week we celebrate the National Park Service's centennial with a collection of stunning photographs,听historical听artifacts, and the written word.

Words

Writers on their Parks

This June, the New York Times鈥 鈥淢y National Park鈥 series invited five writers to muse on their favorite national parks. The result is a set of poignant memories that show just how big an impact our parks can have on each of us, personally. In one , poet Patricia Lockwood writes:

The first impressions lay just beyond language: bands of color, so many and varied that color no longer seemed to mean anything, and dusty as if left on the bottom shelf. Everyone came, each eye like a stack of dimes, paying out 10 cents for that postcard, and that one, and that one.

Summer Reading

(Courtesy of Minotaur Books )

For sheer summer relaxation, not much can compete with settling into a pool chair and cracking open a good mystery novel. , the latest in Nevada Barr鈥檚 series of detective novels set in various national parks, brings the rugged beauty of Maine鈥檚 Acadia National Park to life听poolside.

History

Gathering Place

(Open Parks Project)

History buffs rejoice! Just last week, Clemson University and the National Park Service released the , a growing digital archive of more than 100,000 high-resolution images from 20 different parks. But don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 just black and white photos (though there are plenty of those). You鈥檒l also find Civilian Conservation Corps engineering plans, Civil War maps, newspaper illustrations, and much more.

The Spoken Word

If you prefer to get your dose of history through your headphones, be sure to check out the Association of National Park Rangers鈥 , which features choice samples from the nearly 60 interviews conducted with longtime Park Service employees.

Photography

On the Road

Follow along with photographer Jonathan Irish as he shoots his way through all . Next Up? The South Pacific paradise that is American Samoa National Park.听听

No One Better

Speaking of photographing our national parks, no one did it better than Ansel Adams. And his love affair with America鈥檚 Best Idea is well documented with . The 344-page hardcover, released in 2010, features more than 200 photographs, many of which were previously unpublished.听

In Case You Missed it

(Benjamin Rusnak )

Back in March, we ran a gallery of back-and-white photographs听from Benjamin Rusnak鈥檚 stint as artist-in-residence at Zion National Park. The series explores the Park Service鈥檚 dual mission of conservation and recreation by juxtaposing natural panoramas against humanity鈥檚 interaction with the land.

Weekend Reading from 国产吃瓜黑料

No Love Lost

There鈥檚 never been a better time to dive into our recent 鈥100 Reasons to Love the National Parks鈥澨齠eature which includes everything from biking down a volcano to this collection of retro travel posters. 听

Hang your favorite national parks on your wall.
Hang your favorite national parks on your wall. (Doug Leen/Rob Decker)

And if that鈥檚 not enough to get you through the weekend, be sure to check out these听国产吃瓜黑料 pieces:

Out of Bounds: The Death of 832f, Yellowstone鈥檚 Most Famous Wolf

When an unidentified hunter took out an alpha wolf that has long been a favorite of park tourists and an important part of ongoing research, he unwittingly drew many once-casual observers into a contentious battle between wildlife management, scientists, and hunting advocates

Read it here.

Why Female River Guides Aren鈥檛 Welcome in the Grand Canyon

Last winter, a federal government report acknowledged a long-standing pattern of sexual harassment against female river guides employed by the National Park Service in the Grand Canyon. But no official account can capture the day-to-day realities of that harmful environment. Here, three former Park Service river guides recount what they endured, and discuss what needs to change.

Read it here.

Weekend Reading from Elsewhere

On the Edge

Former 国产吃瓜黑料 senior editor Kevin Fedarko writes of a 650-mile thru-hike听of Grand Canyon and the danger development poses to the park for the September issue of National Geographic.

鈥淭he successful campaign to stop those dams, spearheaded by the Sierra Club during the 1960s, established the idea that the Grand Canyon is inviolable. And yet Pete and I had heard about a range of new proposals鈥攎any of them driven by savvy entrepreneurs operating just outside the canyon鈥檚 boundaries in areas that were controlled not by the National Park Service but by the U.S. Forest Service or one of the five Native American tribes whose federally recognized reservations are located around the canyon. From every point of the compass, threats ranging from colossal tourist developments and unlimited helicopter tours to uranium mining were poised to spoil one of the world鈥檚 premier parks.鈥

.

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