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国产吃瓜黑料 Magazine, Apr 2002

Stories

POSTs


Diving on lost ships is one thing. Exploring the boat that shadowed your life is a murkier adventure entirely.

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Backpacking's Upright Evolution

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ONCE THERE WAS A WORLD WITHOUT SNOWBOARDING. A world where mountain biking was a strange and obscure cult, kayaking fiendishly inaccessible. A world without fleece vests, single-walled mountaineering tents, down sleeping bags, or GPS. In fact, until the late seventies—around the time this magazine was born—the universe of outdoor recreation…

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Camp overnight or camp all week. We've got the gear to let you go fast and light under blue skies or gray.

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Stymied by the dark side of sport? Don't panic. Mastering fear, fatigue, and pain is easier than you think.

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Big Wheels in Biking's Off-Road Stampede

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As lawmakers accuse seven government biologists of fraud, the truth is drowned out by the headlines

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After a dark year, Nepal offers up a trove of glittering new prizes: 103 peaks and miles of virgin terrain

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To film Valhalla, the cinemaniacs at Teton Gravity research went to great lengths—of rope, that is

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When the weather turns ugly and conditions get rough, every mountaineer must make the ultimate choice: storm the summit, or call it quits.

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CHERRY Poets on the Peaks: Gary Snyder, Phillip Whalen and Jack Kerouac in the Cascades, by Jon Suiter (Counterpoint Press, ) illuminates these beats’ little-documented time tending fire lookouts in the north Cascades—summer pockets of productive A Life of Apsley Cherry-Garrard BY SARA WHEELER (Random…

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At the First Church of What Happens Next—MIT— a NASA-trained engineer and his stable of whiz kids are jump-starting the future of outdoor gear

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Hop on (HUH?), rev up (WHAT?!), and take a trip (I can't HEAR YOU!) deep into the hillbilly heart of West Virginia, where gas-huffin' ATV motorheads churn through the Hatfield-McCoy Recreation Area—a private preserve devoted to the joys and sorrows of four-wheeling. (ARRRRGHHH!)

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In our lifetime, the outdoors has been reinvented by visionaries who opened new worlds for explorers, athletes, travelers, and dreamers. And the adventure is just getting under way—so take a closer look at the bright minds creating the next frontier. Jake Burton, son Timmy, and Ruby the retriever at…

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Trailblazers Who Put the Up in Downhill

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A History of Modern Gear, From 1875-2002

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To make his mark in Europe's toughest races, George Hincapie needs more than guts. He needs an old friend.

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HELP ON THE WAY THANK YOU for your cover story on search and rescue (“Masters of Disaster,” February). I’m a member of Deschutts County SAR in central Oregon, a close-knit volunteer group that completed 112 missions last year. Your article will help make people more aware of…

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How does a caffeine-loaded energy drink become a billion-dollar brand? RED BULL's creators inject their product with the adrenaline-by-association of extreme sports, and they never stop in the quest for buzz.

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The New Faces Revolutionizing 国产吃瓜黑料 Sports

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The Brightest Stars of Stage and Scree

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Paddlers Who Set the High-Water Mark

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WILL GADD is a world-class adventurer who wants his exploits to pay off. He tackles breakthrough climbs all over the planet (sounds good), makes so-so money doing it (less good), and could easily get killed every time he goes to work (sounds bad). Is this any way to make a living?

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Joe鈥檚 hand began to tingle, and he called the group together. The toxins would leave his system in 48 hours, he said. He鈥檇 be conscious the whole time.

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F E A T U R E S

25th ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL REPORT

Meet the visionaries, gear gurus, scientists, risk-taking adventure entrepreneurs, and blessed masters of bigthink and hype who created the new world of adventure—and are taking it places we never knew it could go.


Jake Burton, Bob Gore, Yvon Chouinard, Phil Knight, Jim Jannard, and a horde of creative disrupters. ALSO: , , , , and .


How the Austrian energy-drink company Red Bull leveraged extreme sports to build a billion-dollar brand. By Rob Walker


国产吃瓜黑料 athlete Will Gadd wants to profit from doing all the things you do for fun. Is that so wrong? By Brad Wetzler


Inside MIT’s Center for Sports Innovation, where young brainiacs are reshaping the future of gear. By Brad Wieners

PLUS ; , and more.


When death came for herpetologist Joe Slowinski, he was in Myanmar, doing the thing he loved most: tracking down and studying the world’s most poisonous snakes. A colleague recalls the final days of a scientific explorer who believed in risk. By Mark W. Moffett


As the backcountry echoes with the din of motorized fun vehicles (and the howls of their critics), we follow the noise to West Virginia’s Hatfield-McCoy Recreation Area—a newly created off-road Disneyland where ATV mud hogs run wild and free. Yee-haw! By Bill Donahue

D E P A R T M E N T S

Dispatches
Ten months after the royal massacre leveled Nepal’s adventure-travel economy, the government is opening to lure back climbers. Is it safe to return? Plus: plays domestique for a frustrated teammate; conservatives turn a biologist’s error into a ; ; cinematics paddle for paradise in , the latest in extreme kayaking; and this month’s .


Is it ever too cold to snow? Why are there no fireflies in the West? Does drinking hot tea in hot weather cool you down? By Brad Wetzler


Exploring pristine backcountry doesn’t have to mean restless sleep and dehydrated camp food. Our guide to the in North America proves you can have your remote adventure and live in grand style to boot.


As downpours wash away his shot at a New Zealand summit bid, a lifelong mountaineer wrestles with the sport’s toughest question: Is turning back an act of courage, or the ultimate failure? By Mark Jenkins


On a scuba tour in New Jersey’s murky waters, the author pays homage to the sunken S.S. Mohawk—the looted wreck where his family’s bad luck began. By Patrick Symmes


Stop the insanity! The latest in will shave pounds off your pack. Plus: An all-mountain watch Dick Tracy would love; BMW’s ; and more.


—they’re the dreaded dark side of sports. But don’t panic. Coping with them is easier than you think.