Nature

Archive

Jeremy Jones, the king of freeriding, wants to unleash the political might of the 50 million Americans who love our natural playgrounds

What to do when you're on an outdoor adventure and disaster strikes

In 'Two Trees Make a Forest,' environmental historian Jessica J. Lee offers a welcome disruption to the travel-memoir genre

According to Chris Watson, the man behind your favorite wildlife soundtracks, we're just becoming better listeners

From a cult-favorite publisher launching a national-parks series to a Kevin Costner–narrated app, these five new releases are reinventing the traditional field guide

Chris Watson, the legendary field recordist for David Attenborough’s films, says this is a unique opportunity to discover the art and pleasure of hearing our world

Our 62 Parks Traveler explores miles of hiking trails and one of the largest remaining mixed-grass prairie ecosystems in the country at South Dakota's Wind Cave, the 21st stop on her journey to visit every U.S. national park.

This pastoral stretch of the Southern Appalachian mountains in Virginia is packed with hiking, fishing, road biking, and other adventures—if you know where to look

Grizel is using her rising social media profile to spark a more nuanced conversation on nature's power to heal

In a new era of menacing blazes, there are lessons to be learned from the people who stay and defend their properties

These recent releases feature stories of gritty heroines on journeys through threatened wild landscapes

The key is to go all out on the things you feel comfortable doing

From Alabama to Wyoming, we found the best off-grid sites for chilling out, escaping the hordes, and finding adventure

Two friends abandoned promising careers to pursue a bold adventure. It went terribly wrong—but also right.

Researchers have identified an alarming lack of books about Black children in nature. Diversifying your bookshelf can help kids find themselves in literature—and the outdoors.

A serious exploration of a topic that a lot of people don't take seriously

With stormchasing tours more popular than ever, our writer set out to discover why this risky pastime is once again taking off

This will be the best $10 you ever spend. Trust me.

Artist Jackson Stell is crafting music that captures the ecstatic feelings we have when we venture into the natural world

We called this brilliant 18-foot string of solar-powered lights “our favorite car-camping illumination” in the 2019 Summer Buyer’s Guide. You’ll get 20 hours of soft light on the low setting and eight hours on high, more than enough to add a touch of class to evenings at camp.

Fire and grill combos are all the rage right now, and this one from Snow Peak is beautiful and easy to use so you can enjoy your fire—and cook over it—wherever fires are allowed. The whole unit folds flat and packs away in an included canvas bag for easy…

As RV rentals and purchases continue to skyrocket, these three startups are going beyond the basic rental scheme to be more on demand, millennial focused, and remote-work-friendly

The marine biologist wants us all to start asking a new question: What does the future look like if we get it right?

For more than three decades, Paul Knapp Jr. has taken travelers out into the Caribbean Sea to hear humpback whales. Now seismic blasts threaten to silence their songs.

Technology and hyper-anxious parents were destroying one of the last bastions of unfettered childhood long before the pandemic closed camps for the season

Creating a shelter in nature is fun, encourages creativity, and offers an emotional refuge from the pandemic

Two documentaries, 'Big Fur' and 'Stuffed,' set out to show that this sticky-fingered branch of natural history is full of beauty and wonder. Do they succeed? Our reviewer, who knows a lot more about the subject than he ought to, says yes.

'Going Nocturnal' gives us a glimpse of the annual hatch of a giant mayfly and the large trout that emerge at night to feed on them

With more than a hundred 11,000-foot peaks, five glaciers, and some 150 alpine lakes, Colorado's most popular park has served as an idyllic backdrop for some of our writer's bigger life moments: it's where he proposed to his wife, where his kids earned their first Junior Ranger badges, and where he said goodbye to someone special. While you'll be among 4.7 million visitors who visit every year, there's something personal to be found here.

In an excerpt from his forthcoming book 'Leave It As It Is,' nature writer David Gessner examines the iconic conservation legacy of Theodore Roosevelt and unpacks the perception that the national parks and monuments he created were previously untouched and empty

There are myriad arguments for and against eating roadkill. Can they all be true at the same time?

In a time when most of us are struggling with restricted access to the activities we love, I wanted to know if VR would help. What I found surprised me.

In the spirit of Thoreau and Dillard, Donovan Hohn considers the joyous and brutal aspects of the natural world

The strangest things happen at summer camp. Which is probably why we love it so much.

Are social media and selfie culture killing the outdoors? Nah... but as a visit to some overshared spots reveals, they’re challenging our notions about whether there’s a right way to appreciate nature—and who gets to do it.

They're a connection to our wildest selves

Trying to improve your sleep quality? Get back to nature.

Don't forget to bring the bug spray, folks

Booking apps, glamping, and tricked-out Sprinter vans: over the past decade, life under the stars has been upgraded. Here's your up-to-date guide for enjoying the ultimate socially distanced weekend.

Can a lifelong tent pitcher with a penchant for roughing it learn to appreciate high-thread-count sheets and teak-floored showers in the midst of nature? Our editor agreed to suffer in the name of research to find out.

The Senate passed the Great American Outdoors Act, 73 to 25, allocating billions to recreation

Many of us have long dismissed this gentle, approachable activity for more adrenaline-pumping forms of exercise. We've been missing out—big-time.

From a young age, the ocean provided relief from mental illness, something I've been unable to replicate with any other form of nature. It turns out, there's a science behind why some people prefer water.

I went out for a hike and forgot to put on you-know-what. When we crossed paths, was it really necessary to hit me with your self-righteous wrath?

Outdoorsy people always have the best stories about dating. Some of them are wild enough to make national headlines.

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, three Chinese teams reached the top of the world

Gina Rae La Cerva's 'Feasting Wild' is a delightful culinary travel book. It's also an adjustment to the way we think about what that buzzword actually means

Spring is the ideal time to collect maple sap and boil it down to syrup. When COVID-19 hit, writer and photographer Andy Cochrane paused his travels around the country and headed home just in time to help his parents with their annual maple-syrup operation in northern Minnesota. Here's how they did it.

Homesteaders were ready for this. Here's how to kick your self-sufficiency skills into high gear.

From setting up a vise to gathering materials, here's everything you need to tie a basic fly

Pythons are devouring native animal life in the unique ecosystem of South Florida. To help solve the problem, Florida Fish and Wildlife officials have turned to amateur and professional hunters to round up the reptiles in a wild competition called the Python Bowl.

'Dear Humanity' is a celebration of the earth's beauty and a call to action to protect it

In an excerpt from his new book, 'In Praise of Walking,' Shane O'Mara delves into the science behind an activity that human beings often underestimate

From humble jellyfish anecdotes to straightforward self-help, three new titles offer resonant takeaways for these worrisome times

A new United Nations report finds that Scandinavian nations continue to be the happiest in the world. Here's why.

'Last Call for the Bayou' follows five Louisiana residents as they battle to keep their industries alive amid disappearing wetlands

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In his new book, writer Mark O'Connell explores what our anxieties about the future say about our precarious present

In this film from director Brian Kelley, Carl Casey explains what a champion tree is and some strategies he uses to find them

Help keep trails open by not abusing them

Hemmed between the Oregon and Washington border, this windy water-sports mecca has something for everyone. Add it to your list of adventures worth waiting for.

From poetry to nonfiction, these books celebrate everything we love about our planet

In his new photo book "Errors of Possession," adventure photographer Garrett Grove documents the region's shifting industries and culture

Super tuskers are a highly poached population of elephants that are known to have ivory tusks that drop to the ground.

On going back to the mountains after a traumatic accident

A crew of daring twentysomethings had a half-baked plan to canoe through the jungle. Not surprisingly, they ran into all sorts of trouble.

Last December, around 100 tourists set out for New Zealand's Whakaari/White Island, where an active volcano has attracted hundreds of thousands of vacationers since the early 1990s. It was supposed to be a routine six-hour tour, including the highlight: a quick hike into the island's otherworldly caldera. Then the volcano exploded. What happened next reveals troubling questions about the risks we're willing to take when lives hang in the balance.

'Space,' a film from Gnarly Bay Productions and Howl Collective, reminds us that there's still adventure out there to be had

Surfers Belinda Baggs, Liz Clark, and Moona Whyte​​​​​​​ reflect on their relationship to conservation

Lessons from Wendell Berry, Wallace Stegner, and my neighborhood trees

Cinemas and film festivals are screening online. Here are our favorites.

Don and Steve Friedman decided to bond with a trek in the Cascades. Worked great! Except for some minor disagreements about work. And money. And hope. And the meaning of life. And …

The architect Charles Bello has spent the past 52 years restoring forests from logging and protecting the land on his 400-acre Bello Ranch in Northern California. Here's what he's learned along the way.

There's something about swimming that makes us feel very much alive—even as we enter an environment where the risk of death is all around us