Frederick Reimers Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/frederick-reimers/ Live Bravely Mon, 27 Jan 2025 16:26:34 +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 Frederick Reimers Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/frederick-reimers/ 32 32 How Will Trump鈥檚 Second Term Impact Public Lands, Outdoor Rec, and the Environment? /outdoor-adventure/environment/donald-trump-public-lands/ Mon, 27 Jan 2025 16:26:34 +0000 /?p=2694475 How Will Trump鈥檚 Second Term Impact Public Lands, Outdoor Rec, and the Environment?

A writer examines Trump鈥檚 first presidency and his cabinet appointments to understand how the next four years will impact public lands, the environment, and outdoor recreation

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How Will Trump鈥檚 Second Term Impact Public Lands, Outdoor Rec, and the Environment?

Barely two weeks into his second presidential term, Donald Trump has already dramatically changed the policies governing public lands, outdoor recreation, and the environment.

On Monday, January 20, Trump renamed the country鈥檚 highest peak, 20,310-foot Denali, to Mount McKinley, replacing the indigenous title with that of the 25th president of the United States. The same day, Trump the U.S. from the Paris Agreement, the 2016 international treaty to battle climate change. He on oil and gas leasing within the state鈥檚 Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. He requiring the National Marine Fisheries, Bureau of Reclamation, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to begin pumping water from California鈥檚 San Joaquin Delta across the state鈥攁 move that could jeopardize endangered fish. And Trump announced a , which has a within the National Park Service.

These moves echo ones that Trump made during his first presidential term: like the controversial downsizing of Utah鈥檚 Bear鈥檚 Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments by almost a million acres apiece and the different climate, water, and wildlife protections.

But critics may forget that, during his first term, Trump also signed into law a pair of very significant conservation bills. In 2019, the John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation, Management, and Recreation Act created 1.3 million acres of Wilderness and ten new Wild and Scenic River segments. It also increased the size of three national parks. Then in 2020, Trump encouraged the passage of the , which funneled $9.5 billion towards the infamous National Park Service (NPS) maintenance backlog. It permanently allocated $900 million annually to the Land and Water Conservation Fund, the nation鈥檚 single largest source of outdoor recreation infrastructure funding.

What will the second Trump administration mean for public lands, the environment, and outdoor recreation? Nobody knows for sure. But we鈥檝e taken a look at the decisions Trump has already made, what he鈥檚 said he鈥檒l do, and a wish-list created by personnel from the previous administration, to make an educated analysis.

Hiring Personnel Who Appreciate Outdoor Rec and Industry

One of the former president鈥檚 first personnel nominees for his upcoming administration was North Dakota governor Doug Burgum to lead the Department of the Interior. The agency controls some 500 million acres of public land and oversees the National Park Service, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), and the Fish and Wildlife Service.

Critics have labeled Burgum a champion of the oil and gas industry, having led the state with the third-largest oil production and publicly criticized the Biden administration鈥檚 efforts to . At the same time, Burgum is himself an avid horseman, hunter, skier, and hiker and has been a booster of outdoor recreation in North Dakota, creating the state鈥檚 Office of Outdoor Recreation and allocating $1.2 million in grants for trail building.

Former North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum will lead the Department of Interior (Photo: SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

Trump is also expected to name Burgum the administration鈥檚 energy czar, following through on his campaign promises to increase oil and gas production as a way to curb energy costs. Burgum鈥檚 nomination drew praise from the energy and mining sector. 鈥淗e recognizes that affordable and reliable energy along with American mineral production are critical to growing our nation鈥檚 economy,鈥 Rich Nolan, president and CEO of the National Mining Association told .

Conservatives argue that increased mining and domestic fossil fuel production could spur economic activity, but conservationists are bracing for the environmental blow. 鈥淧ublic lands are beloved and vitally important to people in this country. The first Trump administration treated these places like they鈥檙e meant to be dug up, drilled, or sold off for profit,鈥 David Seabrook, interim president of the Wilderness Society, said in a press release.

Despite Burgum鈥檚 alignment with the oil and gas industry, other sources within the outdoor recreation community told 国产吃瓜黑料 that the North Dakota governor represents a best-case-scenario nominee from the Republican administration. “Governor Burgum has shown a commitment to supporting outdoor recreation as an economic driver and a meaningful way to connect communities,鈥 said Jessica Turner, president of outdoor recreation trade association Outdoor Recreation Roundtable, in a press release. 鈥淎s an avid outdoorsman, we are hopeful that the governor鈥檚 long-time admiration of Teddy Roosevelt and deep understanding of business will help support and grow the recreation economy.鈥

According to Cody Schulz, director of North Dakota Parks and Recreation, which oversees the state鈥檚 new office of outdoor recreation, Governor Burgum is 鈥渁n incredibly curious and collaborative leader who encourages his personnel to make decisions based on data.鈥

Schulz says that Burgum鈥檚 efforts to improve outdoor recreation in North Dakota stem from his own passion for the outdoors, and from an understanding that the industry can be an important economic driver. 鈥淐onservation and outdoor recreation infrastructure draws both visitors and new residents to North Dakota,鈥 he says.

Burgum鈥檚 data-driven approach offers a ray of hope for fans of the Bureau of Land Management鈥檚 new Public Lands Rule, which considers recreation on equal footing with extractive industries like grazing and oil and gas when making land use decisions.

Moving the BLM Back to Colorado

In 2019, the Trump administration relocated the agency鈥檚 headquarters from Washington, D.C. to Grand Junction, Colorado. The relocation was touted as a practical move to get managers closer to the lands they managed and seen as a way to attract workers who may not have been able to afford D.C. ‘s notoriously expensive cost of living.

Eventually, the BLM鈥檚 headquarters was returned to D.C. by Interior Secretary Deb Haaland in 2021. According to a 2021 Government Accountability Office report, collapsing the D.C. office drove out the agency鈥檚 most experienced employees and the number of vacancies. Out of 176 staff told to relocate, only 41 accepted their reassignments and the rest left their positions.

Tracy Stone-Manning, who was appointed by Biden in 2021 to lead the BLM, called the move 鈥渨ildly disruptive,鈥 in a . 鈥淚t鈥檚 years of opportunity cost when we could and should be focused on the work of the bureau, for public lands and the American people, and we had to instead focus on rebuilding the bureau,鈥 Stone-Manning said.

Lawmakers in Colorado, , have said that they support moving the BLM headquarters back to Grand Junction.

Taking Aim at Environmental Policy

The downsizing of Bear鈥檚 Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monuments was one of the former president鈥檚 most high-profile decisions on public land. While the cuts were reversed by the Biden administration, it鈥檚 possible that Trump will again shrink the monuments. Utah Republican Representative John Curtis told The Salt Lake Tribune he .

A demonstrator holds a sign against drilling in the Arctic Refuge (Photo: SAUL LOEB/AFP Getty Images)

The first Trump administration championed mineral extraction and land development as a way to pump revenue into local economies and return power over protected lands to states. The administration also weakened several bedrock environmental laws. Probably most significant were alterations to protections afforded by the Clean Water Act, the Endangered Species Act, and the National Environmental Protection Act (NEPA).

In 2017, Trump鈥檚 EPA , which afforded protections to seasonal wetlands and streams, particularly prevalent in the arid, but recreation-rich western United States. Then in 2019, the administration changed the Endangered Species Act,听removing protections for threatened species and making it more difficult to add additional species to the list. Agencies would also be allowed to conduct economic assessments when deciding whether a species warrants protection.

More subtle, but arguably more problematic, was the weakening of the National Environmental Protection Act (NEPA), the law that requires an environmental review and public comment period for every major project. It鈥檚 used on everything from major timber sales to ski resort development.

Jon Jarvis, director of the Park Service under President Barack Obama, said NEPA helped guide multiple policies during his time with the NPS, from the relocation of wolves to Yellowstone, to the altering traffic flow in Yosemite. 鈥淪unlight is a great disinfectant, and many of these agency plans would now be done in the dark,鈥 Jarvis told 国产吃瓜黑料.

Trump鈥檚 Interior Department made several other controversial moves during his first administration that directly impacted outdoor recreation. In 2017, the department made a unilateral decision to increase admission prices during peak seasons at the nation鈥檚 most popular national parks from $30 to $70. There was so much furor about the decision that the administration canceled those plans five months later.

Then in 2020, the department issued an order that allowed for e-bike use on any federal trail where regular bikes were allowed. Cycling advocates and at least one advocacy group applauded the decision that would allow better access for cyclists who rely on e-bikes. 鈥淭he Secretarial Order will help get public lands visitors out of their cars and beyond congested visitor centers and parking lots,鈥 wrote the cycling advocacy group People For Bikes at the time. More than 50 other recreation groups, however, formally objected to the policy, saying that the decision had been made without any study on its impact on wildlife and visitor safety.

This year, the Park Service ruled that it would make decisions on up to individual park units on a 鈥渃ase-by-case basis.鈥

Creating Fewer National Monuments

Some Western conservatives would like to see the administration spearhead an effort to repeal or weaken the 1906 Antiquities Act, which allows a president to create new national monuments. The law has been used in some 300 instances by presidents from Teddy Roosevelt to George W. Bush to protect millions of acres of federal land. Some of the nation鈥檚 most popular national parks began as monuments, including the Grand Canyon, Joshua Tree, and Grand Teton.

Only Congress can repeal a law in the United States, so abolishing the Antiquities Act would require a majority of both houses to want it gone. Given pro-monument public sentiment, that seems like a long shot.

Bears Ears National Monument was expanded under the Biden administration (Photo: Josh Brasted/Getty Images)

More likely is a severe weakening of the law through the Supreme Court. Published in April 2022 by the conservative think tank The Heritage Project, the 2025 Presidential Transition Project, known colloquially as 鈥淧roject 2025,鈥 outlines the steps such an effort might take. The document calls for a 鈥渄ownward adjustment鈥 of the nation鈥檚 national monuments, and then directs the republican President to 鈥渧igorously defend the downward adjustments it makes to permit a ruling on a President鈥檚 authority to reduce the size of national monuments by the U.S. Supreme Court.鈥

Throughout his campaign, Trump repeatedly distanced himself from the document. But authors of Project 2025 have noted that other prominent conservatives support weakening the Antiquities Act. In 2021 Chief Justice Roberts signaled that he is looking for a case whose verdict could be used to curtail the ability of presidents to create large monuments.

It may also mean the loss of a Biden-era protections like a 10-mile oil exploration moratorium placed around New Mexico鈥檚 Chaco Canyon National Historical Park to help protect Native American antiquities, and one on 221,898 acres of Forest Service and BLM land on Colorado鈥檚 Thompson Divide, just northwest of Crested Butte. The latter was the result of years of work by an unlikely coalition of ranchers, hunters, anglers, mountain bikers, off-road vehicle users, and environmentalists to protect the habitat of elk, bear, deer, moose, mountain lion, and a pair of endangered species: Colorado River cutthroat trout and Canadian lynx. The Project 2025 document specifically targets both protections.

Also on the chopping block may be Biden鈥檚 public land order to Minnesota鈥檚 Boundary Waters Canoe Area for 20 years. The decades-long fight over proposed copper and nickel mines adjacent to the wilderness area was seemingly settled in 2023 with the order. At issue were concerns that mine waste would flow directly down the Kawishiwi River into the waterways of the nation鈥檚 most-visited Wilderness Area (some 165,000 visitors annually.) Project 2025 calls for that order to be reversed despite recent polling that shows 69 percent of Minnesota for the Boundary Waters.

All of these potential rollbacks fly in the face of what many Americans want, says Jenny Rowland-Shea, director of public lands for The Center for American Progress, a progressive research and advocacy group. She cites a , which found that 78 percent of Western voters want more emphasis on conserving wildlife migration routes, providing highway crossings, and limiting more development to protect wildlife habitats. According to the study, just 20 percent of voters want more emphasis on economically productive uses of land such as new development, roads, ranching, or oil and gas production.

鈥淭he United States is actually producing record amounts of oil right now,鈥 she says.

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The Best 惭别苍鈥檚 Insulated Midlayer Jackets of 2025 /outdoor-gear/clothing-apparel/best-winter-midlayers/ Mon, 04 Nov 2024 23:03:30 +0000 /?p=2687351 The Best 惭别苍鈥檚 Insulated Midlayer Jackets of 2025

The results are in: From puffies to weather-resistant softshells, these were the best active midlayers we tested.

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The Best 惭别苍鈥檚 Insulated Midlayer Jackets of 2025

The classic three-piece layering system consists of a baselayer to move moisture away from your skin, a shell to keep wind and water out, and an insulating layer to hold in warmth. That middle layer is where the magic is. It鈥檚 the one you swap out to match the conditions, and the one you rely on to keep you perfectly ventilated on warm spring days and toasty warm in deepest winter. Your midlayer can be anything from a thick down puffy to a stretchy synthetic piece designed to dump heat through special channels or pores. Some midlayers also do double-duty, sporting protective panels or water-resistant coatings so you can tag them in as outer layers in a pinch.

So, in finding the best insulation on the market for 2025 we looked at a full spectrum, including vests that save weight by targeting the core, and even hybrid pieces that strategically place insulation only where it鈥檚 needed. After a long season of testing everywhere from North Idaho to the mountains of New Hampshire, these are the midlayers that came out on top.

At a Glance

If you buy through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission. This supports our mission to get more people active and outside. Learn more.


Stio Fernos Insulated Jacket
(Photo: Courtesy Stio)

Editor鈥檚 Choice

Stio Fernos Insulated Jacket

Sizes: S-XXL
Weight: 17.8 oz
Warmth: 7
Breathability: 7
Durability: 10

Pros and Cons
Great stretch
Super durable
Balance of warmth and breathability
Moderate compressibility

The Fernos Insulated Jacket is the sort of workhorse synthetic midlayer everyone should own. It鈥檚 got the perfect amount of insulation to keep you warm whether you鈥檙e pushing hard up the skin track or standing around in the snow staring up at your route. The face fabric stood up to the notorious west wind on Teton Pass鈥檚 Glory bootpack, but was still breathable enough to keep our tester from having to swap his base layer at the summit. Thinner panels under the arms and along the sides helped with the breathability score by venting heat where testers needed it most. The Fernos is surprisingly stretchy and durable enough we never worried about tears whether wrestling with a toothsome pup tailgating in the parking lot or bundling firewood back to camp.


Smartwool Smartloft Hybrid Jacket
(Photo: Courtesy Smartwool)

Best for Aerobic Pursuits

Smartwool Smartloft Hybrid Jacket

Sizes: S-XXL
Weight: 16 oz
Warmth: 6
Breathability: 10
Durability: 8

Pros and Cons
Exceptional stretch
Super breathable
Generous pockets
A little heavy

This mullet of a hybrid jacket is all business in the front and breathability in the back. The Smartloft Hybrid Jacket protects the chest with a panel of wind- and weather-resistant softshell and quilted insulation鈥 50 percent recycled/reprocessed wool, 38 percent virgin wool (including trimmings from Smartwool鈥檚 cutting room floor), and 12 percent polyester. Meanwhile, the back, sides, and sleeves are cut from a stretchy, fleece-weight blend of merino, polyester, and elastane, which afforded testers exceptional movement and breathability while moving fast through the cold. Our New Hampshire trail runner and resident science teacher raved about 鈥渁chieving perfect thermal equilibrium.鈥 In Wyoming, our Nordic skier used the thumb loops in lieu of gloves on a warm spring day. A DWR finish kept the wintry mix at bay and a trio of zippered pockets handily secured things like keys, phone, and snacks.


Patagonia Das Light Hoody
(Photo: Courtesy Patagonia)

Most Packable

Patagonia Das Light Hoody

Sizes: XS-XXL
Weight: 12.2 oz
Warmth: 9
Breathability: 6
Durability: 7

Pros and Cons
Water- and wind-resistant
Excellent warmth-to-weight
Packs down well
Expensive

The Das Light Hoody is the ultimate puffy layer for cold and wet conditions. Patagonia鈥檚 years-long quest to build a synthetic alternative to the loftiest goose down (which loses its insulating properties when wet) resulted in its proprietary Plumafill insulation. Imagine hundreds of feather boa-like strands draped throughout the jacket, providing very nearly the same warmth-to-weight ratio as the finest goose down, but with a much faster drying time and warming capabilities when wet. Stuff 65-gram Plumafill inside an ultralight, 10-denier wind- and-water-resistant shell, and you鈥檝e got a puffer that kept our testers toasty even while skiing in single digit temps in British Columbia鈥檚 Monashees, as well as on one unfortunately rainy ski tour in northern Idaho. It stuffs down to the size of grapefruit in the pack, and amenities like four pockets, a helmet-compatible hood, and a two-way zipper for use with a harness make this an expedition-ready piece.


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Arc鈥檛eryx Atom Insulated Hoodie – Men’s ($300)

Arc鈥檛eryx Atom Insulated Hoodie - Men's

Alpine-proven as a mid layer or standalone jacket, the men’s Arc’teryx Atom insulated hoodie is your companion for backcountry skiing, climbing, snowshoeing or winter commuting. Insulation is synthetic. Weight for the product is 13.05 oz


Outdoor Vitals Nova Pro
(Photo: Courtesy Outdoor Vitals)

Best For Frigid Days

Outdoor Vitals Nova Pro

Sizes: XS-XXL
Weight: 14.5 oz
Warmth: 10
Breathability: 7
Durability: 6

Pros and Cons
Great price
Excellent warmth-to-weight ratio
Water resistant
Less compact than other down jackets

First and foremost, testers were wowed by the Nova Pro鈥檚 price tag. It鈥檚 remarkable to find an 850-fill down hoody for $250, much less one with such a full feature set. The bells and whistles on this jacket include three-point tensioning in the helmet-compatible hood and another drawstring at the waist to help keep out drafts, as well as thumb loops at the wrists. When those made the jacket too toasty, we used the pit zips to dump heat鈥攁 rare but welcome feature in a down puffy.

The Nova Pro鈥檚 real innovations come in the fill and fabric, though. Down offers two big advantages over other kinds of insulation: it鈥檚 remarkably warm for the weight and packs down very small. The disadvantage is that if it gets wet, the down clumps together, eliminating its insulating properties. To combat that, the Nova Pro employs a hybrid fill of water-repellent-treated down and synthetic fibers, which retains the majority of its loft when soaked.

Outdoor Vitals also applied a DWR coating to the jacket, making it water resistant; testers watched some unusual early-spring Wyoming rain bead up and roll off of the jacket鈥檚 fabric without soaking in. That made the Nova Pro great not only for marginal freezing temps but also in wet flurries or light drizzle. All that insulation is packed into baffles, which are woven instead of stitched into the jacket鈥檚 main fabric. That makes for fewer stitching holes through which the down can escape. The only downside to the Nova Pro is that all of those niceties add weight鈥攎aking it less packable than you might expect from an 850-fill down.


Oyoki T艒ya Down Insulator Vest
(Photo: Courtesy Oyuki)

Most Stylish

Oyuki T艒ya Down Insulator Vest

Sizes: XS-XXL
Weight: 8.1 oz
Warmth: 5
Breathability: 9
Durability: 5

Pros and Cons
Unbeatable warmth-to-weight
Huge stash pockets
Exceptional breathability
Not much wind protection

It’s hard to beat the warmth-to-weight ratio of a down vest. It traps the bulk of your body heat by insulating your core and, without sleeves, vests are also exceptionally breathable. The Toya Insulator also employs Allied Down鈥檚 recycled, water-resistant 700-fill down, meaning it鈥檚 easier on the planet, more lofty when damp thanks to a hydrophobic coating, and quicker to dry. Testers loved this vest not just for all of that, but for its whimsical Japanese styling. There鈥檚 a plump, chin-height collar and a pair of massive drop pockets on the vest鈥檚 front. 鈥淚 think the pockets are a style hit, but they worked great for stashing a couple of PB&Js,鈥 commented one tester. There鈥檚 also a pair of zippered, fleece-lined hand pockets to warm up your digits or secure valuables.


Mountain Hardwear Kor Airshell Warm Hoody
(Photo: Courtesy Mountain Hardwear)

Most Versatile

Mountain Hardwear Kor Airshell Warm Hoody

Sizes: S-XXL
Weight: 13.4 oz
Warmth: 6
Breathability: 7
Durability: 9

Pros and Cons
Four-season insulation
Terrific moisture management
Super packable
Insufficient insulation for colder days

鈥淧acking for my next trip, it鈥檚 hard to imagine leaving this layer at home,鈥 said our Boulder-based tester. The Kor Airshell Warm Hoody perfectly straddles the knife-edge between a superlight windbreaker and an insulated midlayer, making it an essential piece in the mountains in any season. The 20-Denier stretch ripstop outer fabric was tough enough to withstand 30-mph gusts and a season鈥檚 worth of abuse from pack straps, a climbing rack, and shouldered skis鈥攁ll of which our tester employed during missions around the Front Range. The jacket鈥檚 eco-friendly main fabric is made of 59 percent recycled nylon and coated with a DWR that easily shed snow and drizzle. It鈥檚 insulated with a thin layer of AirMesh, a brushed-back mesh made with hollow core yarn that traps heat and provides exceptional warmth to weight. It was enough to keep us warm bootpacking and skinning in temps in the teens. In colder conditions, or at rest, we slapped a shell or puffy on top, and the supple mesh liner helped move moisture away from our base layers, keeping us dry and toasty. At 13 ounces, it鈥檚 super-light but still boasts four zippered pockets, an elastic drawcord at the hem, and a two-way zipper for compatibility with a harness and belay device.


How to Choose Midlayers

Insulated midlayers come in as wide a range as the activities you鈥檒l use them for and the conditions you鈥檒l use them in. The fabrics and insulation they use go a long way toward determining warmth, breathability, and weather protection. Here鈥檚 how to judge what will best serve your needs.

Water-Resistance

Down-filled layers offer the best warmth for their weight but can lose that advantage if the garment gets soaked from precipitation or an accidental dousing. Once wet, down clusters wilt and pack down鈥攚hich means they lose all their insulating ability. If you expect especially wet conditions, a synthetic insulation (like in the ) or a bio-based fill (like in the ) will do better at retaining its loft and therefore keeping you warm when wet.

Warmth

The general rule of thumb is the thicker the layer, the warmer it is. That comes with trade offs like weight or packed size if you have limited space in your pack. If you know it鈥檚 gonna be frigid, by all means, go for a thick puffy like the . But that piece could be overkill if the day heats up. Consider layering more than one less warm piece, like the and the , to give you more options to mix and match amid changing conditions.

Weather Protection

If you plan to wear a wind- and waterproof shell over your midlayer, you won鈥檛 need to worry about your midlayer鈥檚 weather-blocking ability. If you don鈥檛 intend to carry a shell, however, look for a piece that sports wind-blocking panels and/or a DWR chemical treatment for more wind and weather resistance. The and the are both good examples.

Activity Level

If you are going to amp up the cardio for extended periods of time, look for a more breathable layer. The better your midlayer vents water vapor, the less sweat you鈥檒l trap next to skin. That鈥檚 both a comfort advantage and a safety win: moisture can quickly sap your body heat if you stop moving or encounter strong winds. More porous fabrics, like on the or , will allow that perspiration to move away from your body, keeping you dry as well as warm.


How We Test

  • Number of testers: 7
  • Number of products tested: 50
  • Mountain ranges represented: 14 (Whites, Greens, Front Range, Gore Range, Bitteroots, Selkirks, Monashees, Wasatch, Teton, Pioneers, Sawatch, Park, Mosquito, Gros Ventre)
  • Toddlers towed in a chariot: 1

Last winter, we found that more than half of our test crew were teachers. You鈥檇 think we鈥檇 want a slightly more epic batch, but in reality these were our ideal evaluators. For one thing, their need to get out skiing, running, cycling, and climbing was uncompromising, if only to shake off the stress of teaching today鈥檚 youngsters. That meant that they went out no matter the conditions, pushing these garments to their limits. For another thing, they are used to grading stuff, and criticizing the fit of a hood or odor-fighting properties of a fabric was a welcome change from marking up another essay on Moby Dick.

For this test, we put insulated models of every stripe through the rigors of lift-accessed and backcountry skiing, climbing, snow biking, Nordic skiing, and tailgating. Conditions ranged from single digits in Wyoming to rain in North Idaho to 70-mph gusts on New Hampshire鈥檚 Mount Washington. Of the 50 layers we wore, there were shelled puffies, traditional down sweaters, synthetic hoodies, lightly-insulated windbreakers, and a couple of vests. Our testers graded warmth, breathability, fit, durability, sustainability, and price. Their verdicts led us to select only the best of the batch. Those are the reviews you鈥檒l find here.


Meet Our Lead Tester

Frederick Reimers

Reimers was raised on a canoe-tripping summer camp in Ontario, Canada, and had completed a trio of 40-day expeditions before he even shipped off to college. When his parents sold the camp and moved to Jackson Hole in the 1990s, he followed. He has made a career from scribbling about outdoor culture and gear ever since. In addition to 国产吃瓜黑料, his work has appeared in The New York Times, Smithsonian, Bloomberg Business, and Ski. While Wyoming鈥檚 long winter does feel a little long round about April, that makes it the perfect place to test layers. You鈥檒l find Reimers testing them on ski slopes, Nordic tracks, and godforsaken pre-dawn dog walks.

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The Best Fleece Jackets for Men (2025) /outdoor-gear/clothing-apparel/best-mens-fleece-jackets/ Thu, 31 Oct 2024 20:34:54 +0000 /?p=2687098 The Best Fleece Jackets for Men (2025)

Our crew tested over two dozen fleeces in every winter condition they could find. These six stood out from the competition.

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The Best Fleece Jackets for Men (2025)

A modern fleece jacket is essentially a better sweater. It performs the same role as those fisherman’s cable knit jobs of yore: you wear it over your baselayer to keep you warm when the elements turn nasty. But it is lighter and quicker drying, designed for backcountry travel when every ounce counts.

We tested thicker fleeces for colder temps, more breathable fleeces for high-intensity activities, wool-based fleeces that are naturally odor-fighting, and synthetic fleeces for better durability. Our test crew put these midlayers through the ringer while skiing, running, cycling, and climbing, wearing them with waterproof shells and without. We also kept an eye on the style, as, in our opinion, there鈥檚 truth to the notion that we perform better when we look and feel great.

At a Glance

If you buy through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission. This supports our mission to get more people active and outside. Learn more.


L茅 Bent Sentinel Midweight Waffle Knit Zip Hoody
(Photo: Courtesy L茅 Bent)

Editor鈥檚 Choice

L茅 Bent Sentinel Midweight Waffle Knit Zip Hoody

Weight: 14 oz
Sizes: S-XL
Warmth: 7/10
Breathability: 10/10
Durability: 7/10

Pros and Cons
Super Stretchy
Excellent warmth-to-weight ratio
Great breathability
Constructed out of natural fibers
No way to cinch the lower hem

For such a classy hoodie, the Sentinel has a lot going on. First and foremost, it鈥檚 knit using Nuyarn, a product from a New Zealand-based company that鈥檚 developed a way to spin merino wool fibers into a stretchier, loftier, and more durable, yarn. Nuyarn creates a custom yarn blend for each brand partner, and we love that L茅 Bent chose to integrate natural bamboo fibers鈥攔ather than synthetic polyethylene鈥攎aking for a more sustainable garment.

In our testing, no performance was sacrificed in the choice; the Sentinel was remarkably stretchy, tough, and warm for its weight. The Sentinel鈥檚 waffle knit structure adds further loft, and therefore warmth, and lends a chic texture that made the garment stand out from the rest of the fleeces we tested. Our test team agreed that it鈥檚 the quintessential four-season mountain layer: light, stretchy, and breathable enough for high-output activity in the cold, thin enough when temps are warmer, and roomy enough to layer under when temps turn brutal. Zip it on for a winter expedition, or for that first date at the bistro.


Rab Evolute Hoody
(Photo: Courtesy Rab)

Best for High-Intensity Exercise

Rab Evolute Hoody

Weight: 12 oz.
Sizes: XS-XL
Warmth: 8/10
Breathability: 9/10
Durability: 7/10

Pros and Cons
Exceptional warmth to weight ratio
Very quick drying
More than 50 percent recycled materials
May need to size up

The Evolute pulls off a pretty impressive trick: it was one of the most breathable fleeces we tested while also offering some of the best weather protection. The secret lies in the Primaloft Active Evolve fleece鈥檚 construction鈥攕ilky polyester fibers woven to a mesh chassis with lots of space between them. That space makes for lots of trapped air for insulation, but it also provides room for breathability when things get too steamy. Because the fleece structure is too airy to stand alone, it鈥檚 paired with a thin outer fabric that brushes off wind and abrasion.

The Evolute became an everyday layer for one tester, our New Hampshire-based winter trail runner. 鈥淚t was crazy warm, but I never felt clammy no matter how hard I went,鈥 he said, 鈥渆ven if I was a little overdressed.鈥 Rab kept it super-light with elastic at the hem, rather than a draw cord, and just a pair of zippered hand pockets.


Houdini Power Houdi
(Photo: Courtesy Houdini)

Most Durable

Houdini Power Houdi

Weight: 1.05 lbs
Sizes: XS-XXL
Warmth: 9/10
Breathability: 7/10
Durability: 10/10

Pros and Cons
Excellent warmth to weight ratio
Very soft and stretchy
Excellent durability
Expensive
Runs slim

The Power Houdi has been Houdini鈥檚 core product since 2003, with few changes. Customers report that the garment can last them up to 10 years, and many boast multiple, in different colors. When we got our hands on some, it became obvious why they are so beloved. One tester described the Power Houdi as 鈥渋nstant coziness,鈥 and all remarked on how bombproof it is. One tester said it easily shrugged off friction from shouldered skis while heading up Jackson Hole鈥檚 notorious White Spider boot pack, and from the sandstone on Boulder鈥檚 Flatirons during a spring climbing mission, reported another. That Flatirons scrambler loved the Houdi鈥檚 two-way zipper that allowed him to more easily access his climbing harness as well as the sturdy thumb loops on the sleeves that kept his hands warm despite clinging to the cold rock.

The secret is the very thick Power Stretch Pro fuzzy fleece fabric, the elasticity of which helps it ward off puncture and retain its snug fit. The only drawback we saw was that the Power Houdi, despite very good breathability, was simply too warm on milder days. It鈥檚 worth noting that the European-style fit is long and narrow.


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Patagonia Men’s Synchilla Fleece Jacket ($149)

Patagonia Men's Synchilla Fleece Jacket

For a cozy and classic fleece, look no further than the Patagonia Men’s Synchilla Fleece Jacket. Made of 100% recycled polyester and Fair Trade Certified sewn, this full-zip jacket features double-sided fleece and an anti-pilling finish to keep it looking like new. The stand-up collar is designed for warmth, while the rugged outer collar is trimmed with recycled nylon plain weave. The left-chest pocket and two welted front pockets, all with webbing zipper pulls, provide plenty of space to stash your essentials. Durable, set-in sleeves ensure comfort while wearing a pack, and recycled nylon helps this classic hold its shape and resist abrasion鈥攎aking it a true essential for every cool-weather outing.


Columbia Arctic Crest Sherpa Full Zip Fleece Jacket
(Photo: Courtesy Columbia)

Best for Frigid Temps

Columbia Arctic Crest Sherpa Full Zip Fleece Jacket

Weight: 1.3 lbs
Sizes: XS-XXL; 1X-6X; LT-5XT
Warmth: 10/10
Breathability: 7/10
Durability: 9/10

Pros and Cons
Abrasion and weather resistant patches
Great value
A little heavy
No recycled content

The heat-capturing Omni-Heat Arctic tech in Columbia鈥檚 Arctic Crest Sherpa fleece was inspired by polar bears. Turns out that the arctic ursine鈥檚 fur isn鈥檛 white just for camouflage to sneak up on seals, it鈥檚 actually translucent to allow the scant winter sunlight to pass through to the black skin beneath, which absorbs the heat like a black T-shirt on a hot summer day. The dense fur then helps trap that heat next to the skin in a micro-greenhouse effect.

Similarly, the Arctic Crest fleece uses this solar-capture insulation trap warmth from the inside. Worn by itself without a shell on top, the Arctic Crest was a furnace on the ski track, leading one tester to joke that he felt hot enough to 鈥渞ip apart an igloo bare-handed.鈥 Testers also loved the Arctic Crest鈥檚 full feature set鈥攏ylon DWR-treated panels on high-wear areas like the hood, shoulders, and forearms, three zippered pockets for secure storage, and hidden elastic drawstrings at the hem to seal in heat. The only downside? Those niceties add weight.


Paka PAKACLOUD
(Photo: Courtesy Paka)

Most Breathable

Paka PAKACLOUD

Weight: 14.5 oz
Sizes: XS-XXL
Warmth: 7/10
Breathability: 10/10
Durability: 5/10

Pros and Cons
Exceptionally soft
Odor-resistant
Super breathable
Not wind resistant
Very small hand pockets

The term 鈥渇leece鈥 originally meant the pelt of a wooly animal. These days, it connotes a lightweight sweater made of petroleum-based yarn. Colorado-based B-corp Paka is bringing back fleece鈥檚 origin story with its PAKACLOUD midlayer. In Paka鈥檚 case, the pelt is that of the South American alpaca from whence it derives its name. Alpaca wool compares favorably to merino sheep鈥檚 wool in its warmth, wicking, and natural odor-fighting properties. It鈥檚 also lighter and softer, all while being arguably more sustainable鈥攕heep can be hard on the land where they graze whereas the alpaca is a critical part of the Peruvian highlands ecosystem where the company sources its wool. (They also support their indigenous women contractors by paying them a livable wage.)

In order to make a garment that will stand up to the rigors of outdoor adventure, as well as ring in for under $175, Paka created a fabric that鈥檚 a blend of 42 percent alpaca (traceable to the source) and14 percent merino wool, with the remainder made of recycled polyester and nylon. The result is incredibly light, extremely warm, and, in the words of one tester, 鈥渢he softest fleece I鈥檝e ever worn.鈥 It’s super breathable for high exertion鈥攖oo breathable for one tester who鈥檇 left his shell at home on a fat bike ride when a sudden squall kicked up. Everyone loved the quarter zip for weight savings, but quibbled with the oddly small hand pockets and wished the hem drawcords were a little more tucked away. Style note: If you鈥檙e cheering the return of the boxy fit, this is your fleece.


Flylow Lassen Fleece Lined Flannel
(Photo: Courtesy Flylow)

Best for Spring Skiing

Flylow Lassen Fleece Lined Flannel

Weight: 1.39 lbs
Sizes: S-XXL
Warmth: 8/10
Breathability: 5/10
Durability: 8/10

Pros and Cons
Street/slope crossover appeal
Good wind protection
On the heavier side
No recycled materials

Flannel button-downs never go out of style鈥攅specially not in ski country. If rocking a crinkly nylon shell at apr猫s or on the fat bike isn鈥檛 your jam, the Lassen Fleece Lined Flannel might be. Flylow clearly designed this shirt with outdoor rigors in mind. Along with a liner of fleece soft enough to wear next to skin, a zippered interior pocket can secure your RFID ski pass, car keys, or other valuables while the snug collar snaps extra high to seal in heat. The interior sleeves are lined with a slippery taffeta to ensure frictionless pole plants on the uphill skin track. With its double-layer construction, the Lassen provided our testers with enough wind protection to wear as an outer layer for sunny spring ski conditions, and garnered a few approving nods on the lodge deck after.


How to Choose a Fleece

Fleece jackets range in warmth, breathability, and weather protection. Here鈥檚 how to judge what will serve your needs.

Will You Pack It?

As a rule, fleece isn鈥檛 as compressible as, say, goose down. So it takes up considerable space in luggage or backpacks. If you need serious insulation but only occasionally, so that it remains packed most of the time, you might consider other, more space-saving insulated jackets. Amongst those we tested, the is the lightest and most compressible.

How Much Will You Sweat in This Fleece?

Some fleeces use a dense construction that traps in body heat but limits breathability. If you鈥檙e cross-country skiing, running, or logging outdoor workouts that involve constant exertion, look for lightweight fleeces or hybrid constructions that place breathable, less-insulated panels under the arms and in other hot spots. While all of these fleeces offered great breathability, was a bit of a unicorn, offering exceptional breathability with a decent dose of wind resistance for high aerobic output.

Will You Wear a Water- and Windproof Shell over This Fleece?

Most fleeces offer some water resistance, but that varies鈥攁nd no fleece can be counted on to deliver complete waterproof protection against rain or sustained snow. Most fleeces are also porous enough to let breezes in, which is great for sweat mitigation but bad for comfort amidst 30-mph winds. Consider whether you鈥檒l wear a shell sometimes, always, or never: Ski-tourers might choose a fleece with some weather-resistant panels, like Columbia鈥檚 , so they can skip a shell when it isn鈥檛 frigid. Resort skiers are better off with breathable fleece worn always under a shell jacket, like the .

Do You Run Cold?

If you鈥檒l wear the fleece in 0-10 degree temperatures, or if you鈥檙e always chilly no matter the conditions, choose a thicker, high-pile fleece like the .


How We Test

  • Number of testers: 7
  • Number of products tested: 25
  • Mountain ranges represented: 14 (Whites, Greens, Front Range, Gore Range, Bitteroots, Selkirks, Monashees, Wasatch, Teton, Pioneers, Sawatch, Park, Mosquito, Gros Ventre)
  • Moose successfully dodged on-slope: 2

Last winter we found that more than half of our test crew were teachers, and it turned out that these were our ideal evaluators. For one thing, their need to get out skiing, running, cycling, and climbing was uncompromising, if only to recharge for another week in the classroom. That meant that they went out no matter the conditions, pushing these garments to their limits. For another, they are used to grading stuff, and welcomed the opportunity to evaluate the performance of a midlayer instead of another middling essay on Moby Dick.

For this test, we put as many fleece models as we could get our hands on through the rigors of skiing, climbing, running, and snow biking in cold and uncomfortably wet conditions across North America. Of the 25 we evaluated, we wore full-zip models and pullovers, wool and synthetic pieces, heavy and lightweight layers. Our testers graded warmth, breathability, fit, durability, sustainability, and price. Their verdicts led us to select only the best of the batch.


Meet Our Lead Tester

Frederick Reimers was raised at a canoe-tripping summer camp in Ontario, Canada and had completed a trio of 40-day expeditions before he even shipped off to college. When his parents sold the camp and moved to Jackson Hole in the 1990s, he followed. He has made a career of scribbling about outdoor culture and gear ever since. In addition to 国产吃瓜黑料, his work has appeared in The New York Times, Smithsonian, Bloomberg Business, and SKI. While Wyoming鈥檚 long winters do feel a little drawn-out come April, that makes it the perfect place to test layers. Find Reimers testing them on ski slopes, Nordic tracks, and bitterly cold predawn dog walks around town.

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Long-Term Test: 2023 Norr酶na Lyngen Gore-Tex Active Jacket /outdoor-gear/clothing-apparel/norrona-lygnen-gore-tex-jacket-2023-review/ Tue, 18 Oct 2022 17:00:50 +0000 /?p=2606129 Long-Term Test: 2023 Norr酶na Lyngen Gore-Tex Active Jacket

Over the course of last season, this touring shell impressed us with a combination of serious weight savings and surprising durability

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Long-Term Test: 2023 Norr酶na Lyngen Gore-Tex Active Jacket

Price: $650
Weight: 10.6 oz
Size: 惭别苍鈥檚 S-XL

In 2015, Gore-Tex debuted its lightest and most breathable product: , a waterproof shell material without the traditional protective face fabric. Instead, the waterproof membrane forms the outer layer, which you can literally shake to dry, because the water beads right off. The material weighs less and vents better than three-layer alternatives, and never wets out. The tradeoff is durability. Until now, Crepe-thin Shakedry jackets were marketed to weight-obsessed runners and road cyclists for frontcountry use.

Read more: The Best Puffy Jackets and Midlayers of 2023听

To bring Shakedry to the trekking and backcountry skiing world, Norr酶na combined Shakedry with Gore-Tex Active, a still very light and breathable three-layer fabric aimed at the set. Shakedry rings the torso and lines the underarms of the jacket, while Gore Active comprises higher-wear zones like the hood, shoulders, and hem.

One tester wore the Jacket backcountry skiing in Montana and British Columbia. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the most breathable backcountry hardshell I鈥檝e worn,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd I sweat like an amorous water buffalo.鈥 Another tester wore this shell over just a base layer while skinning the slopes of Iceland鈥檚 Troll Peninsula in relatively warm, drizzly maritime conditions, and was wowed by the fact that it kept him completely dry despite weighing just 10.8 ounces (about half as much as standouts like The North Face鈥檚 Summit Stimson Futurelight Jacket).

Because Shakedry is so breathable, the Lyngen Gore-Tex Active Jacket skips pit zips in lieu of an inch-wide mesh panel that opens and shuts with a zipper running parallel to the main front opening. Without the extra bulk of pit zips, the jacket packs down to the size of a grapefruit鈥攄espite the fact that it has a generous helmet compatible hood, stiffened hood brim, and hip-length hem. (The slim, mountaineering fit also contributes to its light weight and bulk.) But take note that this system doesn鈥檛 work as well with bibs, because the front-center vents overlap with the bib fabric, which blocks some moisture transfer鈥攚hich does not happen when you layer bibs under a jacket with armpit vents.

But how durable is it? Gore-Tex Active is tougher than Shakedry, but it鈥檚 still an ultralight fabric, and users should take reasonable care with the Lyngen Gore-Tex Active. That said, the shell easily held up to a season of ski touring in Yellowstone, Canada, Iceland, and Greenland without any rips. One quibble: the jacket is only available in men鈥檚 sizes.


听literally grew up at a summer camp. His father was director of Ontario鈥檚 Keewaydin Canoe Camp, and Frederick parlayed that experience into a decade of year-round work leading rafting, mountaineering, and sea kayaking courses for Colorado Outward Bound. These days he lives in Jackson, Wyoming, about to embark on a massive expedition into parenthood along with his wife and two dogs.

Back to the Winter Gear Guide

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The Ultimate Guide to Grand Canyon National Park /adventure-travel/national-parks/grand-canyon-travel-guide/ Tue, 16 Aug 2022 06:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/grand-canyon-travel-guide/ The Ultimate Guide to Grand Canyon National Park

Grand Canyon National Park has some of the best views in the United States. Here鈥檚 how to make the most out of a visit, whether its hiking, boating, biking, camping, or so much more.

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The Ultimate Guide to Grand Canyon National Park

No wonder Teddy Roosevelt called the Grand Canyon 鈥渢he one great sight which every American should see.鈥 Walk to its edge, and the earth falls away into an expanse of peaks, plateaus, and gorges so vast it can be disorienting. Descend below the rim, and the sense of awe only grows. The canyon is essentially an inverted, 6,000-foot, 277-mile-long mountain range, where you are dwarfed by sheer stone walls stacked to the sky and vistas that multiply with every turn. In the desert landscape, the water can be the most astonishing sight. Turquoise streams rush whole out of rust red cliffs听and cascade through travertine pools. At the bottom of the canyon, of course, lies听the engine of this great geological conundrum鈥攖he thrumming, persistent Colorado River, which听carved the gorge over millennia. If there鈥檚 a better place to gain听perspective on our own relative insignificance, I don鈥檛 know it.

But all this comes with a downside. The park gets crowded. visited in 2021 alone. Don鈥檛 let that stop you from planning a trip, though. Just a fraction of visitors bother to descend into the canyon itself, which means it鈥檚 easy to find solitude. But with 595 miles of established trails, 278 miles of river to float, and countless panoramas, historic sites, and overlooks to explore, it鈥檚 hard to know where to start. Here鈥檚 how to make the most out of an adventure to one of our country鈥檚 most rugged and iconic places.

What You Need to Know Before Visiting the Grand Canyon

(IlexImage/iStock)

Beware of the heat.

The interior of the canyon averages triple-digit highs June through August, and those temperatures contributed to in 2017 alone.听So unless you鈥檙e a reptile or riding in a raft, plan your visit for the other nine months of the year.

If a summer trip is your only option, head to the North Rim.

The North Rim gets about atenth of the visitors听and,听at an elevation of 8,297 feet,听runs nearly ten degrees cooler than the South Rim.听In fact,听all park amenities on the North Rim are closed November through April, and the听road into the park closes in December鈥攐r earlier if enough snow falls鈥攎eaning you can only access the North Rim听by听hiking, snowshoeing, or cross-country skiing with a backcountry permit.

Be prepared for some paperwork and hope for some luck.

Many of the park鈥檚 best adventures, like camping in the backcountry, running your own trip down the Colorado鈥檚 rapids, or spending the night at the Phantom Ranch at the canyon鈥檚 bottom, require winning a lottery to land the necessary permits.

Rafting Permits in Grand Canyon National Park

If you know your way around an oar rig, the odds of winning a permit for a noncommercial river trip are notoriously difficult, especially for popular times like autumn and spring. For example, there were 459 applications to launch on September 18, 2019, alone. On the other hand, some days in December, when the days are short and the nights are cold, see no applicants at all. No matter your launch date, it costs $25 to apply for a permit. If you win, a 听must be paid immediately and听is applied to your听trip鈥檚 final price tag, which will depend听on the size of your group.

Backpacking Permits in Grand Canyon National Park

Your odds for scoring are much better and only cost $10 per permit, plus $12 per person per night in the canyon or $12 per group above the rim. A word of note on this, though: the park鈥檚 reservation system is still dependent on pre-Y2K technology, meaning you have to apply via fax, regular mail, or in person. Your best chance for landing your dream hike is sending in a written application a little over four months before your planned trip during what鈥檚 called the earliest consideration period, which starts on the 20th of every month and runs through the first of the next. Trip applications submitted during this time are rewarded through a lottery. After that it鈥檚 first-come, first-served. Don鈥檛 fret if you don鈥檛 snag the spot you want, and definitely don鈥檛 cancel your trip. Most people don鈥檛 know it, but once you receive your permit, you can call the backcountry office to try and modify it. The nonprofit Grand Canyon Trust has a good explainer of the .

How to Get There

(Jad Limcaco/Unsplash)

Grand Canyon National Park is split into two distinct zones divided by, well, the actual canyon. It鈥檚 a long four-and-a-half-hour drive to get from one rim to the other, so plan carefully. If you鈥檙e visiting the North Rim, it鈥檚 quickest to fly to Las Vegas, a four-and-a-half-hour drive from the park. If you are bound for the South Rim, from Phoenix it鈥檚 a three-and-a-half-hour drive, or you can splurge on one of the few daily flights into Flagstaff, Arizona, just an hour and a half south of Grand Canyon Village, the main hub for exploring the park. No car, or prefer not to drive? runs vans from Flagstaff to the village three times a day from May 15 to October 16.

Where to Stay In or Near the Grand Canyon

(YinYang/iStock)

国产吃瓜黑料 Inc.’s National Park Trips offers a free filled with a complete itinerary, beautiful photography, a park map, and everything else you need to plan your dream vacation.

South Rim

is a landmark, not only for its location just steps from the canyon rim but also for its iconic architectural style, which influenced many of the National Park lodges that followed. Built in 1905, it鈥檚 worth taking a look at the log-sided lobby, even if you aren鈥檛 staying there. Like most NPS lodging, rooms are basic, expensive, and hard to come by (from $394). You鈥檒l want to book a year in advance, especially if you covet one of the three balcony suites on the canyon side, which cannot be reserved online. You鈥檒l have tocall听the hotel directly, and they鈥檒l cost you double the regular room rate. There are , all pretty basic, and another half dozen in the town of Tusayan, just outside the park, about six miles from the rim.

For camping on the South Rim, your best bet is to head听25 miles east of Grand Canyon Village for the prized sunsets at . It runs $18 per night but is first-come, first-served, so plan to snag a site midmorning when campers are clearing out.

North Rim

Go for the Western Cabins at the听. With nothing between your front porch and the canyon but a few pine trees, cabins 301, 305, 306, and 309 are some of the best accommodations in the park ($271, open May 15 to October 15). If those are booked, grabbing an Adirondack chair from the main lodge鈥檚 veranda and settling in as the sunset washes the Deva, Brahma, and Zoroaster Temple buttes in flaming alpenglow is a solid second choice.

You can catch the same west-facing views at the ,听a mile or so north of the lodge. Book sites 14 to 19, right on the rim, if you can, though they鈥檙e often reserved听a year in advance.

Canyon Floor

The Phantom Ranch, tucked into a shady cottonwood grove at the bottom of the chasm, in 2018, and entries are due a whopping 15 months ahead of your desired dates. If you don鈥檛 make the cut, try for a spot at the adjacent Bright Angel Campground, which requires a backcountry camping permit. You can still order meals from Phantom Ranch, which will lighten your load for the hike in.

The Best 国产吃瓜黑料s in Grand Canyon National Park

(David Moskowitz/TandemStock)

Most park visitors never leave the developed enclave of Grand Canyon Village on the South Rim. They roll up in their rental car, park, stroll to the guardrail听rim, browse the gift shops, and then head to the next national park on their checklist. That鈥檚 not an exaggeration: the park estimates that the average听visit lasts less than four hours. Even hopping on the free shuttles that stop for fresh views along the South Rim every mile or so is听enough to leave most of the horde behind. The farther you get from the visitor听center, the more the crowds thin out.

Biking Routes

Rent bikes from , located听next to the visitor center, and cruise the South Rim. The Hermit Road winds seven miles along the rim from the village and is closed to private cars March through November, making it one of the most scenic cycling paths in the world. Or head east from the visitors center and link the bike path with the car-free Yaki Point Road. Jutting far into the canyon, Yaki Point is a popular spot to catch the sunset splash听rosy light across a 42-mile swath of canyon all the way from the Palisades of the Desert, 25 miles to the east,听to Havasupai Point, 17 miles west.

Hiking Trails

For day outings, skip the South Rim鈥檚 well-trampled Bright Angel Trail, which drops into the canyon right at the village, and take the shuttle bus from thereto the South Kaibab Trailhead. The seven-mile path, one of the best hiking trails in Grand Canyon National Park, descends 4,780 feet all the way to the river, but many people merely opt for the 1.8-mile round-trip to the comically named Ooh Aah Point. On the North Rim, the mild five-mile Widforss Trail winds along the rim and then ducks through ponderosa pine and aspen groves to Widforss Point, where you can catch views of sheer, jagged buttes like Wotans Throne and the Zoroaster Temple or the battlements of Transept Canyon.

Backpacking Trips

The remote, arduous may well be the Grand Canyon鈥檚 most astonishing backpacking trip. Start the 21-mile, three-day loop from the Bill Hall Trailhead at Monument Point (which shaves 2.5 miles off the traditional Indian Hollow Trailhead route), 34 miles down a sometimes impassable road from the North Rim town of Jacob Lake. It passes by Thunder River itself, a large creek that pours straight out of cave midway up the red canyon wall and tumbles down tiers of lush, vegetated pools. Don鈥檛 miss the chance to spend an afternoon exploring the twisting Deer Creek Narrows, or detour down the rafter鈥檚 trail to the river to check out the outlet of the narrows, 80-foot-high Deer Creek Falls.

The granddaddy of Grand Canyon hikes is going rim to rim, dropping all the way to the river, crossing the bridge at Phantom Ranch, and then climbing out the other side. Some break up the journey with a night at Phantom Ranch. Others prefer to knock it out in a day鈥攖he current record is two hours and 39 minutes.听To preserve knee cartilage, most people start at the lower South Rim, descend听4,460 feet on the Bright Angel Trail, and then听ascend听5,850 feet on the North Kaibab Trail to the North Rim Lodge, for a total of 21 miles. Some of the听more ambitious hikers and runners go听rim to rim to rim, but for the one-way trip, you鈥檒l need transportation back. If you can鈥檛 talk a friend into picking you up on the other side (a four-and-a-half-hour drive one-way), you can drop听a car off yourself and catch a ride back with the for $120.

Boating and Paddling

There are two ways to boat the Colorado River: by motorized raft听or in a human-propelled oar or paddle raft. I can鈥檛 recommend the former. The outboard engines feel like a violation of the river鈥檚 stretches of sublime silence, and the huge听30-foot rafts鈥攑acked shoulder to shoulder听with passengers鈥攎ute even the formidable whitewater.

The best way to experience the river is at its own pace,听taking on the towering waves of famous rapids like Crystal and Lava Falls in an 18-foot oar rig. You鈥檒l drift for days through face-melting scenery, blast down hundreds of galloping rapids, and camp each night on sand beaches beneath a lane of bright stars. Plus听you can pack听steaks and fresh veggies in coolers, chill beers beersin drag bags in the river, and best of all, enjoy the complete lack of cell-phone reception. If you don鈥檛 have the experience or a permit to DIY, more than run river trips through the Grand Canyon, ranging in length from three to 18 days and costing around $2,000 to $6,000.

Where to Eat and Drink Near the Grand Canyon

(Craig Zerbe/iStock)

If you鈥檙e driving up from Phoenix, stop in Flagstaff, a college town with a burgeoning food and brewery scene. For lunch, pop by for locally sourced beef patties served on English muffins, and grab a Blake, which features homemade Hatch-chile mayo, roasted green chilies, and sharp cheddar. Staying for dinner? The folks at say their fare is good for the soul鈥攃ast-iron cornbread, jambalaya, and slow-smoked barbecue are all on the menu.

Inside the park, dining options are mainly limited to large-scale concessionaires who win service-contract bids. , which runs most of the Grand Canyon鈥檚 restaurants, now sources 40 percent of its ingredients from sustainable or local vendors. At the El Tovar dining room, the signature prime-rib hash鈥攚hich features Arizona-grown beef, cage-free eggs, bell peppers, and chipotle hollandaise sauce鈥攕hould set you up for a descent into the canyon听and back.

听in Grand Canyon Village听sells Flagstaff-made baked goods, sandwiches, and coffee. The cinnamon pound cake is worth stashing in your pack for a midride snack.

Across the canyon, the view from听the veranda at the听 makes for some of the best alfresco dining on the planet. From the dinner menu, try the wings, which are braised in spicy prickly pear cactus juice. Wash it down with Flagstaff-brewed beers named after park features, like the Phantom Ranch Red.

Just outside the park, the Meadows Edge Coffee Trailer, beside the , serves a blueberry-pomegranate smoothie and the canyon鈥檚 best latte. A little farther on, at the junction of 89A and Highway听67, the Jacob Lake Inn is famous for its听. There are听15 varieties on offer, including chocolate parfait and lemon zucchini with pecans.

If You Have Time for a Detour

While getting a permit to float through the Grand Canyon takes some doing, paddling 15 miles upstream from听the park into Marble Canyon requires no permits, fees, or reservations. Dogs are also allowed, so you can finally let the pups out of the van.

For camping, part of Glen Canyon National Recreation Area (the section of river between Lee鈥檚 Ferry and Glen Canyon Dam)听contains first-come, first-serve听sites. Or relatively strong paddlers can rent a kayak from in nearby Page, Arizona, and head upstream to camp听in the听Instagram mecca that is . From the beach, you can just make out the silhouettes of the hordes on the rim.

Want to mountain bike at the park? You can鈥檛. But the , on Forest Service land abutting the North Rim, has become the听go-to destination for fat-tire听riders wanting to cozy up to America鈥檚 favorite abyss. Twenty-two miles of singletrack wind through ponderosa pine forests and meadows, occasionally popping out at the rocky rim for eyefuls of the Big Ditch. Most cyclists post up for a few days听at dispersed car-camping spots like Locust Trailhead, midway on the route.


Editor’s Note: We frequently update this National Parks guide, which was originally published on Dec 4, 2018.

The post The Ultimate Guide to Grand Canyon National Park appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

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What Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 Move Back to Utah Means for the Industry /outdoor-gear/gear-news/outdoor-retailer-utah/ Fri, 29 Apr 2022 10:00:17 +0000 /?p=2578283 What Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 Move Back to Utah Means for the Industry

And how it will affect us all

The post What Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 Move Back to Utah Means for the Industry appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

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What Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 Move Back to Utah Means for the Industry

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Outdoor Retailer was our industry鈥檚 indispensable event. Twice annually, more than 20,000 people crowded into the trade show, wandering a vast grid of booths that displayed companies鈥 top-secret coming attractions鈥攔acks of impossibly light down parkas, cases of glittering climbing hardware, and gadgets like stoves that charge a smartphone with a twig fire. The national media reported breathlessly on next year鈥檚 gear and shop owners and employees rubbed elbows with outdoor celebrities like Alex Honnold and Bear Grylls and partied at corporate shindigs featuring bands like Parliament Funkadelic and Macklemore.

Beyond the gear bacchanal, Outdoor Retailer was instrumental in growing the industry鈥檚 conscience. Dozens of conservation and equity nonprofits rallied support at the show, and the Outdoor Industry Association (OIA), which has been the show鈥檚 title sponsor for over 25 years, grew from a trade-issues lobbying group into a more forceful advocate for public lands protection and social equity. Congresspeople and senators roamed the show stumping for legislation like re-authorizing the Land and Water Conservation Fund and expanding designated wilderness areas. In 2017, Outdoor Retailer made national headlines when it decamped from Salt Lake City and moved to Denver to protest Utah鈥檚 efforts to decimate Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monuments.

So it was a blow to many when, after canceling the previous two in-person shows entirely, the Delta and Omicron variants whittled the August 2021 and January 2022 events to fewer than 8,000 attendees apiece. Some believed the show would never recover its previous size due to shifts in the way business is done: many factories now need orders well in advance of the event, a significant number of retailers have migrated to less expensive regional trade shows, and direct-to-consumer sales mean the show is simply no longer essential to some brands. Recognizing all of those factors, certain companies have shifted their marketing budgets away from previously lavish expenditures at Outdoor Retailer, or have stopped attending entirely. To the chagrin of many who love the energizing effects of Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 critical mass, the show鈥檚 star has undeniably dimmed.

The Next Evolution of Outdoor Retailer

It therefore made financial sense when, last month, Outdoor Retailer announced that despite its 2017 exodus, in January 2023 the show would return to Salt Lake City, where costs will be lower for both attendees and exhibitors鈥攁nd the show itself. Then, a week after the announcement, Outdoor Retailer let go two of its senior management team, brand development director Larry Harrison and senior marketing director Jennifer Pelkey. Harrison said it was an additional cost-cutting move. Representatives from OR declined to comment on the reasoning behind the decision.

But those weren鈥檛 the only problems: when brands caught wind of the potential about-face, 34 of the industry鈥檚 biggest players鈥攊ncluding Patagonia, the North Face, and REI鈥攑eremptorily announced that, on moral grounds, they would not attend Outdoor Retailer if it moved back to Utah.

鈥淲e will not support or attend a trade show event in Utah so long as its elected officials continue attacks on national monuments and public lands protections,鈥 they wrote in a public letter distributed by the Conservation Alliance. While President Biden reversed the Trump administration鈥檚 2017 decision to shrink both Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monuments, the state of Utah is currently to the Supreme Court. 鈥淏efore we鈥檇 return to a trade show in Utah, we鈥檇 need a commitment that Utah wouldn鈥檛 pursue that suit,鈥 says Corley Kenna, Patagonia鈥檚 head of communications and policy.

Furthermore, many have noted that Utah鈥檚 passage last month of makes the state anathema to an industry working to increase inclusivity. 鈥淲hy would you want to tie outdoor retailers to such a trans-phobic state?鈥 wrote one person on social media. 鈥淚t is a slap in the face to the entire LGBTQ+ community.鈥

Outdoor Retailer entrance
Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 total attendance at its last two shows has dipped below 8,000鈥攁 far cry from pre-pandemic staging numbers, when shows regularly drew tens of thousands of participants. Photo: 国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal

Outdoor Retailer and supporters of the Utah move say they aren鈥檛 ignoring the state鈥檚 unpalatable politics. 鈥淟eaving after 2017 has not brought the change we had hoped for, so we will push back, not pull back,鈥 the company wrote in a press release. They announced plans to donate a portion of show revenue to support public lands in Utah and to bring government officials and industry stakeholders together for meetings 鈥渇ocused on influencing policy, assisting advocacy efforts, and directing resources into protecting natural and cultural spaces.鈥 It鈥檚 unclear, however, how much they鈥檒l donate and where the money will go, exactly.

Nevertheless, the upcoming Utah trade shows will almost certainly be smaller than those of the show鈥檚 pre-pandemic apex. In addition to the boycott by many of the industry鈥檚 heavyweights, the trade show鈥檚 primary model has been shifting for the last decade or more. Outdoor Retailer was originally created to show off future products to retailers who would write orders on the spot, but the factories making the gear are requiring increasingly long lead times, so orders are now being filled weeks in advance of the shows鈥攁 problem only exacerbated by the pandemic. Instead, for the manufacturing brands footing a portion of the show鈥檚 bill, Outdoor Retailer has largely become a marketing event. Even before COVID, dozens of brands like Arc鈥檛eryx and Columbia had decided the costs were no longer worthwhile and decamped. Then, says Conor Hall, director of Colorado鈥檚 Outdoor Recreation Industry Office, 鈥淐OVID-19 threw lighter fluid on that smoldering model.鈥 Some of the brands and retailers that have abandoned OR are now rendezvousing at less expensive regional trade shows and smaller national gatherings like the Big Gear Show in Park City, Utah, whose exhibitor fees are significantly lower than OR鈥檚.

From the retailer side, national chains and online behemoths like REI and Backcountry don鈥檛 necessarily need a big show like OR to find new vendors, says Wes Allen, owner of Sunlight Sports in Cody, Wyoming. 鈥淓very brand makes a pilgrimage to REI鈥檚 headquarters in Seattle, and would give their left arm to sell their stuff with REI.鈥 Many manufacturers, including Patagonia, Arc鈥檛eryx, and Columbia, are also growing their own direct-to-consumer businesses online in addition to operating fleets of brick-and-mortar stores. 鈥淚t鈥檚 unlikely those big brands will miss Outdoor Retailer,鈥 says Allen.

What a Weakened OR Might Mean for the Industry

So, what is lost if Outdoor Retailer continues to fade? First and foremost, it鈥檚 the community building, say most attendees. 鈥淭rade shows are great for networking and trading ideas that you didn鈥檛 know you needed to trade,鈥 says Chris Sword, CEO of RoVR Products. Those ideas run the gamut from updating style and technologies to building consensus on the moral and political issues that affect the entire outdoor community. 鈥淲here else can the CEOs of The North Face and Patagonia grab a casual beer together?鈥 says Sword.

Speaking of community building, look too at the constellation of nonprofits that rely on the show to recruit supporters and spread their messages. Some, like , which seeks to increase inclusivity in the outdoor industry, were literally created at the trade show. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 see that activism at many other trade events, if any,鈥 says Harrison.

In addition, a weaker trade show might mean a weaker OIA, which is undeniably the industry鈥檚 most powerful agent of change in Washington. (Last year, OIA鈥檚 executive director, Lise Aangeenbrug, was invited with a handful of other business and labor leaders to sit down with President Biden and Vice President Harris at the White House.) At one time, OIA relied on show revenue from Outdoor Retailer for over 60 percent of its budget鈥攁 tenuous position that effectively tied the organization鈥檚 fate to OR鈥檚. Recently, it鈥檚 , but a smaller Outdoor Retailer still means less opportunity for OIA-driven consensus building and possibly less fiscal might for OIA as well. Representatives from OIA declined to comment on funding issues, but in a released after OR announced its upcoming move, the group did say that it 鈥渆xpressed the concerns of many of [its] members regarding a move of Outdoor Retailer to Utah.鈥

A smaller national trade show will impact us all as outdoor consumers, too. Small brands, the kind with just a few employees and maybe a bit of seed funding, have been helping drive gear innovation for decades. Without the show, their opportunity for in-person discovery by important retailers will likely diminish. Allen describes the sensation on the Outdoor Retailer show floor when Jetboil, founded by a pair of New Hampshire cousins, debuted in 2003. Such brands made it at Outdoor Retailer 鈥渂ecause shops can wander the show and discover dozens of them all in one place,鈥 Allen says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no way a small brand can afford the time to attend each regional show or knock on the doors of hundreds of stores across the country.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to imagine Outdoor Retailer succeeding without its deepest-pocketed companies.鈥

Nicholson echoes that sentiment from the show鈥檚 leadership team. 鈥淲hat makes the show relevant is the ability for retailers to discover and elevate the importance of new and younger brands,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 been no slowdown of brands entering the industry. Trade shows have always served as an efficient path for small companies to showcase their products and gain exposure.鈥

鈥淭he chance encounters you get when there鈥檚 20,000 people in the building were critical for us,鈥 says Kelli Jones, founder of NoSo Patches, which makes adhesive patches to help individuals repair their gear. At Outdoor Retailer in 2018, Jones happened to meet Burton鈥檚 director of global sustainability. They hit it off, and that friendship led to one of NoSo鈥檚 biggest contracts. Then, in 2021, The North Face icon Conrad Anker dropped by the tiny NoSo booth and expressed his love for the company鈥檚 mission. That led to a partnership with The North Face鈥攁 huge deal for the ten-person company.听

By the same token, the show has been indispensable for independent retail businesses like Allen鈥檚. At a big trade show, he says, 鈥渟mall shops can efficiently find unique products that fit their vision, or get a leg up on competitors by discovering emerging brands.鈥 It鈥檚 how they compete with national chains and e-tailers.

As with NoSo鈥檚 Jones, Allen relies on the excitement of the show to help keep his business energized. 鈥淲e retailers are motivated by helping people get excited to go outside, which spreads that conservation ethic,鈥 says Allen. 鈥淲hen there鈥檚 25,000 people at the show, there鈥檚 a powerful sense of belonging.鈥

Outdoor Retailer says it has plans to increase the critical mass at its Utah shows to keep the community building alive. When the company announced its return to Utah in late March, it declared it would be 鈥渞einventing OR鈥 by hosting speakers, community events, and musical acts 鈥渂eyond the walls of the convention center.鈥 Many are hopeful the strategy works, even if the high-profile boycotters of the show follow through with their threats. 鈥淚鈥檇 love to see [the show] survive,鈥 says Allen. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 hard to imagine Outdoor Retailer succeeding without its deepest-pocketed companies.鈥

Perhaps, though, there鈥檚 a third option for attendees and exhibitors鈥攁 way to retain the political and cultural momentum created by Outdoor Retailer while satisfying those repelled by the state of Utah鈥檚 stances on conservation and equality. The same day OR announced it was leaving Colorado, officials in that state said they would establish their own trade event, describing it as a South by Southwest for the outdoor industry. Details are sparse, but given Colorado鈥檚 to power a significant part of its economy, a new event might quickly gain support among state organizers and lawmakers.

鈥淭here should be the leadership piece and the creative piece,鈥 says Colorado鈥檚 Hall. 鈥淕iven the upheaval in our society, it鈥檚 more important than ever to nurture connections within our community.鈥

The post What Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 Move Back to Utah Means for the Industry appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

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What Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 Move Back to Utah Means for the Industry /business-journal/trade-shows-events/what-outdoor-retailers-move-back-to-utah-means-for-the-industry/ Thu, 28 Apr 2022 04:48:33 +0000 /?p=2591745 What Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 Move Back to Utah Means for the Industry

And how it will affect us all

The post What Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 Move Back to Utah Means for the Industry appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
What Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 Move Back to Utah Means for the Industry

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Outdoor Retailer was our industry鈥檚 indispensable event. Twice annually, more than 20,000 people crowded into the trade show, wandering a vast grid of booths that displayed companies鈥 top-secret coming attractions鈥攔acks of impossibly light down parkas, cases of glittering climbing hardware, and gadgets like stoves that charge a smartphone with a twig fire. The national media reported breathlessly on next year鈥檚 gear and shop owners and employees rubbed elbows with outdoor celebrities like Alex Honnold and Bear Grylls and partied at corporate shindigs featuring bands like Parliament Funkadelic and Macklemore.

Beyond the gear bacchanal, Outdoor Retailer was instrumental in growing the industry鈥檚 conscience. Dozens of conservation and equity nonprofits rallied support at the show, and the Outdoor Industry Association (OIA), which has been the show鈥檚 title sponsor for over 25 years, grew from a trade-issues lobbying group into a more forceful advocate for public lands protection and social equity. Congresspeople and senators roamed the show stumping for legislation like re-authorizing the Land and Water Conservation Fund and expanding designated wilderness areas. In 2017, Outdoor Retailer made national headlines when it decamped from Salt Lake City and moved to Denver to protest Utah鈥檚 efforts to decimate Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monuments.

So it was a blow to many when, after canceling the previous two in-person shows entirely, the Delta and Omicron variants whittled the August 2021 and January 2022 events to fewer than 8,000 attendees apiece. Some believed the show would never recover its previous size due to shifts in the way business is done: many factories now need orders well in advance of the event, a significant number of retailers have migrated to less expensive regional trade shows, and direct-to-consumer sales mean the show is simply no longer essential to some brands. Recognizing all of those factors, certain companies have shifted their marketing budgets away from previously lavish expenditures at Outdoor Retailer, or have stopped attending entirely. To the chagrin of many who love the energizing effects of Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 critical mass, the show鈥檚 star has undeniably dimmed.

The Next Evolution of Outdoor Retailer

It therefore made financial sense when, last month, Outdoor Retailer announced that despite its 2017 exodus, in January 2023 the show would return to Salt Lake City, where costs will be lower for both attendees and exhibitors鈥攁nd the show itself. Then, a week after the announcement, Outdoor Retailer let go two of its senior management team, brand development director Larry Harrison and senior marketing director Jennifer Pelkey. Harrison said it was an additional cost-cutting move. Representatives from OR declined to comment on the reasoning behind the decision.

But those weren鈥檛 the only problems: when brands caught wind of the potential about-face, 34 of the industry鈥檚 biggest players鈥攊ncluding Patagonia, the North Face, and REI鈥攑eremptorily announced that, on moral grounds, they would not attend Outdoor Retailer if it moved back to Utah.

鈥淲e will not support or attend a trade show event in Utah so long as its elected officials continue attacks on national monuments and public lands protections,鈥 they wrote in a public letter distributed by the Conservation Alliance. While President Biden reversed the Trump administration鈥檚 2017 decision to shrink both Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monuments, the state of Utah is currently to the Supreme Court. 鈥淏efore we鈥檇 return to a trade show in Utah, we鈥檇 need a commitment that Utah wouldn鈥檛 pursue that suit,鈥 said Corley Kenna, Patagonia鈥檚 head of communications and policy.

Furthermore, many have noted that Utah鈥檚 passage last month of makes the state anathema to an industry working to increase inclusivity. 鈥淲hy would you want to tie outdoor retailers to such a trans-phobic state?鈥 wrote one person on social media. 鈥淚t is a slap in the face to the entire LGBTQ+ community.鈥

Outdoor Retailer entrance
Outdoor Retailer’s total attendance at its last two shows has dipped below 8,000鈥攁 far cry from pre-pandemic staging numbers, when shows regularly drew tens of thousands of participants. (Photo: 国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal)

Outdoor Retailer and supporters of the Utah move said they aren鈥檛 ignoring the state鈥檚 unpalatable politics. 鈥淟eaving after 2017 has not brought the change we had hoped for, so we will push back, not pull back,鈥 the company wrote in a press release. They announced plans to donate a portion of show revenue to support public lands in Utah and to bring government officials and industry stakeholders together for meetings 鈥渇ocused on influencing policy, assisting advocacy efforts, and directing resources into protecting natural and cultural spaces.鈥 It鈥檚 unclear, however, how much they鈥檒l donate and where the money will go, exactly.

Nevertheless, the upcoming Utah trade shows will almost certainly be smaller than those of the show鈥檚 pre-pandemic apex. In addition to the boycott by many of the industry鈥檚 heavyweights, the trade show鈥檚 primary model has been shifting for the last decade or more. Outdoor Retailer was originally created to show off future products to retailers who would write orders on the spot, but the factories making the gear are requiring increasingly long lead times, so orders are now being filled weeks in advance of the shows鈥攁 problem only exacerbated by the pandemic. Instead, for the manufacturing brands footing a portion of the show鈥檚 bill, Outdoor Retailer has largely become a marketing event. Even before COVID, dozens of brands like Arc鈥檛eryx and Columbia had decided the costs were no longer worthwhile and decamped. Then, says Conor Hall, director of Colorado鈥檚 Outdoor Recreation Industry Office, 鈥淐OVID-19 threw lighter fluid on that smoldering model.鈥 Some of the brands and retailers that have abandoned OR are now rendezvousing at less expensive regional trade shows and smaller national gatherings like the Big Gear Show in Park City, Utah, whose exhibitor fees are significantly lower than OR鈥檚.

From the retailer side, national chains and online behemoths like REI and Backcountry don鈥檛 necessarily need a big show like OR to find new vendors, said Wes Allen, owner of Sunlight Sports in Cody, Wyoming. 鈥淓very brand makes a pilgrimage to REI鈥檚 headquarters in Seattle, and would give their left arm to sell their stuff with REI.鈥 Many manufacturers, including Patagonia, Arc鈥檛eryx, and Columbia, are also growing their own direct-to-consumer businesses online in addition to operating fleets of brick-and-mortar stores. 鈥淚t鈥檚 unlikely those big brands will miss Outdoor Retailer,鈥 said Allen.

What a Weakened OR Might Mean for the Industry

So, what is lost if Outdoor Retailer continues to fade? First and foremost, it鈥檚 the community building, say most attendees. 鈥淭rade shows are great for networking and trading ideas that you didn鈥檛 know you needed to trade,鈥 said Chris Sword, CEO of RoVR Products. Those ideas run the gamut from updating style and technologies to building consensus on the moral and political issues that affect the entire outdoor community. 鈥淲here else can the CEOs of The North Face and Patagonia grab a casual beer together?鈥 said Sword.

Speaking of community building, look too at the constellation of nonprofits that rely on the show to recruit supporters and spread their messages. Some, like , which seeks to increase inclusivity in the outdoor industry, were literally created at the trade show. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 see that activism at many other trade events, if any,鈥 said Harrison.

In addition, a weaker trade show might mean a weaker OIA, which is undeniably the industry鈥檚 most powerful agent of change in Washington. (Last year, OIA鈥檚 executive director, Lise Aangeenbrug, was invited with a handful of other business and labor leaders to sit down with President Biden and Vice President Harris at the White House.) At one time, OIA relied on show revenue from Outdoor Retailer for over 60 percent of its budget鈥攁 tenuous position that effectively tied the organization鈥檚 fate to OR鈥檚. Recently, it鈥檚 , but a smaller Outdoor Retailer still means less opportunity for OIA-driven consensus building and possibly less fiscal might for OIA as well. Representatives from OIA declined to comment on funding issues, but in a released after OR announced its upcoming move, the group did say that it 鈥渆xpressed the concerns of many of [its] members regarding a move of Outdoor Retailer to Utah.鈥

A smaller national trade show will impact us all as outdoor consumers, too. Small brands, the kind with just a few employees and maybe a bit of seed funding, have been helping drive gear innovation for decades. Without the show, their opportunity for in-person discovery by important retailers will likely diminish. Allen described the sensation on the Outdoor Retailer show floor when Jetboil, founded by a pair of New Hampshire cousins, debuted in 2003. Such brands made it at Outdoor Retailer 鈥渂ecause shops can wander the show and discover dozens of them all in one place,鈥 Allen said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no way a small brand can afford the time to attend each regional show or knock on the doors of hundreds of stores across the country.鈥

Nicholson echoed that sentiment from the show’s leadership team. “What makes the show relevant is the ability for retailers to discover and elevate the importance of new and younger brands,” she said. “There鈥檚 been no slowdown of brands entering the industry. Trade shows have always served as an efficient path for small companies to showcase their products and gain exposure.”

鈥淭he chance encounters you get when there鈥檚 20,000 people in the building were critical for us,鈥 said Kelli Jones, founder of NoSo Patches, which makes adhesive patches to help individuals repair their gear. At Outdoor Retailer in 2018, Jones happened to meet Burton鈥檚 director of global sustainability. They hit it off, and that friendship led to one of NoSo鈥檚 biggest contracts. Then, in 2021, The North Face icon Conrad Anker dropped by the tiny NoSo booth and expressed his love for the company鈥檚 mission. That led to a partnership with The North Face鈥攁 huge deal for the ten-person company.听

By the same token, the show has been indispensable for independent retail businesses like Allen鈥檚. At a big trade show, he said, 鈥渟mall shops can efficiently find unique products that fit their vision, or get a leg up on competitors by discovering emerging brands.鈥 It鈥檚 how they compete with national chains and e-tailers.

As with NoSo鈥檚 Jones, Allen relies on the excitement of the show to help keep his business energized. 鈥淲e retailers are motivated by helping people get excited to go outside, which spreads that conservation ethic,鈥 said Allen. 鈥淲hen there鈥檚 25,000 people at the show, there鈥檚 a powerful sense of belonging.鈥

Outdoor Retailer says it has plans to increase the critical mass at its Utah shows to keep the community building alive. When the company announced its return to Utah in late March, it declared it would be 鈥渞einventing OR鈥 by hosting speakers, community events, and musical acts 鈥渂eyond the walls of the convention center.鈥 Many are hopeful the strategy works, even if the high-profile boycotters of the show follow through with their threats. 鈥淚鈥檇 love to see [the show] survive,鈥 said Allen. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 hard to imagine Outdoor Retailer succeeding without its deepest-pocketed companies.鈥

Perhaps, though, there鈥檚 a third option for attendees and exhibitors鈥攁 way to retain the political and cultural momentum created by Outdoor Retailer while satisfying those repelled by the state of Utah鈥檚 stances on conservation and equality. The same day OR announced it was leaving Colorado, officials in that state said they would establish their own trade event, describing it as a South by Southwest for the outdoor industry. Details are sparse, but given Colorado鈥檚 to power a significant part of its economy, a new event might quickly gain support among state organizers and lawmakers.

鈥淭here should be the leadership piece and the creative piece,鈥 said Colorado鈥檚 Hall. 鈥淕iven the upheaval in our society, it鈥檚 more important than ever to nurture connections within our community.鈥

The post What Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 Move Back to Utah Means for the Industry appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

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Insulated Jackets for Every Type of Weather /outdoor-gear/clothing-apparel/insulated-jackets-2022/ Tue, 29 Mar 2022 11:00:12 +0000 /?p=2560947 Insulated Jackets for Every Type of Weather

Choosing the right puffy is challenging. We鈥檙e here to help.

The post Insulated Jackets for Every Type of Weather appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

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Insulated Jackets for Every Type of Weather

We鈥檝e all been there: shivering because our jacket isn鈥檛 warm enough, or sweating buckets because it鈥檚 too thick. Well, there鈥檚 good news鈥攑uffies just continue to get better. They鈥檙e toastier on one end of the spectrum and more breathable, but still cozy, on the other. These are a collection of our top picks from this winter season that will serve you well for years to come.


Aether Launch ($425)

(Photo: Courtesy Aether)

A true trail-to-town crossover, the Launch (and women鈥檚 Senna, $375) fuses technical materials with urban design. The bomber jacket鈥檚 fit is as stylish as it is effective at sealing in heat at the cuffs and hem. Meanwhile, interior seams with elastic binding and a 16 percent spandex blend in the shell allow for superior stretch when adjusting snowshoe straps and planting ski poles. The 800-fill goose down makes this garment warmer than you鈥檇 expect given the low-bulk silhouette. (惭别苍鈥檚 XS鈥揦XL, 1.2 lbs; women鈥檚 XS鈥揦L, 1 lb)


Columbia Bulo Point II Omni-Heat Infinity Down ($250)

(Photo: Courtesy Columbia)

Cloudlike baffles stuffed with 700-fill goose down conform to your chest like a gentle hug, while supple reflective gold lining amplifies your body鈥檚 natural heat. Flurries bead on the DWR-treated shell颅鈥攎ade of recycled polyester in the hood and shoulders, and nylon elsewhere鈥攖o keep you dry on chairlift rides. It breathes capably enough, but without vents it鈥檚 better for the parking lot at the end of the day. (惭别苍鈥檚 S鈥揦XL, 1.6 lbs; women鈥檚 XS鈥揦XL, 1.6 lbs)


Fj盲llr盲ven Visby 3-in-1 ($550)

(Photo: Courtesy Fj盲llr盲ven)

Named for a coastal Swedish city notorious for its fickle weather, the Visby is designed for maximum versatility. It pairs a waterproof-breathable hip-length shell with a zip-out synthetic-insulated midlayer that can be worn alone when the weather breaks. Fj盲llr盲ven boosts its sustainability cred by cutting the coat entirely from recycled materials. (惭别苍鈥檚 XS鈥揦XL, 2.8 lbs; women鈥檚 XXS鈥揦L, 2.8 lbs)


Patagonia Downdrift ($299)

(Photo: Courtesy Patagonia)

Heritage styling isn鈥檛 the only thing the Downdrift brings back. It鈥檚 insulated with 600-fill down that鈥檚 recycled from bedding, and the shell material is made from nylon nets salvaged from South American fishermen. The exterior isn鈥檛 only durable but also protected by a PFC-free DWR coating, which makes the Downdrift equally at home on job sites, chairlifts, and city streets. (惭别苍鈥檚 XS鈥揦XL, 2.3 lbs; women鈥檚 XS鈥揦XL, 1.8 lbs)


Marmot WarmCube Novus Hoody ($250)

(Photo: Courtesy Marmot)

The Novus Hoody is the indispensable layer: a fantastic wet-weather insulator when paired with a hard shell, and a stand-alone soft shell for the skin track. Cube-shaped baffles of synthetic insulation along the back help trap warm air against the body, augmenting an already impressive warmth-to-weight ratio. The 20-denier ripstop nylon shell can take a thrashing, but it鈥檚 stretchy and breathable enough for the most rigorous climbs. (惭别苍鈥檚 S鈥揦XL, 1.3 lbs; women鈥檚 XS鈥揦L, 1.2 lbs)


Ortovox Swisswool Zinal ($370)

(Photo: Courtesy Ortovox)

Stuffed with fleece made from the wool of Swiss mountain sheep, the Zinal is an eco-friendly alternative to puffers filled with petroleum-based insulation. We liked the wool鈥檚 natural odor-fighting properties, but we really loved this exceptionally warm and supple parka when the temperature dropped to single digits. Details like a buttery-soft merino-wool chin guard and adjustable cuffs make it comfy, and giant chest pockets are positioned well above your pack鈥檚 waist belt鈥攁nd double as vents when you warm up. (惭别苍鈥檚 S鈥揦XL, 1.4 lbs; women鈥檚 XS鈥揦L, 1.3 lbs)


Norr酶na Trollveggen Superlight Down 850 ($349)

(Photo: Courtesy Norr酶na)

Here鈥檚 the truly featherweight down puffy you鈥檒l wear year-round: it鈥檚 wispy enough for climbers, skiers, and hikers who insist on the lightest loads. Credit the filmy-thin, seven-denier recycled nylon, which allows maximum loft in the 850-fill down by limiting compression. Those baffles make the Trollveggen shockingly warm, given the scant weight and pack size (it scrunches into its own pocket). (惭别苍鈥檚 S鈥揦L, 7 oz; women鈥檚 XS鈥揕, 6 oz)


Daehlie Winter Run 2.0 ($170)

(Photo: Courtesy Daehlie)

This aerobic insulator is the mullet of puffy jackets, combining baffles of ultralight synthetic insulation up front and laser-cut perforated ventilation in the back. The result is an excellent piece for high-output running, nordic skiing, and fat biking. Four-way-stretch polyester won鈥檛 hold you back, no matter how ungainly your form. One zippered lumbar pocket keeps a phone or fuel secure. (惭别苍鈥檚 S鈥揦XL, 11 oz; women鈥檚 XS鈥揦L, 9 oz)

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The Osprey UNLTD Antigravity 64 Is Osprey鈥檚 Most Technical Backpacking Pack Yet /outdoor-gear/hiking-gear/osprey-unltd-antigravity-64-backpack-review/ Wed, 16 Mar 2022 10:00:08 +0000 /?p=2563811 The Osprey UNLTD Antigravity 64 Is Osprey鈥檚 Most Technical Backpacking Pack Yet

But is it worth the $700 price tag?

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The Osprey UNLTD Antigravity 64 Is Osprey鈥檚 Most Technical Backpacking Pack Yet

What kind of backpack do you get when price imposes no limit? That was the concept Osprey set out to fulfill with its new , which launched this week. 鈥淚 wanted to showcase all that we could do,鈥 says Mike Pfotenhauer, Osprey鈥檚 founder and lead designer.

The first thing you notice is the price tag: the men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 Antigravity 64 and Airscape 68 retail for $700. No matter how well engineered a pack is or how much you pay for it, it鈥檒l still make your legs ache when you cram it full and lug it up the trail. That said, I tested out the Antigravity 64 on a four-day traverse of the Teton Crest Trail in Wyoming last summer and can attest that it is by far the sweetest pack I鈥檝e carried in 30 years of backpacking. (I never got a crack at the Airscape, which is designed with more rigid suspension for heavier loads, but shares many of the Antigravity鈥檚 innovations.)

The second thing you notice is the 3D-printed lumbar pad, which was the genesis of the UNLTD line. It was developed with Silicon Valley firm Carbon. Carbon prints products for the automotive and dental industries (headrests and individualized dentures, respectively) and has ventured into the outdoor space in recent years with and , both featuring the same distinct polyurethane (PU) latticework the Osprey lumbar pads are made from. The PU strands are remarkably elastic鈥攖hey can be elongated 250 percent before they break, which gives the lumbar pads a springy, dynamic feel.

(Photo: Courtesy Osprey)

The 3D-printing process allows Carbon to make shapes that are impossible to achieve with injection molding鈥攁nd with remarkable speed. In just over a year, the company made close to 100 different permutations of the design, all with far less waste than injection molding.

Carbon can also tune the compressibility within the object by changing the density of the lattice in different areas. The lumbar pad is more compressible toward the top (for comfort) and firmer toward the bottom (for better load bearing), all of which gives the pad the cushioned, supported feel while maintaining remarkable breathability, thanks to its weblike structure. My shirt never wetted out as I chugged up the trail in temps as high as 80 degrees.

Despite that high-tech basis, the UNLTD Antigravity 64 is still essentially an upgrade to Osprey鈥檚 cult classic Atmos and women鈥檚 Aura. Those packs both feature almost seamless mesh that extends from the back panel across the hipbelt, creating remarkable ventilation and an exceptionally snug yet frictionless fit. It works great until loads reach more than 40 pounds, at which point both packs struggle to keep their loads stable due to the extensive trampoline design. Carrying an overloaded Atmos is a bit like riding in a car that needs its shocks replaced鈥攊t鈥檚 excessively bouncy.

(Photo: Courtesy Osprey)

The UNLTD Antigravity solves that load stability issue while maintaining the Atmos鈥 ventilation and snug fit in a couple ways. The first is that lumbar pad, which is less elastic than the Atmos鈥 tensioned mesh panel. The second is an upgraded stainless steel and aluminum frame underneath the tensioned back panel and hipbelt mesh. I didn鈥檛 set off on a three-night backpacking trip with a 40-pound load, but to test the limits of the pack for a handful of miles, I filled it up with all the food and water I could borrow from trip mates, getting to about 45 pounds altogether.听 The pack stayed plenty stable even as I trundled around the Hurricane Pass switchbacks.

The other big innovation in both the UNLTD Antigravity 64 and Airscape 68 is the pack strap auto-lift system. Rather than having both a lower tensioning strap and a lift strap above the shoulders, the UNLTD models feature a continuous system that both lifts and tightens the harness with one pull of the lower strap. I found that this apparatus continually adjusted itself on the trail to ensure a close, equalized fit around my shoulders, reducing painful pressure points. Together with the continuous mesh of the hip panels, the Antigravity 64 was the best-fitting pack I鈥檝e worn. That, along with the fantastic ventilation, made it a revelation to carry.

Other unique features in the Antigravity include raised polyurethane printing on the hipbelt exterior to reduce abrasion at that known wear point; a built-in sleeping bag compression sleeve; lighter and more durable fabrics, like molecular-weight polyethelene; and a pair of plastic bumpers that protrude from the base of the pack, providing better stability and helping reduce wear and tear when the pack is standing upright on the ground.

(Photo: Courtesy Osprey)

I also loved the pack鈥檚 proprietary clamshell main compartment opening鈥攁 steel wire runs across the top of the body, providing a lightweight structure that helps maintain the opening for loading and unloading while also making it easier to operate the waterproof zipper. It also helps apply uniform pressure across the load when the upper side compressors are adjusted.

All these innovations and bells and whistles do add up to a heavier weight and cost. The UNLTD Airscape 64 weighs 5.44 pounds鈥攔oughly a pound more than many 65-liter packs. To shed a little weight, you can always jettison the eight-ounce 7.5-liter top lid, though it does double as a fanny pack for summit pushes.

Overall, the Antigravity was clearly superior to other packs I鈥檝e used鈥攅asier to load, easier to carry, and more comfortable. Much like driving the deluxe model of a vehicle, using the top-of-the-line pack was more fun but came at a cost.

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An Everest Guide Just Won a Legal Battle over a Canceled Summit Attempt /outdoor-adventure/exploration-survival/madison-mountaineering-everest-lawsuit-agreement/ Thu, 30 Dec 2021 20:32:17 +0000 /?p=2544175 An Everest Guide Just Won a Legal Battle over a Canceled Summit Attempt

Garrett Madison was sued by one of his clients in 2020 after he called off an expedition, saying it was too dangerous. A final court order states the client was not entitled to a refund and that guides should not fear lawsuits when making decisions about safety.

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An Everest Guide Just Won a Legal Battle over a Canceled Summit Attempt

In September 2019, Himalayan guide Garrett Madison called off a summit attempt on Mount Everest, telling clients that an ice block hanging over the route made it too dangerous. The following March, one of the clients on the expedition, Zac Bookman, sued Madison for $100,000 for breach of contract and fraud. In response, Madison filed a countersuit seeking a declaratory judgment absolving Madison of harm, stating that Bookman wasn鈥檛 entitled to a refund because he signed a waiver acknowledging that reaching the summit is not guaranteed due to unpredictable conditions. After more than a year of legal wrangling, the pair settled their dispute last week in a Seattle court with Bookman agreeing through a stipulated judgement that he is not entitled to a refund for the trip.

The signed agreement 鈥淢adison Mountaineering and Mr. Madison are the 鈥榩revailing parties鈥 and the 鈥榮uccessful parties鈥欌 and stated that 鈥渢he fear of lawsuits and the financial repercussions from lawsuits can lead to injuries, illnesses, and fatalities for clients, guides, Sherpa, and other mountain professionals.鈥

The lawsuits made headlines because of the eyebrow-raising prospect of a service dispute between a mountaineering guide and a wealthy client in one of the most exclusive and dangerous locations on earth. The judgment is being hailed in guiding and outdoor-adventure circles. 鈥淭he real fear within the industry would be that we would get sued every time we made a decision that a client did not like,鈥 says Guy Cotter, CEO of New Zealand鈥揵ased 国产吃瓜黑料 Consultants. 鈥淭he typical client on Everest has always included business leaders of industry and high rollers, some of whom decide that it is they who should be dictating decisions on the mountain.鈥

Madison, who has guided more than 70 clients to the summit of Everest, believed that the threat of a lawsuit over a judgment call for safety was beyond the pale. 鈥淚 feel like it鈥檚 a big win for myself and my company and for the mountain-guiding industry as a whole,鈥 says Madison. 鈥淓xpedition leaders should be able to make whatever decision they think is best and safest even if that results in the client not summiting and the clients are unhappy with that.鈥

Bookman had not responded to 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 multiple requests for comment.

鈥淭he real fear within the industry would be that we would get sued every time we made a decision that a client did not like.鈥

During the September 2019 Everest season, several climbing parties, besides Madison鈥檚 commercial expedition, were halted by the massive ice block, which was hanging nearly 3,000 feet above the route. The serac was estimated to be the size of a 15-story building, even larger than a similar ice block that had collapsed onto the same area in April 2014, killing 16 Sherpas working on the Khumbu Icefall between Base Camp and Camp I.

Among those who also called off their summit attempts were ultrarunner and mountaineer Kilian Jornet and Andrzej Bargiel, a Polish ski mountaineer who earlier that year made the first ski descent of K2 and hoped to pull off a similar feat on Everest. Two of Madison鈥檚 clients headed home, while a third accepted a consolation expedition to climb nearby 22,349-foot Ama Dablam. Bookman, however, declined the offer of a different summit attempt that fall and of a spot on an Everest expedition in a subsequent season. He and Madison remained in camp to see if the serac would fall and clear the way for a summit push. After eight days, Bookman flew home on the condition that Madison would remain in camp to see if the danger would resolve. No one made it to the summit of Everest in the fall of 2019, and 听sometime between October 2019 and November 2020.

In March 2020, Bookman sued Madison in California seeking $100,000 for breach of contract, alleging Madison had orally promised him a refund for the trip. He also claimed that Madison had deliberately scuttled the expedition because one of his other clients had been physically unfit, which sapped Madison鈥檚 incentive to push for the summit. Bookman鈥檚 lawsuit never mentioned the serac. Bookman told 国产吃瓜黑料 last year that this was because the ice block听鈥渨as a red herring.鈥 He continued, 鈥淭here are hanging seracs all over the west wall of Everest. It鈥檚 like saying we can鈥檛 walk through the forest until that particular tree falls down.鈥

Madison denies ever offering him a refund and in August 2020 filed the countersuit in Seattle. This month鈥檚 agreement settles that countersuit. Bookman鈥檚 California suit was thrown out in September 2020 on the grounds that it should have been filed in Washington State, where Madison Mountaineering is incorporated. He never refiled the suit in Washington.

In addition to stating that Bookman had 鈥渁ssumed weather, safety, and other risks鈥 on the expedition and wasn鈥檛 entitled to a refund, Bookman also agreed in the stipulated judgement that his previous attorney 鈥渟hould not have used the phrase 鈥榯he expert Sherpas and ice fall doctors were clearly lazy and inefficient,鈥欌 which appeared in a January 21, 2020, letter demanding a refund. Madison told 国产吃瓜黑料 in October 2020 that the members of the Sherpa team he hired had 100 Everest summits between them and that 鈥渢hese are my friends. The allegation that any of them are lazy is offensive.鈥

鈥淭his certainly appears to be a favorable outcome for Mr. Madison and the guiding industry,鈥 says Leah Corrigan, an attorney who represents outdoor-industry clients. Attorney James Moss, author of , says he knows of two other legal disputes involving clients seeking refunds from Everest guides. Neither was successful. 鈥淚f the guide鈥檚 contract is well written, it will stipulate that the guide has the right to cancel the trip due to unsafe conditions,鈥 he says. What鈥檚 remarkable about this order, Moss says, is that it was 鈥渨ritten not for the court, but as a press release. It鈥檚 meant to dissuade other similar lawsuits.鈥

Madison says he had no choice but to fight Bookman鈥檚 lawsuit because forking over $100,000 would have bankrupted him. Seven Summits guiding garners notoriously thin margins due to the high cost of permits, base-camp equipment, and Sherpas and other personnel. (Madison is currently from a client on a K2 expedition in the summer of 2019 that claims Madison charged him unnecessary additional fees and then prematurely called off a summit attempt.)

Madison and his legal team also says they felt bound to stand up for the Sherpa and guide communities. 鈥淥ur team was particularly concerned about the consequences this sort of lawsuit might have for Sherpa,鈥 said Doug Grady, Madison鈥檚 lawyer, in a released statement. Grady鈥檚 firm, Baker and Hostetler, took on the case pro bono (as well as the lawsuit from the K2 client). 鈥淭hey bear most of the climbing burden and often take the biggest risks,鈥 he continued. 鈥淚t is one thing for Sherpa to knowingly take those risks as paid mountain professionals, it is quite another for the American legal system to create unhealthy pressures that make their jobs even more dangerous.鈥

Grady also mentioned tentative plans to design an arbitration procedure for guides and clients that will avoid lawsuits by working out disagreements. 鈥淎bsolutely no one should be thinking about lawsuits when looking up at the Western Cwm from Everest Base Camp,鈥 Grady said.

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