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(Photos: from left to right, Jessica Chou; Luis Ortega Flores/Stocksy; Olga Sibirskaya/Stocksy; Sonia Pulido; John Fullbright; Courtesy David Kushner)
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We asked staffers to name the story they loved the most from across the 国产吃瓜黑料 network this year. (Photos: from left to right, Jessica Chou; Luis Ortega Flores/Stocksy; Olga Sibirskaya/Stocksy; Sonia Pulido; John Fullbright; Courtesy David Kushner)

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Our Favorite 国产吃瓜黑料 Stories of 2021

The stories we were most excited to read and publish across 国产吃瓜黑料 titles this year

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

From long reads about Moab to deep dives into the qualities of a super shoe, titles under the 国产吃瓜黑料 umbrella published a ton of great stories in 2021. We asked staffers to name the story they loved the most from across the 国产吃瓜黑料 network this year.

鈥淚n the World of Ultralight Hiking, Everything Weighs Something,鈥 国产吃瓜黑料

I loved this story by a new writer to 国产吃瓜黑料 named Ali Selim. Selim usually works in television and film. Because he isn’t a journalist per se, he brought a really unique and often hilarious voice to his story about hiking through Utah鈥檚 Buckskin Gulch with a group that included ultralight gear guru Glen Van Peski and actor Matthew McConaughey. Selim鈥檚 attempts to lighten his own load and keep up resulted in a fun鈥攁nd ultimately meaningful鈥攁dventure, hitting on the reasons we all need more time in nature and the outdoors. 鈥擬ary Turner, deputy editor, 国产吃瓜黑料

Read the story.

鈥淔or Kelly Catlin鈥檚 Parents, Athlete Mental Health Finally Takes Center Stage,鈥 VeloNews

Kelly Catlin was slated to be one of the American stars of the 2020 Olympics, and her tragic suicide in 2019 sent shockwaves through the U.S. cycling community. Catlin was one of those uber-talents who seemed to excel at everything she attempted. She was a world champion athlete, accomplished violinist, and a scholar. Her death shone a light on the internal struggles that extremely accomplished and talented people often face, and it came two years before this topic took center stage at the 2021 Olympics. When Simone Biles鈥 decision to sit out events at the Games placed a microscope on athlete mental health, I thought that Catlin鈥檚 parents could provide some valuable perspective to the cycling community. And they did. 鈥擣red Dreier, articles editor, 国产吃瓜黑料

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鈥淣otes from a Moab Trailer,鈥 国产吃瓜黑料

When he鈥檚 not 聽or reporting聽stories for 国产吃瓜黑料, Mark Sundeen moonlights as an English professor who often teaches classes on the art of the memoir. For good reason. Sundeen has a gift for revealing the intricacies of his life with a mix of painful honesty and surprising humor, always tying his own experiences to larger themes that anyone can relate to. This story chronicles his nearly 30-year relationship with the town of Moab, and how that location shaped him as a man, a husband, and a father. And wow, the writing: I was going to cut and paste a couple of my favorite sentences in here, but there are just too many to choose from. 鈥擟hris Keyes, editor-in-chief,聽国产吃瓜黑料

Read the story.

鈥淗ow a Viral Documentary Saved the First Black-Owned Gear Shop,鈥 国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal

The pandemic crushed a great many small businesses in 2020. When a Texas outdoor shop, Slim Pickins Outfitters, the first Black-owned outdoor gear shop in the nation, was on the verge of throwing in the towel, something wonderful happened. A digital media company, the Outbound Collective, called saying they wanted to produce a documentary about the shop. What followed was a GoFund me campaign that raised close to $175,000, allowing the husband and wife team Jahmicah and Heather Dawes to stay open, reboot, and keep serving their community. 鈥擪ristin Hostetter, editorial director, 国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal

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鈥淭he Final Descent of Dean Cummings,鈥 国产吃瓜黑料

This is the heartbreaking story of the rise and fall of extreme skiing star Dean Cummings by 国产吃瓜黑料 contributor Devon O鈥橬eil. It covers his freestyle fame (and his legendary marijuana) in Telluride in the eighties all the way up to being charged for murder in New Mexico in 2020. It鈥檚 about stardom and catastrophe, but, as one of Cummings鈥 former employees put it in the story, 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 a tale of savagery. This is a tale of mental illness.鈥 Everything from the timeline-style formatting of events leading up to the tragedy to the beautifully executed peek into the glory days of free-skiing make this long read an 翱耻迟蝉颈诲别听classic and masterpiece. 鈥擜bigail Wise, digital managing director, 国产吃瓜黑料

Read the story.

鈥淗ow a Plus-Size Hiker Found Her Footing on the Trail,鈥 Backpacker

I鈥檝e long been the biggest fan of stories about everyday adventurers overcoming a big obstacle. That鈥檚 bread-n-butter stuff at Backpacker. In this piece, though, Kara Richardson Whitely showed me there鈥檚 an even better type: stories of hikers being exactly who they are. Her experiences with binge eating, stereotypes, perseverance, and, at times, hiking one mile per hour, are enlightening. 鈥擲hannon Davis, editorial director, Backpacker

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鈥淚t Happened Deep in a Cave in the Amazon,鈥澛国产吃瓜黑料 Podcast

In the summer of 2019, I assigned 国产吃瓜黑料 contributing editor David Kushner a story that took him to a mysterious cave in the Ecuadorian rainforest. Cueva de los Tayos, or the Cave of the Oilbirds, has for decades tantalized fans of the occult, who believe that it contains artifacts of a lost civilization and evidence of extraterrestrial visitors. Kushner was there to profile Eileen Hall, the daughter of a Scottish explorer who helped make the cave famous in the 1970s when he led an expedition into Tayos that included astronaut Neal Armstrong. We published Kushner鈥檚 fantastic feature, 鈥Journey to the Center of the Earth,鈥 in late 2020. But for Kushner, that was just the beginning of an adventure. Since his trip, he has slowly come to understand that his experience inside the cave had been transformative. A science-centered journalist by nature, he was reluctant to accept what he was feeling: that something inside him had been released while he was deep underground in a space that defied the imagination. In this episode of the 国产吃瓜黑料 Podcast, which includes numerous recordings from inside Tayos, we capture the full breadth of his remarkable odyssey. 鈥擬ike Roberts, senior executive editor, 国产吃瓜黑料

Listen to the podcast.

鈥淭he Pandemic Is Not a Marathon,鈥 Triathlete

I鈥檓 cheating and picking something I wrote, but back in March I talked to a lot of different people and tried to encapsulate the vibe it felt like so many of us were struggling with. And now, as we enter the second year of this whole thing, this is the piece I keep coming back to over and over. 鈥擪elly O鈥橫ara, editor-in-chief, Triathlete

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鈥淚 Choose to Remember the Bike Ride鈥 国产吃瓜黑料

In Tracy Ross鈥檚 story about her older brother, Chris鈥攁 longtime alcoholic who struggled for years to overcome his addiction鈥攕he braids his life story with the up-and-down saga of a multi-day bike trip she arranged in eastern Kansas to help jumpstart his sobriety. It didn鈥檛 work, as she makes clear from the start, but the story that emerges鈥攁 combination of family memoir, personal testimony about suffering and loss, and a sibling who was funny, talented, and doomed鈥攊s a heartbreaking and unforgettable classic. 鈥擜lex Heard, editorial director, 国产吃瓜黑料

Tracy Ross excels here at balancing emotion and explanation in her painful personal history with her brother. The honesty in her words and scenes is as beautiful as it is relatable, especially if you鈥檝e lived with those burdened by a struggle with alcoholism. While it鈥檚 not an upbeat adventure story, it鈥檚 certainly one of this magazine鈥檚 best pieces this year. 鈥擪evin Johnson, editorial fellow, 国产吃瓜黑料

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鈥淲hat Makes Super Shoes Super,鈥 Podium Runner

I loved this story because it dug beyond conventional wisdom and oversimplifications about new technology behind the increasingly-ubiquitous super shoes. It taps primary sources, the biomechanists who are conducting the research (even breaking the results of one study pre-publication), and doesn鈥檛 shy away when they deliver contradictory theories. Despite the lack of consensus, the story advances understanding of these shoes and delivers practical shoe-selection advice from the experts. 鈥擩onathan Beverly, senior running editor, 国产吃瓜黑料

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鈥淭he Spark After the Darkness,鈥 国产吃瓜黑料

Yes, this is a pandemic essay. No, it鈥檚 not a drag. In the hands of Bonnie Tsui, it鈥檚 a celebration of real life in the moments before dawn. Tsui, who lives in California鈥檚 Bay Area, spends those moments surfing. The wave riders she sees at this time of day, 鈥渁re existing in a liminal space, between night and day, ending and beginning. Together and alone. The neither-nor quality of this period is somehow inclusive,鈥 she writes. 鈥淚n its fuzzy borders, I feel that we take more care.鈥 Her words are just as comforting now, as the pandemic drags on, as when we published them in February. Plus, they just make me want to go surfing. 鈥擶ill Taylor, gear director, 国产吃瓜黑料

Read the story.

鈥淜ey to the Kingdom,鈥 Beta

This story could鈥檝e only been covered by a reporter as thorough and skilled as Devon O鈥橬eil because it required really getting sources to open up, something Devon does better than any other writer we work with. His piece on why Vermont land owners pulled access from the lauded Kingdom Trails network is the most revealing piece on the topic published. One of the things we鈥檙e proudest of at Beta is that the magazine is a home to real journalism, and this feature exemplifies that. 鈥擭icole Formosa, editor-in-chief, Beta

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鈥淵oung, Dumb, and Broke: Why Outdoorsy Types Suck at Money,鈥 国产吃瓜黑料

From the headline alone, I knew I needed whatever advice this piece had to offer. What I didn鈥檛 expect was how funny and honest the writing would be. Gloria鈥檚 work is always relatable, sometimes painfully so, and this piece is a prime example of that voice. The combination of essay and service, narrative and reporting, and levity and thoughtfulness in this article represents some of the best of what I think journalism can be. 鈥擬aren Larsen, associate podcast producer, 国产吃瓜黑料

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鈥淩ock Climbing Is Too Hard. One Lifelong Climber Considers Quitting and Taking the Easy Road.鈥澛Climbing

This is a favorite of the year because it is the first story to plumb climbing鈥檚 鈥渨hy I climb鈥 depths in a meaningful and honest way. 鈥擠uane Raleigh, content director,聽Climbing

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鈥淗ow (and Why) to 国产吃瓜黑料 Solo,鈥澛国产吃瓜黑料

As someone who lives in a bustling city, the thought of venturing out into the wilderness alone is a particularly nerve-wracking one. This story presented a challenge to push myself outside of my comfort zone, as well as the information and encouragement that helped to ease the anxiety of doing so. In a time of social isolation, it was a reminder that not only can you venture into the outdoors without company, but that there is value in choosing to do so. 鈥擪evin Spencer, social media manager,聽国产吃瓜黑料

Read the story.

鈥淲e Are All Geraint Thomas,鈥 VeloNews

Geraint Thomas is one of the five active pro cyclists to have won the Tour de France, yet even he can suffer the occasional moment of comic humiliation. That came on stage 4 of the Tour of Romandie. As Thomas sprinted for the line he lost the grip on his handlebars, flopped around on his bicycle, and then crashed just a few feet from the finish. It was a rare uncoordinated and goofy moment for a man who is normally a model of agility on a bicycle. In my column, I likened Thomas鈥 crash to the very relatable moments of idiocy that all of us suffer in our daily lives. For him, crashing at the finish atop a huge mountain in Switzerland is the same as a normal person bashing her shin on a chair, or forgetting to save a word document, or cutting his hand while slicing a bagel. 鈥擣red Dreier

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鈥淚 Was a Bad Dog Owner. Don鈥檛 Be Like Me鈥 and 鈥淗ow to Grieve for a Very Good Dog,鈥 国产吃瓜黑料

Like millions of other Americans, my partner and I adopted a dog at the beginning of the pandemic. It was at once the most stressful and rewarding decision we could have made鈥攐ur pug-chihuahua-heeler mix, Henry, became an irreplaceable source of companionship and comfort during a horrible year, but also the cause of endless headaches, from pulling out cactus needles to cleaning off poop found in all sorts of places. This year, 国产吃瓜黑料 published two thoughtful essays on dog ownership that I found invaluable while navigating my own experience. Kate Siber’s essay “I Was a Bad Dog Owner. Don’t Be Like Me” was a clear-eyed reminder to new dog owners like me that letting our untrained dogs off a leash is not cute鈥攊t’s a nuisance to wildlife and to others sharing trails and open spaces with you鈥攁nd we need to be taking better responsibility for our dog’s behavior. “How to Grieve for a Very Good Dog” by Annette McGivney tackled the other end of having a dog: grief and loss. She perfectly captured the special bond between humans and dogs, and how misunderstood it is by people who haven’t experienced it (“Our culture treats the death of a pet more like the loss of an automobile. When it wears out, you should just go buy another one.”). I sent this essay to so many people in my life who’ve lost a dog and felt alone in their surprisingly intense grief. 鈥擫uke Whelan, senior editor, 国产吃瓜黑料

Read 鈥淚 Was a Bad Dog Owner. Don鈥檛 Be Like Me.鈥

Read 鈥淗ow to Grieve for a Very Good Dog.鈥

鈥淭he Hottest Ticket in Tokyo? Olympic Triathlon.鈥澛Triathlete

With coverage so limited in Japan, we lucked out with an on-the-ground Japanese triathlon editor, who gave us insights not available otherwise. Like this one: the only event most locals in Tokyo could see turned out to be the triathlon race. 鈥擟hris Foster, executive editor, Triathlete

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鈥淭he Driver Who Hit Me Got Two Years in Prison. But I Got a Life Sentence.鈥 国产吃瓜黑料

Last year, cyclist Andrew 鈥淏ernie鈥 Bernstein wrote an open letter to the driver who hit him and left him for dead by the side of the road as he was biking home in 2019. As Bernie began to recover from a long list of near-fatal injuries, including internal bleeding, collapsed lungs, and 35 broken bones, police worked on finding the driver who plowed into him. They finally did and charged him with leaving the scene of an accident, careless driving, and criminal attempt to leave the scene of an accident. In October, 2021, Bernie spoke at his arraignment, but didn鈥檛 find closure there. In his essay, he grapples with questions around forgiveness and justice. 鈥淭he only fitting punishment for a person who鈥檚 shown such little interest in being a safe driver is to take them off the road forever, which I stated in court,鈥 he writes. 鈥淏ut in this country, we give such priority to cars that a punishment of that nature is deemed unthinkably severe.鈥 Anyone who bikes or drives a car needs to read this piece.聽 鈥擜bigail Wise

Read the story.

鈥淭he Dairy-Free Mozzarella That鈥檚 Powering New York鈥檚 Vegan Pizza Renaissance,鈥 Vegetarian Times

For this feature, we sent reporter Emily Wilson on a real drag of an assignment: eating pizza across New York City. She met the passionate innovator behind NUMU Mozzarella鈥攁 revolutionary vegan cheese that is shattering preconceptions of 鈥渧egan cheese鈥濃攁nd visited with some of the region鈥檚 most iconic pizzaioli who are incorporating this modern product in their traditional craft. Since this story was published, Whole Foods Markets across the U.S. have begun offering NUMU at their pizza bars, so there are now even more opportunities to try it for yourself. 鈥擝rittany Martin, editor-in-chief, Vegetarian Times

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鈥淢y Month of Doing 100 Wheelies a Day,鈥 国产吃瓜黑料

I鈥檓 glad we鈥檙e doing this exercise, if only because I now have an excuse to pore over Kim Cross鈥檚 essay on wheelies again. It would have been an excellent piece had Cross simply written about her goal of glorious frontal liftoff. She did that, often humorously鈥斺淏y Wheelie No. 60, my arms and legs feel like overcooked pasta.鈥濃攂ut by, oh, Wheelie No. 681, she had allowed the story to take an entirely different shape. I won鈥檛 ruin it for you; I鈥檒l only say that this one will stick with you. It has for me. 鈥擳yler Dunn, audience development editor, 国产吃瓜黑料

Read the story.

鈥淭he Power of an Invitation,鈥澛Beta

We鈥檙e really proud that writers, photographers, and filmers from all corners of mountain biking are finding Beta to be a home for their creative and visual voices, especially if they haven鈥檛 felt heard before. This essay from Alex Showerman is one of my favorites of the year鈥攈er ability to express why representation is so important to marginalized communities is very powerful. 鈥擭icole Formosa

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鈥淭he Marathon Doesn鈥檛 Care If You Did an Ironman,鈥 Triathlete

Sure, a marathon and Ironman run leg both cover 26.2 miles鈥攂ut that doesn鈥檛 mean they鈥檙e the same. This article breaks down all the differences, why great triathletes don鈥檛 always make great marathoners, and provides some training tips (and a ). 鈥擲usan Lacke, digital editor, Triathlete

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Lead Photos: from left to right, Jessica Chou; Luis Ortega Flores/Stocksy; Olga Sibirskaya/Stocksy; Sonia Pulido; John Fullbright; Courtesy David Kushner