How do we determine which stories get the most love? It鈥檚 not the clicks (that would be too easy). It鈥檚 how much time, on average, thousands of readers have spent with articles we鈥檝e published this year. You spent a lot of time reading these features, and we have to agree they鈥檙e worth it. Here鈥檚 a look back at the stories you may have missed or may just want to revisit.
1. The Road Goes On Forever and the Story Never Ends

鈥淟ance Armstrong is telling a story. He is seated at a boisterous table in a barbecue joint in Aspen, Colorado, along with his five children, ages 6 to 17, his fianc茅e, assorted friends, and a reporter.鈥
2. How 1600 People Went Missing from Our Public Lands Without a Trace

鈥淲hen Joe didn鈥檛 show up to get ready for dinner, Collin and Christian drove up the road, honking and waiting for Joe to come limping toward the road like a lost steer. At 7:30, a small patrol of ranch hands hiked up the rocks toward Faith, the closest formation. By 9:30 there were 35 people out looking. 鈥淚f he was hurt, he would have heard us,鈥 recalled Joe鈥檚 uncle, David Van Berkum, 47. 鈥淗e was either not conscious or not there.鈥
3. From Kidnapping to Kids: My Life On and Off the Rock

鈥淏efore I was kidnapped, before I discovered the chaos that is true love, I believed in routine.鈥
4. A Very Old Man for a Wolf

鈥淚t鈥檚 the nature of the wolf to travel. By age two, wolves of both sexes usually leave their birth packs and strike out on their own, sometimes covering hundreds of miles as they search for mates and new territory. Whatever the reason, when wolves move, they do it with intent鈥攁nd quickly. Humans don鈥檛 know how they decide which way to go, but the choice is as important as any they鈥檒l ever make.鈥
5. Inside the Mind of Thru-Hiking鈥檚 Most Devious Con Man

鈥淥n a Thursday in late April, Melissa Trent, a single mother in Colorado Springs, Colorado, logged into her account on the dating website Plenty of Fish and had a new message from a user called 鈥榣ovetohike1972.鈥 鈥業 can鈥檛 believe a woman as pretty as you is on a site like this,鈥 he wrote.鈥
6. Did Airbnb Kill the Mountain Town?

鈥淚n Bozeman, in Ketchum, in Jackson, in just about every destination or gateway town, one hears a similar murmur: not only are short-term rentals squeezing the last drops out of the housing supply, but more pro颅foundly, they are threatening the very character that drew in locals鈥攁nd tourists.鈥
7. Ryan Zinke Is Trump鈥檚 Attack Dog on the Environment

鈥溾榊ou鈥檝e got a Chubby on,鈥 I said. Zinke looked at me, then down at the zipper on his pants. 鈥榊our fly,鈥 I said. 鈥業t鈥檚 called a Chubby Chernobyl.鈥 Zinke laughed. 鈥榃e killed them on the Middle Fork with this one last summer,鈥 he said.鈥
8. Going It Alone

鈥淚鈥檓 tired of this man. His from-froms and black-blacks. He wishes me good luck and leaves. He means it, too; he isn鈥檛 malicious. To him there鈥檚 nothing abnormal about our conversation. He has categorized me, and the world makes sense again. Not black-black. I hike the remaining miles back to my tent and don鈥檛 emerge for hours.鈥
9. The Curious Case of the Disappearing Nuts

鈥溾榃hen you look at the logistics needed to complete this crime,鈥 he told me, all signs point toward an organized group. 鈥榊ou steal 370,000 pounds of almonds, you鈥檙e not 颅going to sell it on the side of the road.鈥欌
10. The Thieves Who Steal Sunken Warships, Right Down to the Bolts

鈥淎s the seafloor came into view, answers to a few of those questions became clear. The divers had not drifted. Their anchor had held. And they were in precisely the right place. The ship, on the other hand, was not.鈥