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Outside June 2008 Claire Napier Galofaro |
Chris Sharma Chris Sharma is one of the world's strongest technical climbers but has lately favored travel over competition.  |
Outside September 2006 |
What the Pros Know: Mount Everest Guides Debate The experts weight in on the risks and rewards of climbing Mount Everest.  |
AskMen.com Steve Richer |
How To: Go Rock Climbing Learn the basics of rock climbing, including what gear you'll need and where to go.  |
Fast Company December 1999 Ron Lieber |
Consultants and Summitry - Into Thin Advice Consultant Debunking Unit  |
Outside November 2008 Ryan Krogh |
Dean Potter Interview About FreeBASEing the Eiger Dean Potter talks about freeBASEing the Eiger.  |
Outside September 2005 Mark Jenkins |
The Elements of Style It's time for a radical reform of high-altitude mountaineering -- and a fresh debate over what it means to climb right  |
Adventure August 2005 Lindsay Yaw |
There & Back Ed Viesturs became the 12th person to have summited all 14 of the world's 8,000-meter peaks.  |
Outside February 2008 Dave Hahn |
Aces High Make one of the world's greatest Everest guides face his fear of heights by sending him 3,000 feet up El Capitan with Conrad Anker, Jimmy Chin, and Ivo Ninov. The result will be panic attacks, cold sweats, and one order of Depends.  |
Outside August 2005 |
Ed Viesturs Retires Over the past 16 years, Steady Eddie has spent an estimated 25 days above 8K (26,240 feet) en route to becoming the first American to climb all 14 mountains above that height.  |
Outside June 2006 Katie Arnold |
She Rocks Steph Davis knows the downside of being one of the world's best women climbers like living out of a car for seven years and having your mom suggest (frequently) that you're out of your mind. The upside? Yosemite. The Andes. And a life in which every day is a thrilling vertical grab.  |
Outside December 2005 Conrad Anker |
Improving the Odds for Sherpas This all-star pantheon created the Alex Lowe Charitable Foundation (ALCF) to teach Sherpas more about avalanche forecasting and crevasse rescue.  |
BusinessWeek January 15, 2007 Stanley Holmes |
Thrills And Chills Scaling frozen walls isn't for the fainthearted. But once you find your footing, ice climbing can become addictive.  |
Entrepreneur February 2004 Barry Farber |
Pump It Up When it comes to making the sale, projecting a confident attitude is key. So what can you do to give yours a boost?  |
Outside May 2008 Jason Daley |
Forget Me Not Jennifer Lowe-Anker, the wife of a mountaineer killed in an avalanche, shares the harrowing tale from her perspective in this new book.  |
Outside December 2002 Rob Buchanan |
Climbing at the Speed of Soul With his supreme skills on rock, hypercompetitive intensity, and new-age bag of tricks, Dean Potter scrambles up big walls faster than any man alive. So what's the trajectory of all this velocity?  |
Outside May 2003 |
Everest's Destiny Hold on to your crampons. May 29 marks the 50th anniversary of the first successful summit of Mount Everest, by Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay. Record crowds of climbers, trekkers, and gawkers are expected to cram the mountain.  |
Outside September 2003 Maria Coffey |
The Survivors "He died doing what he loved best," they always say. But when climbers meet their end on the high peaks, the ordeal is just beginning for their wives, husbands, children, parents, and friends. An exclusive excerpt from Where the Mountain Casts Its Shadow  |
Outside January 2009 Claire Napier Galofaro |
Katie Brown "I love being a professional climber, but it's hard to have a normal life," she says. "I need other dimensions to round it out."  |
Outside June 2007 Anthony Cerretani |
International Man of Mystery Conrad Anker heads back to Everest, in search of answers.  |
Outside June 2004 Greg Child |
Technicolor Darkness In the red-rock high ground of South Africa, climbing still comes down to black and white. The author goes on belay to explore the crags, boulder gardens, and post-Apartheid complications of the world's next climbing mecca.  |
Outside October 2009 Douglas Fields |
Are the Mountains Killing Your Brain? Alarming new science shows that thin air can wreck brain cells at lower altitudes than you'd think. Here's how to protect yourself.  |
High on Adventure August 2000 Lee Juillerat |
Climbing Mount Rainier "Magic Light" on a Magic Mountain  |