Glorious day on the Aonach Eagach, Glencoe.
It’s certainly felt like a long time coming, but yesterday, travel restrictions within Scotland were eased, allowing people to visit the Highlands for the first time in 4 months. Thankfully, the sun...
It’s certainly felt like a long time coming, but yesterday, travel restrictions within Scotland were eased, allowing people to visit the Highlands for the first time in 4 months. Thankfully, the sun...
Is timidity keeping you from one of life’s most rewarding experiences?
"In terms of mental effort and physical effort, this is a way harder day than El Cap. That’s harder climbing, but I think overall with this link-up, it’s more vertical feet of climbing, probably more sustained climbing...
Some would say dynoing near the top of a highball is a bad idea. Some would also say screw that and huck for it anyway, as our brave whippee did this week.
Over five days in February 2021, Sean Villanueva O’Driscoll completed the first solo traverse of the Fitz Roy massif in Patagonia. He set out on February 5th with borrowed gear, a borrowed rope, and...
It started with a botched approach. We couldn’t discern trail from gap-in-the-trees because the forest floor was covered in snow. After walking a mile further than the vague Mountain Project description, it was evident that we’d gone too far.
Get to know the 17-year-old phenom, who exploded onto the national stage when he won the Pan-American Championship in 2020.
Rock climbers have long scoffed at the 14er-bagging goal as fodder for ‘hikers’ and old men who fancy themselves mountaineers after a summer tick of Whitney. They’re wrong, and here’s why.
Has it changed climbing for better or worse? Who gets to make that judgement and why does it matter?
Adam Ondra writes: “One more little video from Margalef from my October/November trip. This time we will go back to the sunny side of Margalef. Towards the end of the trip, I was happy to make the first...
A competitive ice climber wins her first big competition—and finds that the secret to success is still a whole lot of failure.
The climber who bolted three rock climbs on top of and near ancient Native American petroglyphs told Climbing magazine that he regretted his mistake and any harm he may have caused.