
Alum Cave Trail to Mount LeConte: Day Hike Timing and Ice Risk
Alum Cave Trail to Mount LeConte is one of the Smokies classics for a reason: big views, dramatic rock features, and a summit payoff that feels like you earned it. It is also a hike where timing and conditions matter more than most. The same route that feels like a steady, scenic climb in October...
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Cadillac Mountain Sunrise: Reservations, Backups, and What to Wear
Cadillac Mountain at dawn is classic Acadia: granite under your boots, Atlantic fog doing its slow magic, and a parking lot full of sleepy people clutching coffee like it is a survival tool. It is absolutely worth doing once. And yes, there is a reason the hype persists: from early October through...
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The Wave: Permits, Navigation, and Weather
The Wave is one of those places that looks like it was dreamed up in a darkroom. But the experience is less about “show up and hike” and more about three things: getting a permit, staying oriented on a trail that is not really a trail, and timing your day around desert weather that does not...
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The Narrows Hike in Zion: Gear and Flash-Flood Safety
The first time you step into the Virgin River, it is equal parts magic and humbling. One minute you are on a normal trail. The next, you are wading between towering walls with current tugging at your shins, then your knees, then sometimes your thighs, depending on the day. This guide stays...
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Bear-Country Food Storage
Bear country is not just about bears. It is about habits . The goal is simple: keep smells, crumbs, and curiosity from turning your campsite into a late-night snack bar. Do that consistently, and you protect wildlife, your gear, and your trip. This guide focuses on preventive food storage and camp...
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Half Dome Cables: Permits, Timing, and Fitness Prep
Half Dome is not just a hike. It is a long, commit-yourself kind of day with a permit checkpoint near Subdome and a final about-400-foot cable-assisted climb that can feel equal parts thrilling and humbling. If you are planning to go for it, the best prep is not hype. It is logistics, fitness, and...
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Angels Landing Permits and Chain Safety
Angels Landing is the hike that shows up on everyone’s Zion mood board for good reason: tight switchbacks, canyon views that feel almost unfair, and that final razorback ridge where you grip chains and try not to think too hard about gravity. It is also a hike that now requires planning. Since...
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Indiana Dunes: Short Trails for Beach and Forest
Indiana Dunes National Park is my favorite kind of “two worlds” trip. One minute you are barefoot on a Lake Michigan beach watching sailboats cut across the water (and on clear days, you can sometimes spot Chicago’s skyline), and a short drive later you are under tall oaks and maples, hiking...
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Congaree National Park Boardwalk Hikes and Mosquito Season
Congaree National Park is the kind of place that surprises people who think “national park” automatically means mountains. Here, the main attraction is a cathedral of trees in a floodplain forest, where knees of cypress poke up like little sculptures and the air smells faintly like sweet, wet...
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Lassen Volcanic National Park: Best First-Timer Day Hikes
Lassen Volcanic National Park is the rare California park where you can sip a post-hike coffee in a tiny mountain town, then spend your afternoon watching the earth breathe. On a first visit, it is easy to overplan or underestimate how much snow can dictate access. This guide keeps things simple:...
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Drone and Filming Rules in US National Parks
I love a good “city coffee, sunrise trail” kind of trip. I also love coming home with footage that actually captures the scale of a place. The problem is, US national parks (and other National Park Service sites) aren’t a free-for-all for drones and filming. The National Park Service (NPS)...
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Offline Maps, GPS, and SOS for Hikers
I love a good trailhead latte as much as I love a good ridgeline, but both require the same thing: a plan. On popular routes, it is easy to assume your phone, a blue dot, and a few screenshots will get you through. Then the battery tanks, the app crashes, or the canyon walls turn your “GPS...
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Elk, Moose, and Bison Safety
In the Mountain West, the animals most likely to ruin your day are not the ones with claws. Elk, moose, and bison are huge, fast, and moody, and they often live right where we like to hike, picnic, and pull over for photos. The tricky part is that their body language can look “calm” right up...
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Flash Flood and Monsoon Safety in Desert Slot Canyons
In the desert Southwest, “blue skies over my head” is not a safety plan. Slot canyons and dry washes can flood from storms you never see, sometimes from rain falling miles away on higher ground. If you are building a Page or Moab style itinerary with a mix of iconic viewpoints, quick hikes, and...
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Hypothermia Signs on the Trail
Shoulder season is my favorite hiking season and the one that makes me a little bossier than usual. Bluebird at the trailhead can turn to wind-driven sleet at treeline, and that is where hypothermia sneaks in. Not the movie version with dramatic collapse, but the quiet version that starts with...
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How to Read a Topo Map for Day Hiking
If you have ever opened a topographic map and thought, “Cool, it looks like a plate of spaghetti,” you are not alone. Topo maps can feel like a secret language, especially if you are used to city navigation where the grid does most of the thinking for you. The good news is you only need a few...
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Heat Exhaustion vs. Heat Stroke on the Trail
Hot-weather hikes are sneaky because they often start out feeling like nothing. A little sweat, a little slower pace, a little less appetite. Then you look up and someone is stumbling, glassy-eyed, or saying they feel “fine” while clearly not fine. Heat exhaustion and heat stroke are related...
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Jet Lag and High Altitude: Timing Your First Hike After a Flight
There is a particular kind of travel optimism that hits somewhere over the Great Plains: you land, grab a coffee, toss your bag at the hotel, then head straight for a big trail because you are finally here. I love that energy. I also love ending trips without a splitting headache and a sketchy...
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Lost on a Hike: What to Do Next
You do not have to be reckless to get lost. A wrong turn at a junction. A “shortcut” around a muddy patch. A snow-covered tread in early season. A trail that fades into granite or sand. In many national parks and popular trail systems, the reality is simple: the map kiosk was great at the...
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Safe Stream and River Crossings for Day Hikers
Some of my favorite day hikes have one small detail in common: a line on the map labeled “creek.” Sometimes that line is a shin-deep stroll. Sometimes it is a cold, fast-moving problem you cannot muscle through, no matter how strong or “almost there” you feel. Stream and river crossings are...
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