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Read Our Work in Progress Report

Read Our Work in Progress Report

Our 2025 Work in Progress Report dives into all the new, fun and kinda weird ways we’re trying to lighten our load on Earth, our only shareholder.

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Earth Is Now Our Only Shareholder

Earth Is Now Our Only Shareholder

If we have any hope of a thriving planet—much less a business—it is going to take all of us doing what we can with the resources we have. This is what we can do.

Read Yvon’s Letter

Running Led Me Home
Running Led Me Home
Vanessa Chavarriaga Posada

After years of trying to fit in with Western trail culture, one runner realizes that what she’s been missing lies in the Colombian mountains of her youth.

8 Minutos de lectura
Reimagining Aquaculture
Reimagining Aquaculture
Kate Olson

A family in Maine is changing the way oysters are grown.

3 Minutos de lectura
What’s Your 5 to 9?
What’s Your 5 to 9?
Jeff McElroy

Standing up for the health of lands and waters is part of every Patagonia ambassador’s job description, even when they’re off the clock.

6 Minutos de lectura
Alligator Paradise
Alligator Paradise
Brad Wieners

A big win during a perilous season for public lands.

4 Minutos de lectura
“We Are Not Political Pawns.”
“We Are Not Political Pawns.”
Zina Rodriguez

We spoke with fired public lands employees before they were reinstated. Here are their stories.

12 Minutos de lectura
The Extinction of Dave Rastovich
The Extinction of Dave Rastovich
Derek Hynd

Or is there a Dave heir, somewhere?

9 Minutos de lectura
Parenting: Disaster Style
Parenting: Disaster Style
Patagonia

Education through risk, consequence and building the skills to live simply.

2 Minutos de lectura
Beneath the Rock
Beneath the Rock
Tommy Caldwell

How Tommy Caldwell is reshaping his love for rock climbing by building relationships with Indigenous stewards of Bears Ears.

8 Minutos de lectura
Del Appalachian Trail a la ciudad de Nueva York
Del Appalachian Trail a la ciudad de Nueva York
Lauren Evans

Cómo la experiencia de infancia en el Sendero de los Apalaches determinó la forma en que una madre enseñaría a sus cuatro hijos a conectar con la naturaleza en el corazón de Nueva York.

5 Minutos de lectura
Una vida tranquila
Una vida tranquila
Gerry lopez

Un viaje a Amami Ōshima, en Japón, transporta a Gerry Lopez hacia un sentimiento familiar en una tierra distante.

8 Minutos de lectura
Ciclistas de la noche
Ciclistas de la noche
Sakeus Bankson

A medida que las temperaturas suben en el suroeste, los ciclistas montañeros de Phoenix, Arizona, se aventuran en la noche para escapar del calor.

12 Minutos de lectura
Amor por las redes
Amor por las redes
Andrew O’Reilly

Por necesidad, Jacqueline Sangueza amó las redes de pesca antes que al mar.

4 Minutos de lectura
Fire Lines
Fire Lines

¿Pueden las bicicletas, los senderos y las tradiciones ancestrales ser parte de un futuro mejor?

Ver
43:50
Big Sky Bummer
Big Sky Bummer
Daniel Ritz

Wild trout populations in Southwest Montana have collapsed. Save Wild Trout says enough is enough.

7 Minutos de lectura
Nado salvaje
Nado salvaje
Begoña Ugalde

Nadando junto a una comunidad mujeres, una escritora encuentra en el mar conexión con su pasado y un espacio donde sanar las heridas del presente.

17 Minutos de lectura
Our Power
Our Power
Jane Fonda

I’ve been angry at politicians for as long as I’ve been an activist. Here’s why I still vote.

6 Minutos de lectura
The Green Buffalo
The Green Buffalo

The biggest strides in hempcrete construction are going down on one of the smallest Native American reservations.

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19:31
M10® Alpine Shells
M10® Alpine Shells
Mailee Hung

Gear that climbers agree on.

4 Minutos de lectura
Un final poderoso
Un final poderoso
Archana Ram

Los productos químicos perfluorados, conocidos como PFAS, entregan excelente impermeabilidad, pero también representan una amenaza contundente y persistente para nuestra salud. P or eso dedicamos casi 15 años a encontrar una manera de fabricar equipo sin usar e ste tipo de compuestos y sin comprometer el performance . Para el 2025 todos nuestros acabados DWR serán fabricados sin PFAS.

12 Minutos de lectura
Lāhainā, One Year Later
Lāhainā, One Year Later
Beau Flemister

After a devastating wildfire, the community of West Maui continues to recover and rebuild.

13 Minutos de lectura
Totoganashi
Totoganashi

For surfer Yusei Ikariyama to save his home waters, he’ll have to first unite his community.

Ver
21:55
On the Theft of Dreams
On the Theft of Dreams
Maya Broeks

The first-place essay from a youth writing competition we hosted with the nonprofit Write the World.

6 Minutos de lectura
Una prueba de 240 kilómetros
Una prueba de 240 kilómetros
Eric Noll

Un experimentado diseñador del equipo de I+D de Patagonia viaja a los Alpes suecos para poner a prueba un nuevo prototipo de mochila y una intrépida idea que replantea la forma de viajar por senderos durante varios días.

10 Minutos de lectura
Generaciones de abrigo
Generaciones de abrigo
David Sax

Una visita al armario del recuerdo.

7 Minutos de lectura
Imaginando desde el desecho
Imaginando desde el desecho
Franco Calderón

En el norte de Chile la industria textil flagela el desierto. Pero una comunidad resiliente está transformando su realidad llena de desperdicios en oportunidad.

13 Minutos de lectura
For the Love of Dirt
For the Love of Dirt
Sakeus Bankson

Simplicity, style and lessons in bike jazz on Eastern Washington’s Beacon Hill.

4 Minutos de lectura
The Wall as a Mirror
The Wall as a Mirror
Sean Villanueva O’Driscoll

Giving failure a chance in Greenland.

7 Minutos de lectura
Undammed
Undammed

Ami Bowers Cordalis y la lucha por liberar el Klamath

Ver
17:19
Leave It to Beavers
Leave It to Beavers
Amanda Monthei

Renewing rivers one rodent at a time.

8 Minutos de lectura
We Can Get There from Here
We Can Get There from Here

A family in Maine reimagines a future for working waterfronts that puts back more than it takes.

Ver
28:42
Strength for the Next Disaster
Strength for the Next Disaster
Zina Rodriguez

Louisiana community organizer Roishetta Ozane on her fight to stop the biggest fossil fuel expansion on earth and how mutual aid can play a part.

12 Minutos de lectura
Let’s End Neighborhood Drilling for Good
Let’s End Neighborhood Drilling for Good
Zina Rodriguez

Our next fight against Big Oil is for basic human rights.

5 Minutos de lectura
The Meaningless Pursuit of Snow
The Meaningless Pursuit of Snow

Una exploración abriendo huella en la nieve

Ver
65:45
Alpine Suit
Alpine Suit
Mailee Hung

The making of a mountain-ready one-piece.

5 Minutos de lectura
Una mejor forma de hacer negocios
Una mejor forma de hacer negocios
Patagonia

Una conversación con Vincent Stanley, director de filosofía de Patagonia y coautor de The Future of the Responsible Company: What We’ve Learned from Patagonia’s First 50 Years.

10 Minutos de lectura
Haz que dure
Haz que dure
Katie Lamb

La embajadora Patagonia de escalada, Katie Lamb, cose a su propio ritmo.

6 Minutos de lectura
¿Por qué seguimos comprando cosas nuevas?
¿Por qué seguimos comprando cosas nuevas?
Archana Ram, 西城 克俊, 角田 東一, 赤星 明彦, 辰己 博実, 進士 剛光, 邑上 守正, 野平 晋作, 金子 ケニー & 関口 雅樹

A nuestros cerebros les gusta hacerlo.

12 Minutos de lectura
Legacy Regenerated
Legacy Regenerated

En el condado de Warren, Carolina del Norte, un agricultor afroamericano está cultivando cáñamo industrial para ayudar a que su granja centenaria siga prosperando por al menos 100 años más.

Ver
12:11
What We Do: Una serie de videos de nuestra comunidad
What We Do: Una serie de videos de nuestra comunidad
Patagonia

Want to see what goes on behind the scenes at Patagonia?

2 Minutos de lectura
Suing for Survival
Suing for Survival
Jann Eberharter

Do Skagit River salmon have legal rights?

6 Minutos de lectura
Caminando entre hongos
Caminando entre hongos
Giuliana Furci

En una expedición micológica se necesitan preparación y predicciones, pero sobre todo coincidencia y una apertura de todos los sentidos. Mirando, oliendo y escuchando más profundamente encontramos una ventana hacia los secretos de la evolución y de la vida en la Tierra.

8 Minutos de lectura
What the hands do
What the hands do

¿Cómo la escalada puede darle forma al mundo que queremos ver?

Ver el trailer
Made to Work
Made to Work
Meaghen Brown

A short history of gear designed for very specific reasons.

8 Minutos de lectura
Una foto honesta
Una foto honesta

Patagonia en los años 70 a través del lente del fotógrafo Gary Regester.

3 Minutos de lectura
Home, Grown
Home, Grown

El arquitecto y escalador Dylan Johnson se une a Yvon Chouinard y un comprometido equipo de trabajo para construir dos casas usando fardos de paja.

Ver
12:18
Juntos, somos uno
Juntos, somos uno
Ryan Stuart

En un pequeño pueblo de montaña en British Columbia, una mujer aprovecha los senderos para ayudar a sanar heridas y conectar dos comunidades.

12 Minutos de lectura
Corriendo por un propósito
Corriendo por un propósito
Meaghen Brown

El campamento Footprints Running Camp no solo se trata de correr, sino también de encontrar soluciones para la crisis climática.

8 Minutos de lectura
A mi bebito
A mi bebito
Yessenia Funes

La periodista Yessenia Funes, especialista en clima y sostenibilidad, le escribe a su descendencia; la que espera tener, pero que ha temido traer al mundo.

7 Minutos de lectura
Costa salvaje, tierra protegida
Costa salvaje, tierra protegida
Manuel Fernández Arroyo

La protección de la Península Mitre, como resultado del empuje de una sociedad cada vez más comprometida, le da un respiro al planeta.

9 Minutos de lectura
Daughter of the Sea
Daughter of the Sea

Luchando con una crisis de salud mental, una mujer regresa a las aguas que la vieron crecer y encuentra sanación en el océano

Ver
18:04
Con los niños rumbo al Punto Nemo
Con los niños rumbo al Punto Nemo
Somira Sao

Si lo que buscas es criar a tus hijos en lugares salvajes , haz de la flexibilidad una aliada.

9 Minutos de lectura
Home to Limuw
Home to Limuw
Alan Salazar

A 50-year odyssey.

7 Minutos de lectura
Criando a Kuba
Criando a Kuba
Lauren Evans

Cydney Knapp y su esposo, Bartek, sabían que querían criar a sus hijos para amar el estar afuera, así que aprendieron a navegar el cambio y abrazaron el caos.

4 Minutos de lectura
Victory for the Boundary Waters
Victory for the Boundary Waters
Nate Ptacek

A Patagonia employee celebrates a huge environmental win for his beloved home waters.

3 Minutos de lectura
Perfectly Imperfect
Perfectly Imperfect
Woody Woodburn

A writer’s favorite pullover revised.

4 Minutos de lectura
Ascend
Ascend

These women were forced to flee their homes in Afghanistan. Now the climbing community is helping them build a new one.

Ver
19:40
Trabajando por la naturaleza salvaje – Iniciativas Ambientales de Patagonia 2013
Trabajando por la naturaleza salvaje – Iniciativas Ambientales de Patagonia 2013
Yvon Chouinard

“En lo salvaje yace la preservación del mundo.” – Thoreau Este año, Patagonia cumplirá 40 años. Hay mucho que celebrar en este aniversario, pero lo que más me enorgullece es el apoyo que hemos entregado a las personas que hacen el verdadero trabajo para salvar la naturaleza salvaje: los activistas comunitarios. Yo no soy un…

4 Minutos de lectura
La tierra del surf de medianoche
La tierra del surf de medianoche
Morgan Williamson

Una mirada al interior de la pasión compartida por el surf en el Yakutat Surf Club al sureste de Alaska

15 Minutos de lectura
When Trees Fall, So Do We
When Trees Fall, So Do We
John Perlin

An excerpt from Patagonia’s republished version of A Forest Journey, about what the loss of trees has meant for past life on our planet.

4 Minutos de lectura
A Man, Mud and Methane
A Man, Mud and Methane
Brooke MacMillan

A look inside Delta Brick & Climate Company, where doing is undoing.

6 Minutos de lectura
Taking the Long Way Home
Taking the Long Way Home
Ellen Bradley & Matthew Tufts

In Southeast Alaska, a Native skier searches for something deeper than powder on her homelands.

9 Minutos de lectura
Correr por la costa
Correr por la costa
Kiko Sweeney

Una familia explora su relación mientras corre.

7 Minutos de lectura
The Women of the Mimal Rangers
The Women of the Mimal Rangers
Amelia Moulis

Keeping ancestral knowledge alive in Arnhem Land.

12 Minutos de lectura
We Are the Inlet
We Are the Inlet
Nikki Sanchez

The women fighting for Southern Resident orcas.

9 Minutos de lectura
Episode 6: We Are the Water
Episode 6: We Are the Water

Patagonia and Pop-Up Magazine Productions present a series about knowledge.

Ver
8:36
Restaurando el paraíso
Restaurando el paraíso
Joel Caldwell

Un viaje a través de la peor sequía en California en 1.200 años junto a quienes trabajan por restaurar ecosistemas destruidos y repoblar paisajes perdidos.

17 Minutos de lectura
Three Green Lines
Three Green Lines
Amanda Monthei

Angling beyond the wire at Manzanar concentration camp.

10 Minutos de lectura
Alto al paso: el greenwashing de la hidroelectricidad
Alto al paso: el greenwashing de la hidroelectricidad
Agustín Doña & Paulo Urrutia

Un geólogo y un ingeniero eléctrico, dos amigos apasionados por los ríos, nos explican por qué las hidroeléctricas están haciendo agua en su relación con el medioambiente.

12 Minutos de lectura
Episode 4: Silence Isn’t Silent
Episode 4: Silence Isn’t Silent

Patagonia and Pop-Up Magazine Productions present a series about knowledge.

Ver
10:58
Líneas de consciencia
Líneas de consciencia
Rafael Olavarría

Un movimiento comunitario por la seguridad en la montaña.

8 Minutos de lectura
Episode 3: Dying to Make a Living
Episode 3: Dying to Make a Living

Patagonia and Pop-Up Magazine Productions present a series about knowledge.

Ver
15:00
El Maestro
El Maestro
Sofía Arredondo

Una oda a Raúl Revilla Quiroz, uno de los padres de la escalada mexicana.

11 Minutos de lectura
Smith Rock Is Animal Village
Smith Rock Is Animal Village
Len Necefer & Tara Kerzhner

Elder Wilson Wewa tells the creation story of Animal Village. Tara Kerzhner and Len Necefer consider how these stories can reshape stewardship.

15 Minutos de lectura
A Letter from Yvon Chouinard
A Letter from Yvon Chouinard
Yvon Chouinard

Earth is now our only shareholder.

2 Minutos de lectura
Mentoría queer y escalada
Mentoría queer y escalada
Lor Sabourin & Madaleine Sorkin

Una conversación entre Lor Sabourin y Madaleine Sorkin.

13 Minutos de lectura
Sembrando el cambio
Sembrando el cambio
Juliana García

Francisco “Pacho” Gangotena y su esposa, Maritza “Lili” Rubio, optaron por rebelarse contra lo establecido y apostar por volver a las raíces de la agricultura ancestral.

7 Minutos de lectura
La solución colectiva
La solución colectiva
Andrew O’Reilly

Una ex chica de ciudad encuentra respuestas y empoderamiento en la naturaleza.

4 Minutos de lectura
Nuestro pequeño refugio en el mundo
Nuestro pequeño refugio en el mundo
Erna L. Adelson

Una oda al equipo outdoor más simple.

5 Minutos de lectura
Limpiando las costas de Chile
Limpiando las costas de Chile
Andrew O’Reilly

El pacífico sur tiene un problema con el plástico. Él tiene un camión.

5 Minutos de lectura
Freedom through Fabric
Freedom through Fabric
Archana Ram

Why a symbol of Indian self-reliance is vital again.

6 Minutos de lectura
Químicos permanentes
Químicos permanentes
Beth Schiller

Esta historia se iba a tratar de una boyante granja orgánica en Maine liderada por una mujer, pero entonces apareció la noticia sobre los “químicos permanentes”.

5 Minutos de lectura
El último takajo
El último takajo
Hironori Taniyama

La increíble relación entre Hidetoshi Matsubara y sus aves rapaces.

8 Minutos de lectura
Fuertes por naturaleza
Fuertes por naturaleza
Leslie Hittmeier

Las mujeres son menos del cinco por ciento de los carpinteros de oficio en los Estados Unidos. Pero hay algunas carpinteras que están cambiando esa narrativa, una juntura a la vez.

9 Minutos de lectura
Silencio, agua, esperanza
Silencio, agua, esperanza
Andrew O’Reilly

Proteger el océano, para eso están los amigos.

5 Minutos de lectura
Una palabra …
Una palabra …
Tom Frost & Yvon Chouinard

Cuando instaron a los escaladores a dejar de usar su producto más vendido en 1972, Tom Frost e Yvon Chouinard sentaron las bases para el trabajo de Patagonia hoy en día.

4 Minutos de lectura
Gdje Su Svi Dobrodošli (Donde todos son bienvenidos)
Gdje Su Svi Dobrodošli (Donde todos son bienvenidos)
Denis Tuzinovic

El viaje de un refugiado de guerra bosnio hacia una vida de activismo comunitario.

8 Minutos de lectura
Game Hawker
Game Hawker

Shawn Hayes vive su vida con devoción. Para él, la práctica de la cetrería es más que una profunda relación con las rapaces: también se ha convertido en la obra de su vida.

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25:25
Remendando la vida
Remendando la vida
Sonya Montenegro

La alegre, meditativa y silenciosa rebelión de arreglar tu ropa a mano.

3 Minutos de lectura
Por una Ley de Ríos Salvajes
Por una Ley de Ríos Salvajes
Macarena Soler

Chile tiene más de 1.200 grandes ríos escasamente protegidos. Un grupo de organizaciones ambientales tiene una propuesta para evitar su extinción.

4 Minutos de lectura
Don’t Forget Your Roots
Don’t Forget Your Roots
Andrew O’Reilly

First-generation Vietnamese American Mai Nguyen follows in the footsteps of their agrarian ancestors with a farm that grows numerous types of grains with a no-till, anti-fertilizer regenerative approach.

6 Minutos de lectura
Crónicas del Salmón II
Crónicas del Salmón II
Martina Sasso

El triunfo de una comunidad sobre una industria y la intención de contagiar al mundo entero.

5 Minutos de lectura
Born to Fight
Born to Fight
Andrew O’Reilly

The story of Naelyn Pike, a 21-year-old Chiricahua Apache, and her fight to keep sacred Apache land from becoming a copper mine.

7 Minutos de lectura
Acorralada por la ropa que no quiero
Acorralada por la ropa que no quiero
Sarah Mirk

¿Por qué es tan difícil deshacerse de la ropa usada de una manera ética?

3 Minutos de lectura
Sons of Sacred Mountains
Sons of Sacred Mountains
Chef Nephi Craig

In Western Apacheria, a tradition of cooking in the ground endures.

5 Minutos de lectura
Raised from Earth
Raised from Earth

Under the gaze of southern Arizona’s cinnamon-hued Canelo Hills, a mother passes along an ancient Puebloan tradition of natural adobe building to her three sons.

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9:23
Puntadas en el tiempo
Puntadas en el tiempo
Brad Wieners

Cada vez que se repara, esta camisa se vuelve más original, pero aún guarda los recuerdos del autor.

5 Minutos de lectura
Reciclar ya no sirve. ¿Qué sigue?
Reciclar ya no sirve. ¿Qué sigue?
Michele Bianchi

Patagonia no es ajena a las dificultades de deshacerse de las cosas. Recibimos el 100 por ciento del equipo que nos devuelves para reciclarlo a través de nuestro programa Worn Wear. En 2018, reciclamos más de tres toneladas de productos. Pero no podemos reciclar o reparar todo lo que nuestros clientes nos envían. Muchos de…

7 Minutos de lectura
Un amor en ascenso
Un amor en ascenso
Lor Sabourin

Detrás de escena de la película They/Them (Elle/Elles).

10 Minutos de lectura
Dispatch from Fairy Creek
Dispatch from Fairy Creek
Maia Wikler

Why a logging protest has become Canada’s largest act of civil disobedience.

12 Minutos de lectura
Life Lived Wild
Life Lived Wild
Rick Ridgeway

Rolling Stone called him “the real Indiana Jones.” His new memoir reveals why our friend Rick has always been a great deal more.

5 Minutos de lectura
Criando para la naturaleza
Criando para la naturaleza

Ashe y Christin Brown son madres de una niña de 3 años, Quest, a quien quieren criar con un aprecio por la diversidad del mundo natural.

4 Minutos de lectura
Higher Ground
Higher Ground
Austin Siadak & Richelle Kimble

Discovering that climbing is for them.

6 Minutos de lectura
The Forever Ranch
The Forever Ranch
Louise Johns

Learning to coexist with the wild in Montana’s Tom Miner Basin.

6 Minutos de lectura
Illustration of a person wearing an orange shirt and blue jeans kneeling in their garden picking lettuce.
Good Jeans
Sarah Mirk

What’s the secret to a really good pair of jeans? Comics journalist Sarah Mirk tells us what to look for and how to keep them in play longer.

2 Minutos de lectura
The Place to Go Downhill
The Place to Go Downhill
Korey Hopkins

A soldier finds solace on fat tires.

10 Minutos de lectura
Unfinished Business
Unfinished Business
Rachel G. Clark

When it comes to making more responsible jeans, our work is never done. And, of course, we leave the really dirty work to you.

7 Minutos de lectura
Plotting Change
Plotting Change
Andrew O’Reilly

The father and son team behind Life Do Grow farm has focused their life’s work on building a sense of community and well-being in an area that has been plagued by poverty, violence and neglect for decades.

6 Minutos de lectura
Biking Bread
Biking Bread
Jeff McElroy

In San Luis Obispo, California, a team of bakers is building community by “pedaling” their wares.

5 Minutos de lectura
Donating with Dignity
Donating with Dignity
Sarah Mirk

The dos and don’ts of donating your used clothes.

3 Minutos de lectura
Sowing Trust
Sowing Trust
Jonnah Perkins

How can an organic farmer with no successor make sure the farm will end up in good hands? Paul Bickford started his search in an unexpected place.

6 Minutos de lectura
El Dory Perdido
El Dory Perdido
Joe Curren

Joe Curren comparte recuerdos de infancia junto su padre, el legendario hombre de mar Pat Curren, y el icónico bote que viajó con ellos a Baja.

12 Minutos de lectura
Blood Memory
Blood Memory
Jake Young

What if we could pass our love of a certain place through generations?

10 Minutos de lectura
La Sabiduría de Jerry
La Sabiduría de Jerry
Caroline Gleich

Caroline Gleich se enfrenta al temor que acompaña al envejecimiento de su padre y la presión que siente por tener un hijo antes de que él ya no esté.

7 Minutos de lectura
Let Them Be. Patagonia Kids.
Let Them Be. Patagonia Kids.

Kids are meant to be kids. So let them be.

Ver
1:54
Digging for Answers
Digging for Answers
Johnie Gall

We’re entering Earth’s sixth mass extinction, but clues about this climate crisis could be right under our feet.

6 Minutos de lectura
Four Fifths a Grizzly
Four Fifths a Grizzly
Doug Chadwick

A book excerpt about how the microbes within us and the genes we share with other wild creatures are key dimensions of being human.

6 Minutos de lectura
Hasta La Raíz
Hasta La Raíz

How can Hispanic farmworkers become farm owners? For Mexican immigrant Javier Zamora, the sunup to sundown work ethic was already there—he just needed some support from his community.

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11:48
The Nautical Farmers
The Nautical Farmers
Erin Grace Scottberg

One young couple’s unexpected career path of farming sea vegetables drew them back to their roots and brought a promising climate-change solution to their coastal hometown.

7 Minutos de lectura
¡Échale ganas!
¡Échale ganas!
Nathan Harkleroad

Solo el 4 por ciento de los dueños de granjas en los Estados Unidos son hispanos. Javier Zamora, inmigrante mexicano y agricultor orgánico, está trabajando por cambiar esa historia.

6 Minutos de lectura
En Qué se Parecen un Colapso en la Carretera y un Viaje a Marte
En Qué se Parecen un Colapso en la Carretera y un Viaje a Marte
Bonnie Tsui

Primera Regla de un viaje por carretera: Tu vehículo puede colapsar. Segunda Regla de un viaje por carretera: Tú puedes colapsar con él. Cerca de las Ruby Mountains, en Nevada, Gordon y Meredith Wiltsie daban la pelea entre llaves inglesas y cables luego de que el silenciador de su International Travelall se soltara. Mientras Nick,…

2 Minutos de lectura
The Flight of the Farmer
The Flight of the Farmer
Kristen A. Schmitt

As the proprietor of Cold Antler Farm, a 6.5-acre span of land in Washington County, New York, Jenna Woginrich spends her days with red-tailed hawks.

8 Minutos de lectura
El Regreso de un Clásico del Surf
El Regreso de un Clásico del Surf
Kim McCoy & Willard Newell Bascom

El coautor, Kim McCoy, relata cómo descubrió el misterio de lo que hay bajo las olas, donde el océano y la tierra se encuentran y compiten.

5 Minutos de lectura
The High Life
The High Life
Jeff McElroy

Rock-climber blade techs keep the wind turbines turning, with gusto.

2 Minutos de lectura
Bring Hemp Home: Colorado
Bring Hemp Home: Colorado
Jeff McElroy

In Colorado’s San Luis Valley, two farmers are growing industrial hemp to improve their topsoil—and their bottom line—as they face worsening drought.

6 Minutos de lectura
Bring Hemp Home: Colorado
Bring Hemp Home: Colorado

In Colorado’s San Luis Valley, worsening drought is causing farmers to face the prospect of losing their livelihoods. Two farmers are placing their bets on a drought-tolerant crop—industrial hemp.

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12:24
Fire Sheep
Fire Sheep
Esha Chhabra

Sheep (and their poop) could help California’s climate-driven wildfires. One couple is ushering in this idea with a small flock and some supportive fire departments.

6 Minutos de lectura
The Dread Pirate Andy
The Dread Pirate Andy
Sakeus Bankson

Genetics is a powerful thing.

5 Minutos de lectura
Rewriting the Myth of the West
Rewriting the Myth of the West
Jade Begay & Patrice Ringelstein

Two women, Black and Indigenous, reflect on the myth of the American West after horse-packing through the Sierra.

10 Minutos de lectura
Whitmore’s Legacy
Whitmore’s Legacy
John Long

Remembering the climber and conservationist.

6 Minutos de lectura
El Rito Santero
El Rito Santero
Jeff McElroy

Nicholas Herrera brings new life to old things on his ancestral homestead in El Rito, New Mexico.

5 Minutos de lectura
Colin Haley’s Clothing System for Alpine Climbing in the Chaltén Massif
Colin Haley’s Clothing System for Alpine Climbing in the Chaltén Massif
Colin Haley

6,000 words about dressing for alpine climbing you didn’t know you needed to know.

23 Minutos de lectura
Transplanting Traditions
Transplanting Traditions
Jonnah Perkins

On a small farm outside Minneapolis, Minnesota, a farmer takes a regenerative approach to keeping his community fed.

8 Minutos de lectura
¡Muerte al cierre!
¡Muerte al cierre!
Sakeus Bankson

El cierre es una de las características funcionales más elegantes del diseño de vestuario. También es uno de los más frustrantes impedimentos para la creación de equipo totalmente reciclado y fácil de reparar.

5 Minutos de lectura
El regalo de las historias
El regalo de las historias
Stephanie Vermillion

Por qué el equipo bien usado es el mejor regalo de todos.

6 Minutos de lectura
Everyone’s Wildness
Everyone’s Wildness
J. Drew Lanham

A wildlife ecologist reflects on the public lands that are his escape hatch and life’s work.

7 Minutos de lectura
Bodies of Water
Bodies of Water
Bonnie Tsui

When a swimmer first knew she belonged.

5 Minutos de lectura
Hair of the Dog
Hair of the Dog
Bonnie Tsui

A skiing family’s shear joy.

3 Minutos de lectura
She’s Taking Out the Trash
She’s Taking Out the Trash
Andrew O’Reilly

One woman’s decades-long fight for clean air and environmental justice.

10 Minutos de lectura
Polyester
Polyester
Meaghen Brown

85% of Patagonia’s polyester this season is recycled. Using recycled polyester, rather than virgin petroleum polyester, reduced our seasonal carbon emissions by over 5,600 metric tons of CO₂e.

2 Minutos de lectura
Low Water, Loose Stone
Low Water, Loose Stone
Thorpe Moeckel

Traveling by canoe in a desert miles from nowhere.

7 Minutos de lectura
Crónicas del Salmón
Crónicas del Salmón
Martina Sasso

La historia de una comunidad que enfrentó a la poderosa industria salmonera para proteger la salud de un ecosistema.

7 Minutos de lectura
Bison Hide
Bison Hide
Jeff McElroy

Two Patagonia styles this season use bison hide. Grazing bison help restore prairie ecosystems, whereas grazing cattle can damage native grasses.

4 Minutos de lectura
If I Had a Hammer
If I Had a Hammer
Jeff McElroy

Who made the first hammer, the thing that’s used to make other things? For blacksmiths, it starts with the forge—and it’s hammers all the way down.

4 Minutos de lectura
Down
Down
Molly Baker

Eighty percent of the down we're using this season is recycled. The new down is Advanced GTDS Certified.

3 Minutos de lectura
Todo lo que baja tiene que subir
Todo lo que baja tiene que subir
Johnie Gall

Melinda Daniels se acurruca bajo la protección de su carpa morada esperando que comience a llover, lo que solo llama la atención cuando se considera el contexto: se encuentra en medio de una granja bajo el intenso resplandor del sol y un cielo despejado.

9 Minutos de lectura
Siguiendo un sabor
Siguiendo un sabor
Patagonia & Patagonia Provisions

Por años en la búsqueda del ají correcto.

4 Minutos de lectura
Why We Sit in Trees
Why We Sit in Trees
Robert Moor

Roping up for a global protest.

15 Minutos de lectura
El cariño por Dory
El cariño por Dory
Jeff McElroy

La colorida tradición de construir y navegar los clásicos botes dory, en el Gran Cañón, se transmite a la próxima generación.

9 Minutos de lectura
Capture a Patagoniac
Capture a Patagoniac
Jennifer Ridgeway

How we found our photographic style.

7 Minutos de lectura
The Story of Fleece
The Story of Fleece
Rachel G. Clark

A tale of tinkering.

6 Minutos de lectura
All the Hemp That Fits
All the Hemp That Fits
Jeff McElroy

Patagonia has 73 styles using hemp this season. Cultivation of hemp replenishes vital soil nutrients, prevents erosion and requires no synthetic fertilizer.

4 Minutos de lectura
Liberación en la Tierra
Liberación en la Tierra
Jeff McElroy

Una conversación con Leah Penniman, autora de Farming While Black.

6 Minutos de lectura
Rebeldes en la tierra
Rebeldes en la tierra
Johnie Gall

Un grupo de jóvenes agricultores aprenden lo que significa hacer un trabajo esencial durante una crisis global.

10 Minutos de lectura
La recompensa del riesgo: construir confianza en los niños
La recompensa del riesgo: construir confianza en los niños
Patagonia

Un extracto del libro Family Business, de Malinda Chouinard y Jennifer Ridgeway.

7 Minutos de lectura
Una granja crece en la selva
Una granja crece en la selva
Birgit Cameron

El camino hacia una agricultura más fructífera.

4 Minutos de lectura
El guía de los pantanos
El guía de los pantanos
Beth Wald

Traer a las especies amenazadas de vuelta a los humedales de Argentina también es bueno para los humanos.

3 Minutos de lectura
Lo que saben los árboles: Resolviendo el misterio de una temporada récord de avalanchas en Colorado
Lo que saben los árboles: Resolviendo el misterio de una temporada récord de avalanchas en Colorado

En 2019, después de una temporada récord de avalanchas en Colorado que arrasó con millones de árboles, un equipo de expertos en avalanchas se congregó para recoger la mayor cantidad de información posible de estos guardianes del tiempo de más 300 años.

7 Minutos de lectura
Bajando al Bayou
Bajando al Bayou
Rachel G. Clark

Una mirada detrás de lo que inspiró el diseño para la temporada de primavera 2020.

3 Minutos de lectura
Working Through It
Working Through It
Jeff McElroy

Some farmers, anglers and chefs are providing food for their communities during the time of COVID-19.

11 Minutos de lectura
Maddy Butcher ponies two horses and rides another in southwestern Colorado. Photo: Beau Gaughran
Bestias del Ser
Maddy Butcher

Por milenios, los caballos nos han ayudado a construir el mundo moderno. Puede que los necesitemos hoy más que nunca.

4 Minutos de lectura
Cosiendo para la distancia social
Cosiendo para la distancia social
Patagonia

Fabricar mascarillas en época de COVID-19: cuando las “telas respirables" adquieren un significado completamente nuevo.

5 Minutos de lectura
Calefacción con solo un fósforo
Calefacción con solo un fósforo

Construyendo una casa para soportar el invierno.

3 Minutos de lectura
Conoce los bolsillos de los shorts más viajados y documentados del mundo
Conoce los bolsillos de los shorts más viajados y documentados del mundo
Vincent Stanley

La evidencia está en los bolsillos.

2 Minutos de lectura
Preguntas Frecuentes: Vivir en movimiento, en una van, con niños.
Preguntas Frecuentes: Vivir en movimiento, en una van, con niños.
Lydia Zamorano

Tres mamás comparten los detalles.

12 Minutos de lectura
Una Carta Desde La Toscana (Desde Donde Obtenemos Nuestra Lana Usada)
Una Carta Desde La Toscana (Desde Donde Obtenemos Nuestra Lana Usada)
Mădălina Preda

Se fue a Italia para ver cómo se hace la lana reciclada y descubrir que todo tiene un impacto, incluso el reciclaje.

8 Minutos de lectura
Aventuras de maternidad
Aventuras de maternidad

A Jasmin Caton le preocupaba que tener mellizos pudiera bajarle el ritmo a su vida en las montañas. Pero entonces recordó lo que sus padres hicieron con ella.

4 Minutos de lectura
Creando desde el paisaje
Creando desde el paisaje
Malcolm Johnson

Los diseñadores de Patagonia nos cuentan sobre la colección “Celebrando las Tierras Públicas”

7 Minutos de lectura
Aventura antes que adversidad
Aventura antes que adversidad
Kitty Calhoun

Paradox Sports trae accesibilidad a la escalada

6 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Håkan Stenlund
La migración de los cantares: Reflexiones de un observador de pájaros
Håkan Stenlund

Dándole la bienvenida al “ruido de bienvenida” del Círculo Ártico

8 Minutos de lectura
Manos a la obra en el desierto alto
Manos a la obra en el desierto alto
Patagonia

Ensuciándose las manos con la asociación del desierto natural de Oregón

5 Minutos de lectura
Desde el Suelo
Desde el Suelo
Kate Rutherford

Para esta escaladora, la buena comida es activismo.

6 Minutos de lectura
So, You Want to Be a Regenerative Hemp Farmer?
So, You Want to Be a Regenerative Hemp Farmer?
Doug Fine

A bona fide American hemp farmer and entrepreneur shares his stash—a guide to farming hemp with tips for planting, growing, harvesting and processing.

11 Minutos de lectura
El Regreso del Bebé Libre
El Regreso del Bebé Libre
Bonnie Tsui

Guri Bigham ha sido un espíritu libre desde temprana edad.

3 Minutos de lectura
On The Brink
On The Brink

Best job in the world?

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6:35
Butler Farms
Butler Farms

On a family farm in Bourbon County, Kentucky, a heritage crop has returned.

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3:19
Fire Up the Test Tank
Fire Up the Test Tank
Malcolm Johnson

There’s nothing more important than having waves a few minutes away.

3 Minutos de lectura
Crash-Test Dummy
Crash-Test Dummy
Kelly Cordes

Who gets hypothermia on purpose? This guy.

5 Minutos de lectura
A Painful Conversation with Skier and Hot Sauce Maker Carston Oliver
A Painful Conversation with Skier and Hot Sauce Maker Carston Oliver
Sakeus Bankson

As seen in the November 2019 Journal. For the recipe behind Carston’s Spicy Magic Sauce, scroll to the end of the story. Although my tongue felt as if it might melt, Carston Oliver assured me I was not, in fact, going to die. “That’s just the capsaicin,” he told me, as he calmly ordered some…

7 Minutos de lectura
The Art of Loss: How Zaria Forman Draws Stunningly Realistic Polar Ice
The Art of Loss: How Zaria Forman Draws Stunningly Realistic Polar Ice
Meaghen Brown

It’s fascinating to hear Zaria Forman talk about ice, especially the way that it sounds. She describes the way it rumbles and thunders and cracks, even when you can’t see anything. It crackles and pops like breakfast cereal on high volume. “Ice crispies,” she calls it. “It’s a really beautiful sound.” Polar ice is possibly…

4 Minutos de lectura
How We Turn Scraps into New Gear
How We Turn Scraps into New Gear
Patagonia

What if we could wear our garbage? That’s the idea behind ReCrafted, our line of clothing made from the scraps of used garments collected at our Worn Wear facility in Reno. It’s premium, Patagonia, upcycled. A second life for products that might not otherwise get one. ReCrafted was created by Kourtney Morgan—the designer behind some…

3 Minutos de lectura
Don’t Till On Me
Don’t Till On Me
Andrew O’Reilly

A soil junkie explains no-till practices for regenerative agriculture.

7 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “Fistful of Hearts” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “Fistful of Hearts” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“We biked through wind, rain, and snow. If lightning struck, we kept going. We only stopped if it got too close.  We outran tornadoes in Oklahoma. We waited out a storm in an old horse barn in Montana, huddled like penguins, our bikes cast carelessly aside in the mud,” writes John Flynn. After John lost…

1 Minutos de lectura
Sawdust Is My Glitter: The Story of Blind Craftsman John Furniss
Sawdust Is My Glitter: The Story of Blind Craftsman John Furniss
Jeff McElroy

Editor’s note: This post discusses anxiety and suicide. In a humble workshop in Washougal, Washington, a blind craftsman holds a locally harvested log that he has made into a blank with his miter saw. He turns it in his hands to feel its shape and weight. He measures and marks, measures and marks. A flick…

7 Minutos de lectura
“Life of Pie”: Jen Zeuner and Anne Keller Q&A
“Life of Pie”: Jen Zeuner and Anne Keller Q&A
Katie Klingsporn

In a fossil-rich corner of western Colorado, set against lush agricultural fields, the big-box stores of Grand Junction and the sandstone formations of the Colorado National Monument, you’ll find Fruita. These days, the town is an international mountain-biking destination known for its ribbony, high-desert trails, technical routes overlooking the Colorado River and funky downtown where…

7 Minutos de lectura
The Long, Happy March of Barefoot Dave
The Long, Happy March of Barefoot Dave
Doug Chadwick

Dave Murray lives in a wooded mountain valley in western Montana with his wife, Connie; a labradoodle rightly named Loki, after the Norse god of mischief; and a bunch of mules. I live 140 miles north near Glacier National Park. He and I met on a float trip down a wild river in northern British…

16 Minutos de lectura
Standing Up Against Industrial Fish Farming at a Unique Australian Beachbreak
Standing Up Against Industrial Fish Farming at a Unique Australian Beachbreak
Sean Doherty

Standing Up Against Industrial Fish Farming That Would Forever Alter A Unique Australian Beachbreak The day we arrived on King Island we drove out to Martha Lavinia Beach, where we stood in the dunes and watched waves running down the beach—long left-handers breaking so fast they were almost impossible to surf. However, Martha Lavinia wasn’t…

6 Minutos de lectura
A Conversation with Surfboard Designer Fletcher Chouinard
A Conversation with Surfboard Designer Fletcher Chouinard
Sean Doherty

At Fletcher Chouinard Designs, the focus is on durable, high-performing equipment that lets you have fun no matter what the ocean is doing. There are never enough hours in a day for Fletcher Chouinard. As a surfer, shaper, kiteboarder and new father, he was really doing the dance. Then along came foilboarding, which has made…

5 Minutos de lectura
Kimi Werner, Léa Brassy and Liz Clark: Sea Sisters
Kimi Werner, Léa Brassy and Liz Clark: Sea Sisters
Kimi Werner

The Best Times Are About Friends, Not Perfection It had been four years since Liz Clark, Léa Brassy and I first spent time together, on a sailing trip through the Tuamotus. We knew we’d found something special from the moment we met, and we’ve stayed in touch ever since. We’re all very individual women and…

4 Minutos de lectura
Labor of Love
Labor of Love
Ben Wilkinson

Restoring a traditional Hawaiian koa canoe on O’ahu.

4 Minutos de lectura
Welcome to Gwichyaa Zhee: A Conversation with Co-Director Len Necefer
Welcome to Gwichyaa Zhee: A Conversation with Co-Director Len Necefer
Mădălina Preda

Indigenous communities across the United States are increasingly confronted with threats to their sovereignty and to the places they rely on for their culture and way of life. Nowhere is this threat felt more than in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. A new short film, Welcome to Gwichyaa Zhee, looks at the Gwich’in people’s work to protect…

9 Minutos de lectura
Finding Refuge in Iran’s Climbing Culture
Finding Refuge in Iran’s Climbing Culture
Beth Wald

Fog from the distant Caspian Sea swirled around us as we left the road, crossed a narrow mountain stream on a rickety footbridge of wornwooden planks, passed a pungent corral full of dank, scruffy sheep, and started the steep climb to Alam Kuh base camp in the Alborz mountain range of Iran. Brittany Griffith, Kate…

6 Minutos de lectura
Under the Mud
Under the Mud
Rachel G. Clark

A story of a customer whose photo ended up in our catalog.

3 Minutos de lectura
Hemp Is Back: How Some of Ours Is Produced, in Photos
Hemp Is Back: How Some of Ours Is Produced, in Photos
Diane French

It’s hard not to notice the hype around hemp today. Pick up any lifestyle magazine, enter a pharmacy, talk to a health-food store employee or just the person next to you in yoga class—at some point you’ll learn about its miraculous powers. In particular, near-unbelievable claims swirl around cannabidiol, or CBD, oil derived from hemp:…

5 Minutos de lectura
Life of Pie: How Hot Tomato Pizza Unites a Mountain Biking Paradise
Life of Pie: How Hot Tomato Pizza Unites a Mountain Biking Paradise
Diane French

Friday night at the Hot Tomato is not for those in a hurry. Hungry customers grip pints of beer and compare notes on the day’s rides in lines that spill into the parking lot. Music pumps and the staff whirls behind the counter, tossing floury dough, yelling requests to the kitchen, giving each other shit.…

4 Minutos de lectura
Nose to the Wind
Nose to the Wind
Steve House

Steve House joins forces with coach Scott Johnston and athlete Kílian Jornet to develop a comprehensive approach to finding the joy and the payoff of intense training. Even lunges.

6 Minutos de lectura
The Worn Wear Crew Visits the Northeast: Photos
The Worn Wear Crew Visits the Northeast: Photos
Kern Ducote

I lost track of how many people asked us why we were driving into the deeper nooks of New England during the middle of winter. I knew the answer, but I’d be lying if I didn’t question the reasoning myself. The Worn Wear crew set out to visit a few snow sport communities in the…

5 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “The Van Fan” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “The Van Fan” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

Jeanie Adamson, a 50-something mom, decided to switch things up last year for spring break. When she told her son, Luke, she wanted to ski at every resort between Dallas and Lake Tahoe, he offered up his newly-renovated 1990 Dodge Ram van, Sherrod, for the job. The two of them threw in their skis, buckled…

1 Minutos de lectura
Why Run
Why Run
Meaghen Brown

Generations of a Diné family reflect on running.

7 Minutos de lectura
Ask Where the Mules Go
Ask Where the Mules Go
Leilani Bruntz

Following ancient pathways in Morocco’s High Atlas Mountains.

8 Minutos de lectura
Where Is She Now? The Famous Flying Patagonia Baby
Where Is She Now? The Famous Flying Patagonia Baby
Bonnie Tsui

Jordan Leads wants everybody to know she is alive and well. When she was six months old, she had her picture taken with her family at Joshua Tree’s Turtle Rock: a baby in midair, swaddled in a puffy purple jumpsuit, thrown over a disturbingly large gap between boulders. (Her parents, Jeff and Sherry, were the…

3 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “Novel Inspiration” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “Novel Inspiration” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

After falling in love with John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, Charlie Turnbull and Leon Morton set out to recreate the 1,615-mile journey described in the novel – but on bikes. In July. With camera gear and a few buddies in tow, they followed historic Route 66 from Oklahoma to Southern California. And along the way,…

1 Minutos de lectura
Done in R1
Done in R1

There’s almost nothing that hasn’t been done in an R1 fleece.

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3:53
Listen to “Mountain Hollow Dreams” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “Mountain Hollow Dreams” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“I’d built it up in my head a lot—being a professional climber. This felt like the consummation of those dreams. I found the valley, I envisioned the trip, I got the funding, made it happen, stood at the base, picked the line, climbed it, sent, we were at the top and it wasn’t feeling the…

1 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “Year of Big Ideas 2019” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “Year of Big Ideas 2019” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“For better or for worse, ideas are infectious. They become our goals, and the struggle to realize them becomes memory, the story of our lives,” says Fitz Cahall. When Brian O’Dell decided it was time to stop driving his Honda Civic, he didn’t list in on Craigslist. Instead, he posted in to outdoor forums in…

1 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “Hit Pause” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “Hit Pause” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

What if you could hit pause on life? This last year, Fitz turned 40. Instead of buying a sports car, Fitz took a sabbatical. Today, he presents a story about mountain biking the Oregon Timber Trail, a 670-mile-long, mostly single track trail across the state’s deserts and forests. What’s the difference between a groove and…

1 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “Endangered Spaces” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “Endangered Spaces” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

Drew Hamilton makes a living by taking tourists out into the remote Alaskan wilderness to hang out with brown bears. No fences, no guns—just Drew, and the eight hundred pound, six and a half foot tall, Ursus arctos horribilis of southern Alaska. Most people call them grizzlies. These days, he does it, in large part, as a…

2 Minutos de lectura
The Complicated Gift of Inclement Weather
The Complicated Gift of Inclement Weather
Rolando Garibotti

Weather has a way of complicating—and enriching—everything. By the time I top out, it’s snowing and it’s dark. I walk back as far as the rope will let me, and in the flattest spot I can find, I dig a hole and sit, bracing myself. I yell, “Rope-fixed!” repeatedly, but my partners can’t hear me…

5 Minutos de lectura
Returning to India’s Mount Nilkantha After a Past Retreat
Returning to India’s Mount Nilkantha After a Past Retreat
Anne Gilbert Chase

After a failed first attempt, three friends return to India’s Mount Nilkantha to confront—and embrace—the terrible, beautiful duality of a life in the mountains.

4 Minutos de lectura
Getting the Snow Industry Excited About Recycled Fabrics
Getting the Snow Industry Excited About Recycled Fabrics
Patagonia

Before we could challenge the snow industry to move to recycled materials, we had to change our thinking, too. There are a number of ways to reduce a garment’s impact, but none more significant than making it out of recycled fabric. Doing so keeps material out of landfills and cuts demand for the petroleum used…

2 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “The Glacier Project” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “The Glacier Project” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“Any time I ski a steep line, I’ve done it hundreds of times, and still every time for me there is that moment of fear on top, where I am like, ‘Do I really want to do this?’,” says Jason Hummel. “But, also, anytime you do anything scary, it really ties you down to the…

2 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “Hootin’ and Hollerin'” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “Hootin’ and Hollerin'” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“I was certain I was paralyzed. My legs were totally limp, I was hanging upside down and the only thing stopping me from falling 160-feet headfirst into the talus below, was this rope that was wrapped around my foot,” remembers Craig Gorder. In November, 2016, Craig took a fall in Indian Creek that injured him…

1 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “Ethan and G-Pop” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “Ethan and G-Pop” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“I have a pretty young grandfather, but he was starting to get old and knew he had one or two more big expeditions in him,” says Ethan Roebuck. “He wanted to put together a big trip, because he’s getting older, but also because I’m getting older, these are skills that he thinks are important, and…

1 Minutos de lectura
Introducing Woolyester
Introducing Woolyester
Kristina Johnson Avery

Three years ago, we set out to make a new fleece fabric using natural fibers that were light on the land. Our inspiration came from an old sweater, a weather-beaten merino pullover worn by founder Yvon Chouinard in Patagonia’s early days. It had all the properties that have made wool a staple for centuries of…

5 Minutos de lectura
The Garden at the End of the World: Regenerative Agriculture Pioneers in the Chacabuco Valley
The Garden at the End of the World: Regenerative Agriculture Pioneers in the Chacabuco Valley
Javier Soler

If the present status-quo of soil loss, carbon pollution and planetary warming continue, we’re looking at just 60 more harvests before we can no longer grow 95 percent of the food we humans rely upon to live. At the same time, the way to prevent this calamity is at hand: regenerative organic agriculture. This is…

6 Minutos de lectura
Remembering Tom Frost
Remembering Tom Frost
Patagonia

Patagonia mourns the loss of Tom Frost, Yvon Chouinard’s former climbing and business partner, who passed away Friday morning. Tom, with Yvon, Chuck Pratt and Royal Robbins, made the first ascent of the North America Wall of El Capitan in 1964. He made other notable first ascents with Valley pioneers and others in Yosemite, the…

3 Minutos de lectura
Mud, Sheep, Fish, Trail
Mud, Sheep, Fish, Trail
Mary McIntyre

The raw potential of mountain biking in Iceland’s Westfjords.

6 Minutos de lectura
Illustration: Walker Cahall
Listen to “A Story of My Own” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

For most of his adult life, Cam Fenton has fought against climate change–and particularly to protect the Arctic. “The funny thing was, for most of that time, I couldn’t tell you why,” says Cam. “Sure, I could recite, and often wrote, the talking points: to stop sea level rise, stand with small island nations and…

1 Minutos de lectura
Remembering Peter Noone
Remembering Peter Noone
Vincent Stanley

Peter Kinnoch Noone, who embodied the down-to-earth style of the outdoor industry’s early days and helped shaped the development of the outdoor store as a commercial force, customer refuge and sentinel for the protection of wilderness, died at his home in Ojai, California, on July 9 of recurrent cancer. He was 75 years old. Peter…

4 Minutos de lectura
Illustration: Walker Cahall
Listen to “The Elephant in the Boat – Parts 1 & 2” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episodes
The Dirtbag Diaries

“The definition of kidnapping is moving someone from one point to another point against their will, and that’s exactly what had happened to us,” says Ben Stookesberry. “But, to me, the most noteworthy part of the day was that, for the first time in the entire trip, we were actually all working together as a…

2 Minutos de lectura
Building friendships without language, Tibetan and American musicians bond at an ancient monastery on the Daqu River. Photo: @tripjenningsvideo
Singing and Paddling for a National Park in China
Kai Welch

Building cultural bridges through a shared love of wild rivers and folk music.

11 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “Flyathlon” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode”
Listen to “Flyathlon” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode”
The Dirtbag Diaries

There are a lot of serious problems in this world, but the solutions don’t always have to be serious. Fly fisherman and trail runner Andrew Todd channeled his concern for Colorado’s native trout and the watersheds that support them into the creation of a joyful, irreverent event: The Flyathlon. The rules: Run 10-miles Catch a…

1 Minutos de lectura
The Freedom to Live Off the Land
The Freedom to Live Off the Land
Mike Wood

When I was a kid, the Connecticut River was my Yukon. I spent many days working alongside the river or canoeing its islands and backwaters in search of crabs, snapper, blues, ducks and alewives—amazing silvery fish that brave the depths of the Atlantic to feed and grow and then return to these meandering brooks to…

7 Minutos de lectura
Baggies Shorts Throughout the Years
Baggies Shorts Throughout the Years
Patagonia

To celebrate over three decades of Baggies™ shorts, we dug through our archives so we could share the stories behind a few iconic photos.

6 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “Venture Out” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “Venture Out” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“I was working this corporate job, and, every day, I looked out the window and thought, ‘Man, those mountains are so beautiful, I wish I was out there,’” remembers Perry Cohen. Growing up, Perry was an outdoorsy kid—hiking and cross-country skiing in rural New Hampshire. He was thrilled when, as a teenager, he got to…

2 Minutos de lectura
“After the AT and PCT, I discovered one tiny hole from a campfire in my shorts. Patagonia repaired them for free, no questions asked, with a new pink patch.” Photo: Laura Johnston
My Pink Baggies
Laura Johnston

How a pair of shorts can become a loyal companion thru and thru.

3 Minutos de lectura
The first few inches of the 16 we left behind on our way to Sun Valley. Photo: Kern Ducote
Annihilating Expectations on the Worn Wear Tour
Kern Ducote

After 48 days in the same vehicle with the same four people, five if you count Brandon’s second shadow and beloved dog Rudy (half dog, half human), one is ready for a week of weekends. We romped around for the better part of the last two months, running from Squaw Valley, to Aspen, to Jackson…

4 Minutos de lectura
Caught by the heavy winds of a fast-moving South Pacific squall, Liz Clark heads to the mast to put another reef in Swell’s sail. Photo: Tahui Tufaimea
Excerpt from “Swell: A Sailing Surfer’s Voyage of Awakening” by Liz Clark
Liz Clark

After an hour’s sleep, I wake to the sound of fat raindrops pelting the deck. The noise quickly escalates into a deafening torrent, and I push up off the settee and climb up the steps. Glancing at the radar screen on my way up, I see a massive squall blacking out the entire 8-mile radius…

4 Minutos de lectura
Valle Chacabuco, Patagonia National Park, Chile. Photo: Tompkins Conservation
Patagonia Park and Pumalín Park Officially Join Chile’s National Park System
Kristine McDivitt Tompkins

As you have hopefully heard, January 29, 2018 was a historic day for Chile. On a cool, windy afternoon, we welcomed President Michelle Bachelet to Patagonia Park headquarters to sign the decrees creating Pumalín National Park – Douglas R. Tompkins and Patagonia National Park, solidifying the donation pledge we both signed in March 2017. “The…

5 Minutos de lectura
Artwork: Walker Cahall
Listen to “Escape from Beacon Rock” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“For me, it was a way to stay connected, literally: tied to my free-range daughter by a length of 10-millimeter climbing rope, and connected to my own dream of being an adventurer,” says David Altschul. “And that was how I found myself, a few days later, on a ledge, high above the Columbia River, in…

1 Minutos de lectura
Chris Shalbot races the weather above Big Hole Pass as foreboding clouds gather in the distance. Photo: Scott Rinckenberger
The Fun/Suffer Divide
Chris Shalbot

The Continental Divide Trail is not often traveled, and rarely by bike. The sheer remoteness makes access tricky. With this in mind, Scott Rinckenberger, Justin Olsen and I set out for 11 days on our bikes, pedaling northeast from Chief Joseph Pass. We wanted to shed some light on this beautiful area. The second night…

3 Minutos de lectura
After hard crimping right off the glacier, Kate Rutherford sinks her fingers into the climbing above. Pointe Adolphe Rey, Chamonix, France. Photo: Bernd Zeugswetter
Sometimes More Than a Game: On Climbing Responsibly
Kelly Cordes

When I think about climbing, I don’t think about summits. I see serrated ridgelines rising and falling between earth and sky, and sunlight slipping between spires, casting the shadows of giants onto rubble-strewn rivers of ice below, curving, moving, bending with the passage of time. I remember my partners and I, roped together with no…

2 Minutos de lectura
Mike Wood is the co-founder of Su Salmon Co. and the volunteer president of the Susitna River Coalition. Photo: Travis Rummel
Net to Table: Su Salmon Co.
Ryan Peterson

Mike Wood’s last name is a wholly appropriate coincidence of birth. He’s got a fetish for the stuff. When building his off-the-grid log home masterpiece on the banks of Alaska’s Susitna River, he’d range out into the surrounding boreal forest, select each perfect tree, hug it at the chest in solemn ceremony and then gleefully…

3 Minutos de lectura
It All Adds Up to Nothing: Forging the Micro Puff
It All Adds Up to Nothing: Forging the Micro Puff
Patagonia

At Patagonia, our best ideas come from being in the field. But sometimes simple problems inspire complex solutions. That’s been the case with the development of insulation. Down gets wet and loses its heat-trapping loft, and synthetics never quite achieve the same warmth, lightness or compressibility as down plumes. We’ve tried everything from treated down…

4 Minutos de lectura
Susan Baker repairs a jacket that might just belong to her daughter, whom she raised skiing in the nearby Sierra. Photo: Ken Etzel
Fixation
Patagonia

See what happens to your beloved gear at the Patagonia Repair Center.

4 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Eugénie Frerichs
A Gathering for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion with Teresa Baker
Patagonia

Realizing our own shortcomings when it comes to being more inclusive.

6 Minutos de lectura
Dr. Heather Darby harvests corn by hand at Borderview Research Farm. Alburgh, Vermont. Photo: Colin McCarthy
Workwear Video Series: Farmer and Agronomist Heather Darby
Patagonia

As the seventh generation of her family to farm the same land, working from sunup to sundown comes naturally to Heather Darby. The fourth profile in our Workwear series takes a look at the perpetual motion required to be both a research agronomist at the University of Vermont and the backbone of a 200-year-old, certified…

1 Minutos de lectura
Mac Profile
Mac Profile

This 3-Year-Old Rips.

Ver
1:30
Illustration: Walker Cahall
Listen to “Endangered Spaces: Prince of Wales” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“It’s like being caught in a spiderweb. You’ll find yourself pushing with every part of your body, and no part of your body will be able to move. You’re totally trapped by–held by plants,” says Elsa Sebastian, describing what it’s like to bushwhack through a 25-year old clear cut in Southeast Alaska. It’s something the…

2 Minutos de lectura
The Charpoua Hut, a minimalist hideaway in the heart of a granite sanctuary. Photo: Pierre Cadot
A Conversation with the Captain of an Iconic Alps Refuge
Floran Tomei

Sarah Cartier, the valiant captain of one of the most emblematic refuges on the Alps, unveils life in her little corner of paradise 2,481m above sea level. Being the start and end point of all great alpine adventures, the refuges are one of the strongest emblems of mountain culture. A warm and friendly haven, they…

6 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “The Year of Big Ideas 2018” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “The Year of Big Ideas 2018” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“I think the jack of all trades gets a bum rap. The jack is the master of none, but I think the jack probably has a lot of fun,” says Fitz Cahall. This year, The Dirtbag Diaries opens their annual The Year of Big Ideas with an ode to “mediocrity” from Fitz, then turns, as…

1 Minutos de lectura
Illustration: Walker Cahall
Listen to “Growing Down” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

I’ve watched my friends and peers hopscotch across the world. Some of them have reached the top of their craft, authored ridiculous lines up mountains, followed rivers into wrinkles of the deepest canyons, found the edge of human endurance. If I look back on the last ten years, I’m often surprised that I didn’t end…

1 Minutos de lectura
The White Nile River, a tributary of the Nile, flows through Uganda. Photo: Eli Reichman
How Ugandans are Saving the Nile with River Sports Culture
Chandra Brown

Rallying for conservation of one of Earth’s most iconic rivers.

5 Minutos de lectura
Eric Pollard picks a nice spot to chill. Virginia Lakes, California. Photo: Andrew Miller
“The Last Hill:” A Film About Getting There Slowly
Max Hammer

We were off-the-couch bikers, versed in miles per hour, not miles per day. After seven days of biking to ski, we needed a rest day. Hot springs mandatory. We remembered a shortcut to the Green Church pools, which was 9 miles shorter than the highway route. Shortcuts—with deeply rutted, washboard dirt roads on bicycles loaded…

2 Minutos de lectura
How to Disconnect for Deeper Connection
How to Disconnect for Deeper Connection
Cassidy Randall

“Disconnect to connect,” Leah Evans says to us, 13 total strangers standing in a circle at a remote trailhead in British Columbia’s Purcell Mountains. We’re about to embark on the inaugural Airplane Mode Camp led by Evans and her dream team of experts: Madeleine Martin-Preney, a hiking/ski guide and the first woman to traverse the…

5 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Kyle Sparks
Why is Unstructured Play Crucial?
Patagonia

An excerpt from the book Family Business by Malinda Chouinard and Jennifer Ridgeway.

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This distant view of the Hummingbird Ridge shows the immensity of the climb, starting at the rocky cliffs at lower right to the summit three and a half miles away and some 13,000 feet higher. Photo: Roy Johnson Jr.
Excerpt from Allen Steck’s “A Mountaineer’s Life” on the First Ascent of Hummingbird Ridge
Allen Steck

In honor of the release of A Mountaineer’s Life by Allen Steck, Patagonia Books is pleased to share this excerpt from chapter eight.  Camp II was a desperate and fearful place. We spent seven days there in severe weather. We could not leave the tents without going onto the fixed lines; the weakened cornice behind us…

6 Minutos de lectura
Illustration: Walker Cahall
Listen to “Over the Line” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“It’s like the Iditarod with a chance of drowning,” says Jake Beatty, one of the organizers of a bizarre, crazy race called the Race to Alaska. The course traces 750 miles of Alaska’s Inside Passage through complicated currents and tides, busy shipping channels and bear-ridden coastlines from Port Townsend, Washington, to Ketchikan, Alaska. In June.…

1 Minutos de lectura
With the wind in the high twenties and minimal sail up, Hōkūle‘a and Hikianalia sail into Te Ava Mo‘a, the Sacred Pass to Taputapuātea. Photo: John Bilderback
Mālama Honua: Hōkūle‘a’s Voyage of Hope
Jennifer Allen & John Bilderback

Part 6, Tahiti

5 Minutos de lectura
Illustration: Walker Cahall
Listen to “Tales of Terror Vol. 8” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

For our eighth annual Tales of Terror episode, we have not three, but five stories that span the range of things to fear—from angry men with shotguns, to bears and mountain lions, to things that really don’t have any explanation in the world of science. First, we visit an abandoned Pennsylvania town with Joe Shearer.…

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Artist: Emilie Lee
Painting the Prairie
Emilie Lee

A landscape painter volunteers her skills to help protect wildlife habitat in Montana’s Northern Great Plains.

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Photo: Garrett Grove
Timber to Tideline: Hama Hama Oysters
Malcolm Johnson

“For us, the tide is the boss,” says Adam James of Hama Hama Oysters, a fifth-generation, family-run shellfish farm on Washington’s Puget Sound. “In late August and September, we’ll be out there on the beach harvesting at 3 or 4 a.m., and when the sun finally comes up you can’t help but pause. It reminds…

4 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Tim Davis
From Shirt to Dirt: Thoughts on the Patagonia Design Philosophy
Patagonia

Miles Johnson, our senior creative director, oversees the work of all our designers in both technical and sportswear categories, as well as the product development and textile, graphics and color teams. We caught up with Miles recently at the picnic tables outside our child care center to ask him about his life and work and…

7 Minutos de lectura
What Can Rich Sensory Experiences Teach Children?
What Can Rich Sensory Experiences Teach Children?
Patagonia

An excerpt from the book Family Business by Malinda Chouinard and Jennifer Ridgeway.

7 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “Endangered Spaces: Boundary Waters” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “Endangered Spaces: Boundary Waters” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

Raising awareness. It seems like every day, someone embarks on a new project to ‘raise awareness’ about a particular issue, cause, disease, endangered species or threatened public land. But what separates the projects that cut through the noise and the ones that get drowned out in the static of issues competing for our attention? For…

1 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Jeff Cricco
Raising Less Wasteful Kids—Starting with One Red Hand-Me-Down Jacket
Patagonia

The jacket was probably red once but it’s now more of a muddy pink with an overlay of permanent scuff and smudge. The zipper, replaced four years ago, stands out a little brighter. The interior sports a size tag (Kids XXS) but has no hand-me-down label—it predates that Patagonia tradition. Around 13 years ago, it…

2 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Steve Perih
Giants Live Forever: Remembering BC Steelhead Conservationist Bruce Hill
Dylan Tomine

Through the years I’ve talked to Bruce Hill on the phone more times than I can count, often at odd hours, about subjects big and small. Recipes for teriyaki sauce and salmon caviar. Conservation campaign strategies. Guitar techniques. Family. Personal issues and challenges. For so many reasons it’s been a steady comfort in my life…

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Photo: Jeremy Koreski
Bringing Back the Light with Redd Fish Restoration
Patagonia

Forest and river restoration work fueled by a love for wild salmon.

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Photo: Ken Etzel
How We Extend the Functionality of Your Gear—and Repair It
Patagonia

Lasting Function and a Commitment to Repair In a landscape of disposable ski and snowboard fashion, fixing and keeping your snow gear in play is the most radical act we know. On average, most of us keep a piece of clothing for just three years, yet the materials and processes for making any new garment…

4 Minutos de lectura
Illustration: Walker Cahall
Listen to “Winnebago Warriors” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“When we were living in a house, we were always compromising because we had the weight of a mortgage, of doing what we thought we should be doing,” remembers Kathy Holcombe. Until the day she, her husband Peter and their daughter Abby moved into a Winnebago to travel and work from the road. “I want…

1 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Marko Prezelj
The Memory Lessons: Luca Krajnc’s First Free Ascent of Spomin
Emilé Zynobia, Jane Fonda, Jayme Moye, Luka Krajnc, Manon Carpenter, Manuela Schirra and Fabrizio Giraldi, Rip Zinger, つる詳子, やなぎさわ まどか & ゆき

When I was ten years old, I was a hyperactive kid who had problems staying focused for a long period of time. One day I was sitting in class at primary school, listening to a subject that didn’t really interest me. Bored, I started playing with the scissors that I found in my school bag.…

7 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Joel Caldwell
Searching for the Snow Leopard in Tajikistan
Joel Caldwell

March 11, Saidi Tagnob Conservancy, Zighar, Tajikistan Odina, a Tajik ranger from the Saidi Tagnob Conservancy, squats alongside the cliff edge. With large field glasses pressed to his face, he scans the opposite mountainside for familiar movement. He motions excitedly for the spotting scope. I squint hopelessly across the ravine at I-know-not-what. And then I…

9 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Somira Sao
Rose Marcario: Our Company Policies for Families
Rose Marcario

Patagonia CEO encourages other business leaders to support working families with paid leave and on-site child care.

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Photo: Broudy/Donohue Photography
United in Suffering at Grinduro Scotland
Berne Broudy

It’s drizzling and a bag piper is piping—cliché but cute—as I roll through the steep, salty streets of Lamlash, on Scotland’s Isle of Arran, into a rooty, ferny slick single track, with 149 other bikers. Within the first quarter mile of the Grinduro Scotland, about half the participants are already off their bikes and walking.…

5 Minutos de lectura
Illustration: Walker Cahall
Listen to “081” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“Picture walking through a parking lot with a ski mask rolled up on your head and a pistol in your pocket. You’re getting closer to the bank, your heart’s beating faster, adrenaline’s starting to rush through your head, and you can’t believe you’re about to do what you’re about to do,” says Roland Thompson. “When…

2 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Travis Rummel
The Slab Hunter: Ben Wilkinson Woodwork
Malcolm Johnson

It didn’t take long for Ben Wilkinson to figure out that there was freedom to be had in working for himself—and that freedom was the first requirement if he wanted to go surfing whenever the waves got huge. “I left home when I was 16,” he remembers, “which was old enough in my eyes. But…

4 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Peter Doucette
Majka Burhardt on Being Asked about Mothering and Climbing
Majka Burhardt

Dear Kaz and Irenna, Today you are 10-months old. This week, the last of winter’s snow left our garden, and the final crocus patch bloomed and closed just in time to escape your attempts to eat its purple petals. I spent our first winter together pulling you behind me in a tandem sled that gave…

4 Minutos de lectura
Illustration: Ken Perkins
Excerpt from “The Voyage of the Cormorant” by Christian Beamish
Christian Beamish

Excerpted from chapter one of The Voyage of the Cormorant—new edition now available in paperback. A two-week supply of food, water, and gear in dry bags fit neatly in the boat, and I secured my surfboard in a padded bag over the top of my stowed equipment. My plan was to sail the sparsely populated…

3 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Mark McInnis
About Our Wilder Waters Collection
Patagonia

Patagonia is an unusual workplace in many ways, and the fact that employees are encouraged to incorporate environmental activism into their daily work is just one of the characteristics that sets our company apart. The realities of running a business are important, but we’re always aware that our business has to serve the more pressing…

6 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Kim Jardine-Reiley
Reno Bike to Work Week 2017
Gavin Back

The dust has settled and the results from the Reno Distribution Center 2017 Bike to Work Week (B2WW), back in May, are in—another successful year that demonstrated that the Patagonia Reno Service Center rises to the occasion and puts in those hard bike miles when it matters. The highlight this year was the participation of…

3 Minutos de lectura
Illustration: Walker Cahall
Listen to “Endangered Spaces: Katahdin Woods and Waters” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“The reason that I was able to do it is because I was incredibly naive,” says Lucas St. Clair. “I had no idea how much work it was gonna be when I started. Not a clue.” The thing Lucas did: work to establish Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument in the North Woods of Maine.…

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Photo: Patagonia Books
The Aloha Shirt: Spirit of the Islands
Dale Hope

A brief and colorful history of how Hawaiian garment manufacturers used kimono cloth to create the souvenir of all souvenirs.

7 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Rick Graetz
Wild Youth!
Patagonia

An excerpt from the book Family Business by Malinda Chouinard and Jennifer Ridgeway.

9 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Laura Winberry
The Abbiest Place on Earth
Laura Winberry

I can’t help but say or think or feel it: this is Abbey Land. Despite the various crusts that have formed over the years since Abbey was alive and well in the Moab area, this is still his place. Of course, it is the earth first, shifting and sliding and tectonically galloping—and not giving a…

5 Minutos de lectura
Photo: John Bilderback
In Their Wake: A Journey From Tahiti to Hawai‘i
Ka‘iulani Murphy

Life on the deck of Hokule’a, the double-hulled canoe that sails around the world using only ancient wayfinding techniques.

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Photo: Colin McCarthy
Experimenting with Naturally Dyed Clothing
Joyanna Laughlin

Forty-five years ago, the old school North American outdoor uniform was basically colored in khaki, denim blue and olive green. Not only were the colors monotonous, but the dyes used were mostly petroleum based. Imagine no Craft Pink as vivid as the beavertail cactus flower. No Galah Green as bright as the waters off the…

6 Minutos de lectura
Illustration: Walker Cahall
Listen to “Picaflor” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

When a bad breakup sent him spiraling into a deep depression, Tom Ireson fixated on an unconventional way to get his head straight. “I really needed something to focus my mind on to pull me out of that,” Tom says, “and about the biggest thing I could think of was to try and do a new…

2 Minutos de lectura
Photo: David Clifford
Running the Subansiri
Bridget Crocker

I’d just stepped in human shit when I noticed Arun and Tilak praying next to the river’s put-in. I wanted to join them, but by the time I had scraped the squished feces from my sandal-clad toes, the young men were finished. “We made the offering, but the eggs were not rotten. It wasn’t so…

8 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Jim Ortel
My Brother’s Homemade Electric Car
Brooke Ortel

At age 15, my brother, Wade Ortel, bought a rusty 1973 Volkswagen Bug, a purchase that marked the beginning of an extraordinary journey. His dream? To build an electric car, all on his own, using salvaged laptop batteries. Two years and countless hours of work later, the “e-Bug” is a reality. In front of our…

4 Minutos de lectura
Graphic: Walker Cahall
Listen to “Endangered Spaces: Bears Ears” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“If you really want to have an adventure that’s not going to be sexy—it’s gonna be dirty and it’s gonna be rowdy—there’s a place out here for you,” says Josh Ewing. “It’s the chance to do something where you’re not going to see another climber.” In the beginning, Josh came to Bears Ears, Utah, in…

2 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Jarrah Lynch
Surfing and Making Sustainable Clothing on the Island of Serendip
Belinda Baggs

Almost a decade ago, I’d heard stories of mystical right points peeling forever without another soul in sight. What surfer addicted to logging wouldn’t crave to check it out, even though it meant ignoring travel warnings and venturing into a region suffering from civil unrest? Young, naive and most probably foolish, I set off on…

6 Minutos de lectura
Photo: John Bilderback
Mālama Honua: Hōkūle‘a’s Voyage of Hope
Jennifer Allen & John Bilderback

Part 5, Long Live Hōkūleʻa

7 Minutos de lectura
Photo: John Bilderback
Mālama Honua: Hōkūle‘a’s Voyage of Hope
Nainoa Thompson

Part 4, Right Direction

3 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Chuck Pratt
Remembering Royal Robbins
Yvon Chouinard

Everyone in the Patagonia family is saddened to hear about the passing of Royal Robbins on March 14, 2017. Some in the company knew him personally, many of us did not. But we are, to this day, greatly inspired by his pioneering spirit and commitment to clean climbing. In honor of his friend, Patagonia founder…

3 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Carl Zoch
Photos of a Quick-and-Dirty Crested Butte Bike Trip
Carl Zoch

We were craving it: fresh ribbons of single track, grinding climbs, white-knuckle descents, solitude, dirt. Four friends, four loaded bikes (rush-packed, survival-style), vague plan, limited time. The consensus was to leave it wide open and see where the trail might lead in a condensed time frame. Not a month. It wasn’t even a week. Just…

2 Minutos de lectura
Graphic: Walker Cahall
Listen to “The Fear Is Real” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

Loosely speaking, there are two kinds of fear. There’s the fear of external, objective hazards–like getting caught in an avalanche, or taking a bad fall climbing or getting mauled by a grizzly bear. Then, there’s the internal, more slippery kind of fear, like the fear of not being pretty enough, or not being popular enough…

2 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Hudson Henry
Nature and the Opportunity to Build Diverse Coalitions
Scott Briscoe

Inspiring youth of color to be the future stewards of our wild spaces.

5 Minutos de lectura
Illustration: Walker Cahall
Listen to “Leaving the Races Behind” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

If you travel down to Ushuaia, Argentina, you might just find a bus plastered with a massive photograph of Sam Evans-Brown. In that photo, he’s sprinting, shoulder to shoulder, with Olympic cross-country ski-racer Martin Bianchi in the final stretch of the 2008 national ski championship of Argentina. Today, Sam brings us the backstory to that…

1 Minutos de lectura
Graphic: Walker Cahall
Listen to “The Year of Big Ideas 2017” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

No matter who they voted for, right now, a lot of people in this country would agree that things could be better. In the long term, if we want things to go well or if we want to move forward or to grow, then two, almost evenly divided, sides of this country can’t remain at…

1 Minutos de lectura
Graphic: Walker Cahall
Listen to “To Infinity” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

Chad Kellogg. September 22, 1971 to February 14, 2014. Seattle climbing community legend. Dear friend to many. And the toughest guy around. “For Chad, not eating and shivering on ledges, that was like skiing powder for him. It was just that fun,” remembers Jens Holsten. Today, we take a look at what gets left behind…

1 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Florian Schulz
Nomad of the Arctic: An Interview with Photographer Florian Schulz
Eugénie Frerichs

This fall, we dedicated our late-November catalog to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. For the photo direction, we wanted to highlight life in the Refuge from the perspectives of both the Gwich’in people, for whom the Arctic’s coastal plain is sacred land, as well as the wildlife. Selecting a photographer to work with on the…

11 Minutos de lectura
Graphic: Walker Cahall
Listen to “CoMOMdo” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“As a mom, you have no book that tells you the right way to take care of your kids through bad times,” says Bonnie Elozory, mother of four. For seven years, the Elozory family weathered a relentless streak of bad luck. With no instructions on how to pull her family out of the muck, Bonnie…

1 Minutos de lectura
Photo: John Bilderback
Mālama Honua: Hōkūle‘a’s Voyage of Hope
Jennifer Allen & John Bilderback

Part 3, New Zealand

6 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Tom Frost / Aurora Photos
Tin Shed Ventures: Funding the Next Generation of Responsible Businesses
Patagonia

At Patagonia, we believe making great products, earning a profit and protecting our planet are not mutually exclusive objectives. That’s why, in 2013, we launched an investment fund to help like-minded start-ups on a similar mission. Today, we’re announcing a new name for the fund: Tin Shed Ventures (formally $20 Million & Change). We will…

3 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Kyle Sparks
A School That Goes into the Wild
Nicole Marie

Examining the concept of Forest Schools, where classes take place entirely outside.

4 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Kitty Calhoun
Thoughts from an Encounter with a Baby Humpback
Kitty Calhoun

I was on my first snorkel, on the lookout for humpback whales near Tonga, when a monstrous creature slowly rose through the murky water from the depths of the ocean. She was close enough that I could see her eye studying me. I was afraid and, while holding her gaze, backed away as fast as…

4 Minutos de lectura
Artwork: Walker Cahall
Listen to “Tales of Terror Vol. 7” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

This is our seventh annual Tales of Terror episode. Over the past seven years, we’ve read a lot of stories about scary things that happen out in the woods. We’ve discovered that there are all kinds of frightening things that can happen out there, but there are two ingredients that, mixed together, seem to lead…

1 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Mikey Schaefer
The Most Beautiful Product We Make Is the One You’re Wearing
Mikey Schaefer

At Patagonia, we think the most beautiful product is really designed by you. Every tear, stain and duct tape patch proves the bond that can develop between a person and their gear. Our Worn Wear repair program helps keep your well-loved clothes in action longer and provides an easy way to recycle Patagonia garments when…

4 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Carla Malloy
Chris Malloy Reflects on the Future
Chris Malloy

My three kids are young, too young for me to wax politics with. Nothing worse than an 8-year-old reciting slogans they don’t understand. For now, I’m getting them in the hills, letting them feel the cold and the growl in their bellies after a long day out. I’m doing my best to show them the value…

2 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Jody MacDonald
Under the Midnight Sun: A Paragliding Traverse of the Alaska Range
Gavin McClurg

To understand this story you have to understand that I’m not crazy. Sure I’ve had some close calls, but that doesn’t mean I’ve got a death wish. There was that time in Mexico when I got stuffed in a waterfall kayaking a first descent and spent over five minutes underwater. And there was the time…

17 Minutos de lectura
The Dirtbag Diaries
Listen to “No Way Around It” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

Ben Stookesberry and Chris Korbulic are the expedition kayakers. Over the past decade, the duo have made first descents of over 120 rivers in wildly remote locations across 36 countries and 6 continents. In 2016, Ben and Chris traveled to Myanmar to complete a source to sea descent of the Irrawaddy River. They both say…

1 Minutos de lectura
Book photo: Tim Davis
Introducing a New Edition of Yvon Chouinard’s “Let My People Go Surfing”
Yvon Chouinard

Ten years after its original publication, Penguin Books has released a completely revised and expanded edition of Yvon Chouinard’s classic memoir, Let My People Go Surfing: The Education of a Reluctant Businessman, with more than 40 percent new material and featuring a new foreword by Naomi Klein, author of the bestselling book This Changes Everything. In the…

5 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Donnie Hedden
Notes from the Road: Worn Wear Fall 2016 Tour
Donnie Hedden

We’re a little more than halfway through the tour here in the United States and can’t decide what’s worse: the summer heat down in the South or the demolition y’all do on your garments! Truthfully, we’re not fazed by either. We love the challenging repairs being thrown at us and don’t mind a bit of…

3 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Kyle Sparks
Why Should Employers Care About Families?
Rose Marcario

The poet Maya Angelou said, “When you know better, you do better.” But despite everything we know about the tangible and intangible benefits of taking care of our working families, collectively, we American business leaders provide paid family leave to just 11 percent of U.S. workers. Up to 35 percent of working women in the United States who give…

4 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “Start Saying Yes” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “Start Saying Yes” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“Over two weeks I went from pretty ‘fine’—I have to say ‘fine’ with air quotes and an eye roll, because it’s that kind of fine—so, I went from ‘fine’ to ‘I’m out!’ I just needed a life restart,” says Katie Crafts. For her thirtieth birthday, Katie gave herself a trip on a cruise to Antarctica.…

1 Minutos de lectura
Unbroken Ground
Unbroken Ground

Revolutions start from the bottom

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Photo: Juan Luis De Heeckeren
The Cleanest Line: Read the Story That Inspired the Name of This Blog
Chris Malloy

We are now third and fourth generation surfers. We have the confidence to leave the stereotypes behind. We’re the scroungiest dirtbags one day and then return to the urban environment as activists for change the next. Two time periods epitomize the style and sensibility of what we are working to create in the coming years.…

3 Minutos de lectura
Graphic by Walker Cahall
Listen to “The Ultimate Weekend Warrior” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

Jim Herson and Anne Smith live in the Bay Area. They’re in their fifties. Jim has worked the same computer science job since he graduated college in 1982, and he and Anne have been together nearly that long. They have two kids, a 17-year-old daughter and a 13-year-old son, who they shuttle around the city…

1 Minutos de lectura
Photo: John Bilderback
Mālama Honua: Hōkūle‘a’s Voyage of Hope
Jennifer Allen & John Bilderback

Part 2, The Sāmoan Way

7 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “Live From 5Point Vol. 9” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “Live From 5Point Vol. 9” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

Before Semi-Rad.com, Brendan Leonard wrote a Short for The Dirtbag Diaries called “Sixty Meters to Anywhere.” He recently published a book with the same title, documenting his journey from handcuffs to hand-jams, from rural Iowa to the mountains of Colorado and from business casual to assignments for Climbing magazine. We returned from our sixth annual…

1 Minutos de lectura
Harvesting Liberty
Harvesting Liberty

Industrial hemp is a crop that has the potential to lower the environmental impacts of textile production, empower small-scale farmers and create jobs in a wide variety of industries. Two non-profit groups, Fibershed and Growing Warriors, are working to reintroduce industrial hemp into Kentucky—and eventually U.S. agriculture.

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12:38
Photo: Donnie Hedden
“Harvesting Liberty:” A Film About Growing Hemp in the USA
Dan Malloy & Jill Dumain

TAKE ACTION! Ask Congress to pass the Industrial Hemp Farming Act, allowing American farmers to freely grow this commercially and environmentally important crop. Sign the petition at Change.org Industrial hemp is a crop that has the potential to lower the environmental impacts of textile production, empower small-scale farmers and create jobs in a wide variety…

6 Minutos de lectura
Artwork: Walker Cahall
Listen to “Trespassers” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

Artwork: Walker Cahall “You have to imagine that you’re on the frozen Arctic Ocean. You’re six miles from shore, you can’t really tell where the ocean stops and the white shore begins. All you see is white–and this thing where they’re dumping crap into the ocean to make this island,” says Dan Ritzman. “And, there,…

2 Minutos de lectura
Photo: John Bilderback
Mālama Honua: Hōkūleʻa’s Voyage of Hope
Jennifer Allen & John Bilderback

Part 1, The Curtain of Time

7 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Donnie Hedden
On the Road Again: Notes from the Spring 2016 Worn Wear Tour
Donnie Hedden

I had forgotten about the highway head turns and hollars, the uncompromising loyalty to garments that are decades older than me, the vastness and variety of this continent. The chorus of Worn Wear sentiments sing: on the road again. Anne Graham mending cuffs on a ’90s-era Snap-T. Photo: Donnie Hedden We’ve entered our sophomore year…

6 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Kyle Sparks
We Can Be Both: Mothers at Work
Patagonia

Every day in America, women return to work after the birth of a child to find an unsupportive environment lacking on-site child care, lactation programs and paid medical leave. No wonder there is an alarming lack of women in positions of leadership, board rooms and public office. Women will never be able to effectively “lean…

2 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Dylan Tomine
“Real Life” Science with the Wild Fish Conservancy
Dylan Tomine

Both of my kids love their science classes in school, and Skyla often mentions wanting to be a marine biologist when she grows up. So when the field biologists from the Wild Fish Conservancy invited us to participate in some beach-seine sampling, as part of their project to assess juvenile salmon habitat around Puget Sound, we jumped…

3 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Dörte Pietron
The 2015–16 Patagonia Season ‘Patagonia d’Or’
Rolando Garibotti

While many historic climbs occurred this past season, if I were giving awards, my “Patagonia d’Or” would go to a selfless and lasting non-ascent. The momentum began in late 2014, with climber Steffan Gregory, who sent me an email: “I’m looking at returning to Chaltén next season and wanted to put some time in giving…

4 Minutos de lectura
Dirtbag Diaries Podcast: A Slosh in the Bucket
Listen to “A Slosh in the Bucket” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

Artwork: Walker Cahall Eric Johnson lives in Sturgis, South Dakota with his wife and three young daughters. He works as a high school English teacher. He’s responsible—well, most of the time. Half way into his thirties, Eric emptied his retirement account to buy a raft, despite the fact that he lives in a state without…

2 Minutos de lectura
Mountain biking
Hiding Road Rash at My Wedding
Diane French

Fifteen minutes before my wedding, I’m standing in front of my sister in my dress. “Can you see it?” She scans me, tilting her head to each side. “No. Can’t see it. But here, take this anyway.” Two hours from now, when the hailstorm rolls in and turns my lips purple for all my wedding pictures,…

4 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Kyle Sparks
Strong Families Build Strong Businesses
Dean Carter

In the United States, up to 35 percent of working women who give birth never return to their jobs. Meanwhile, the cost of replacing employees can range from 35 to 200 percent of a worker’s salary, depending on seniority. TAKE ACTION NOW Visit the National Partnership for Women & Families and ask your representatives in…

4 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Garrett Grove
Here Today, Gone Tomorrow: A New Film
Eliel Hindert

The road has been my home for the better part of my adult life. That elusive space not quite here or there, but simply a collection of moments in between. Let’s rephrase that. The road has been where I’ve felt most at home for the better part of my entire life. Sure, I’ve had homes…

3 Minutos de lectura
Photo: Kevin Ahearn
A Different Path
Brooke Ortel

Living and designing sustainably in Southern Chile with Bureo co-founder Ben Kneppers.

6 Minutos de lectura
Listen to “Roll the Dice” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
Listen to “Roll the Dice” Dirtbag Diaries Podcast Episode
The Dirtbag Diaries

“We started the trip without much of a purpose,” writes Fil Corbitt. “We wanted to be pushed around. Wanted to find something we didn’t know we were looking for. We wanted to take some small chance and see where we landed. And see which side was facing up.” But how do you find that kind…

2 Minutos de lectura
Touring Seattle’s Bullitt Center: The greenest commercial building in the world
Touring Seattle’s Bullitt Center: The greenest commercial building in the world
Charles Clark & Jacqueline Sussman

“… after some thinking, I’d say I’d rather be a functioning cog in some great machinery, serving something beyond me.”              –Robin Pecknold of Fleet Foxes, “Helplessness Blues” On a far from average Wednesday, we arrived to work at Patagonia Seattle for a morning meeting led by brand responsibility analysts, Paul…

6 Minutos de lectura
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