
All Stories

A powerful solution to climate change lies just beneath the surface.

To fight the bottom trawlers destroying his beloved Mediterranean Sea, an Italian fisherman realizes art can be the most powerful form of protest.

When the fish stop flourishing, a few local Scots take matters into their own hands, one seagrass bed at a time.

Ramón Navarro joins the Kawésqar community on a journey to protect their ancestral waters in Chilean Patagonia.

Struggling with a mental health crisis, one woman returns to the waters that raised her and finds healing in the ocean.

In a small British Columbia mountain town, one woman is using trails to help heal wounds and bridge two communities.

The decline of aquatic insects should bug everyone.

Trying to address the climate crisis without the ocean will not work.

An excerpt from Steven Hawley’s book about dirty dams—and their methane problem.

Hard alpinism in the Cordillera Huayhuash endures as the climate changes the routes.

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

Lost and in search of purpose, one man turns to bikes as his vehicle to overcome.

Searching for Europe’s most infamous predator in the Italian Alps

Even when the demands of a protest are not met, it can have lasting, immeasurable consequences.

How we’re finally getting to PFC-free—and why it took so long.

Albania’s untamed Vjosa River introduces a new model for global water conservation.

For these Afghan women, climbing in Yosemite is a connection to home.

Footprints Running Camp is as much about finding solutions to the climate crisis as it is about running.

Photographic time travel with longtime Patagonia contributor Gary Bigham.

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.

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

Scenes from ground zero of the greatest surf event in seven years.

TM Herbert helped put up the first ascent of the Muir Wall in 1965. His son followed in his footsteps 55 years later.