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Laxaþjóð | A Salmon Nation

Our relationship with nature not only defines our history, it shapes our future, too. Yet beneath the surface of Iceland’s fjords, an industrial fish farming method threatens to destroy one of Europe’s last remaining wildernesses. Laxaþjóð | A Salmon Nation tells the story of a country united by its lands and waters, and the power of a community to protect the wild places and animals that helped forge its identity.

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Trail Running Stories

Dan Patitucci
Patagonia Ambassadors Run the New Patagonia Park, Part 2: The Run
Patagonia Ambassadors Run the New Patagonia Park, Part 2: The Run
Patagonia Ambassadors Run the New Patagonia Park, Part 2: The Run
Jeff Browning

How do you tell the story of 106 miles in two days in a short and concise manner? It’s nearly impossible—similar to trying to restore an ecosystem and build a national park. So many little steps, so many little stories. Our route would take us through the new Patagonia Park. Starting north in the town…

7 min Read
Breaking Trail for Clean Air
Breaking Trail for Clean Air
Breaking Trail for Clean Air
Ariella Carpenter

Running Up For Air is not a race. It’s a community, a gathering of friends and a fundraiser for clean-air advocacy.

7 min Read
A Matter of Breathing
A Matter of Breathing
A Matter of Breathing
Peyton Thomas

Running won’t solve the issue of wood pellet biomass pollution. But it can ignite community and conversation—and that’s a start.

8 min Read
The 150-Mile Test
The 150-Mile Test
The 150-Mile Test
Eric Noll

A Patagonia advanced R&D designer takes to the Swedish alpine to test out a new pack prototype—and a bold idea for rethinking multiday trail travel.

10 min Read
Run for Something
Run for Something
Run for Something
Meaghen Brown

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

7 min Read
In Search of Silence
In Search of Silence
In Search of Silence
Monica Prelle

A runner explores what it takes to find quiet in the world, and in our minds.

5 min Read
Prayer Run for Oak Flat
Prayer Run for Oak Flat
Prayer Run for Oak Flat

Reflections on the 2022 Oak Flat Prayer Run, a gathering and a protest of a planned copper mine that could destroy this sacred site.

9 min Read
Dark River Runs Deep
Dark River Runs Deep
Dark River Runs Deep
Martin Johnson & Michael Fordham

An attempt to set the fastest known time on the 184-mile path to the source of the River Thames.

7 min Read
Club Run
Club Run
Club Run
Anna Callaghan

The friends that make you want to run 100 miles.

10 min Read
Home Is an Open Place
Home Is an Open Place
Home Is an Open Place
Rio Lakeshore

How the trails beneath our feet help us belong.

6 min Read
For the Land We Inhabit
For the Land We Inhabit
For the Land We Inhabit
Felipe Cancino

The communities of Cajón del Maipo, in Chile, are seeing their environment be threatened by an unnecessary hydroelectric project.

9 min Read
A Clean Run in the City
A Clean Run in the City
A Clean Run in the City
Daisy Maddinson

Campaigning for clean air might be a marathon, but progress is finally being made for communities in UK city centers.

6 min Read
Running the Isle
Running the Isle
Running the Isle
Monica Prelle

Exploring one of the least visited but most revisited national parks, on foot.

10 min Read
Did You Ever Think?
Did You Ever Think?
Did You Ever Think?
Kim Strom

After a difficult year, a runner finds life anew in the Sierra.

10 min Read
Connecting the Cochamó and Puelo Valleys
Connecting the Cochamó and Puelo Valleys
Connecting the Cochamó and Puelo Valleys
Felipe Cancino

A dead-end dirt road is the start to a new challenge—and a fight to protect South America’s Yosemite.

6 min Read
Soulcraft
Soulcraft
Soulcraft
Meaghen Brown

Words and wisdom from two Montana runners.

4 min Read
Some Boundaries are Worth Preserving
Some Boundaries are Worth Preserving
Some Boundaries are Worth Preserving
Alex-Falconer

Running through the most-visited wilderness in the continental United States, rallying to its defense.

8 min Read
Run the Red
Run the Red
Run the Red
Katie Klingsporn

A trail running race in southwest Wyoming brings attention to the importance of protecting the largest unfenced area in the contiguous United States.

8 min Read
Running to the Bottom of the World
Running to the Bottom of the World
Running to the Bottom of the World
Felipe Cancino

Exploring South America’s public lands on foot.

6 min Read
The Most Obvious Line
The Most Obvious Line
The Most Obvious Line
Luke Nelson

Luke Nelson's FKT on the Wasatch Ultimate Ridge Linkup.

5 min Read
Where Life Begins: Patagonia Ambassadors Explore the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
Where Life Begins: Patagonia Ambassadors Explore the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
Where Life Begins: Patagonia Ambassadors Explore the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
Clare Gallagher

 

5 min Read
FFFKT (Fastest Fish Fourteener Known Time)
FFFKT (Fastest Fish Fourteener Known Time)
FFFKT (Fastest Fish Fourteener Known Time)
Jenn Shelton

Jenn Shelton traverses the Sierra High Route.

15 min Read
If You Love It, Run for It: Dispatch from the Inaugural Takayna Ultramarathon
If You Love It, Run for It: Dispatch from the Inaugural Takayna Ultramarathon
If You Love It, Run for It: Dispatch from the Inaugural Takayna Ultramarathon
Krissy Moehl

Krissy Moehl reports from the inaugural takayna ultramarathon “There are no footprints.” Fellow Patagonia ambassador and New Zealand native Grant Guise voiced what I was thinking. Our headlamps and phone lights dimly illuminated the overgrown double-track from Rebecca Road. “If 100 people are starting a race in five minutes, we would see footprints,” he said…

14 min Read
Introducing “Training for the Uphill Athlete” by Steve House
Introducing “Training for the Uphill Athlete” by Steve House
Introducing “Training for the Uphill Athlete” by Steve House
Steve House

In his new book, Training for the Uphill Athlete, 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 effort. Even lunges. The wind had made its presence known all night, the tiny tent shaking off its layer…

6 min Read
Why Run
Why Run
Why Run
Meaghen Brown

Generations of a Diné family reflect on running.

7 min Read
Seven Recommendations for Trail Racing and Training
Seven Recommendations for Trail Racing and Training
Seven Recommendations for Trail Racing and Training
Kílian Jornet

Patagonia is thrilled to publish Steve House and Scott Johnston’s second training book, Training for the Uphill Athlete, for which they teamed up with world-class endurance athlete Kílian Jornet. This is an excerpt from the book, now available in Patagonia stores, on Patagonia.com, and at your favorite bookstore or online distributor. I race a lot:…

4 min Read
A Very Large, Long Group Run Through the Bob Marshall Wilderness
A Very Large, Long Group Run Through the Bob Marshall Wilderness
A Very Large, Long Group Run Through the Bob Marshall Wilderness
Meaghen Brown

For the slo-mo, bug-bitten, exhausted joy of really long runs. Time expands and compresses on long runs. Moments of navigation or extended discomfort can seem endless, while the landscape sifts by like a slow-moving picture. And then suddenly it’s been hours that slipped by without you noticing, except for the subtle changes in light and…

2 min Read
Home Run: How the Braford Family Connects by Foot
Home Run: How the Braford Family Connects by Foot
Home Run: How the Braford Family Connects by Foot
Meaghen Brown

Some families share religion, camping, lavish vacations, opera. Other families go running.

4 min Read
Krissy Moehl and Jeremy Wolf Run from Bellingham to Mt. Baker
Krissy Moehl and Jeremy Wolf Run from Bellingham to Mt. Baker
Krissy Moehl and Jeremy Wolf Run from Bellingham to Mt. Baker
Krissy Moehl

On clear days in the Pacific Northwest, views of Mount Baker depend on the marine layer and the storms. The 10,781-foot snowcapped dome is often obscured by the shifting weather, and though I’d grown up looking at the mountain, I didn’t see it much this year. But when Jeremy Wolf emailed me about running to…

7 min Read
Tackling All of California’s 14ers by Bike, and Only Getting a Little Lost
Tackling All of California’s 14ers by Bike, and Only Getting a Little Lost
Tackling All of California’s 14ers by Bike, and Only Getting a Little Lost
Erik Schulte

Groggily I stirred in the sweaty musk of my sleeping bag. I’d spent the night on the hard concrete slab directly outside the Independence campground’s pit toilets, with the wafting stench of shit enveloping my fitful slumber. I shut my eyes, trying to forget where I was. My hips were sore, my kidneys ached and…

8 min Read
The Way There: Why We Create and Seek Out Trails
Professional orienteer and wilderness advocate Hanny Allston runs near one of the entry points to the takayna / Tarkine region. Photo: Mikey Schaefer
The Way There: Why We Create and Seek Out Trails
Meaghen Brown

It starts with the focal beam of a headlamp. Sunrise is more than an hour away and it’s pouring rain. Hands tucked into the sleeves of a jacket, and the pace already quick through the sharp Tasmanian buttongrass—trying to stay warm. There is an urgency to understand this threatened place, to know takayna / Tarkine as…

4 min Read
Three Hours, Max: Underestimating a Run
Three Hours, Max: Underestimating a Run
Three Hours, Max: Underestimating a Run
Will Leith

The map showed an unbroken line contoured to the ridge. We started running along that line and ran past its end, into a space between two worlds. A few orange ribbons hung on branches in natural openings, marking what might eventually be the beginning of a trail. We followed it. When a gravel slope appeared…

3 min Read
Messengers: A 250-Mile Relay Across Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante
Messengers: A 250-Mile Relay Across Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante
Messengers: A 250-Mile Relay Across Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante
Johnie Gall & Johnie Gall & Andy Cochrane

As we sat on the tailgate of the truck, our frozen breath swirling under the light of a headlamp, we heard the first distant thud of rubber on dirt. The approaching runner was still a mile away, but you can hear just about anything that happens in the dense stillness of 2 a.m. in the…

4 min Read
Lessons in Gratitude
Photo: Jared Campbell
Lessons in Gratitude
Luke Nelson

It started on a hot afternoon in May, deep in Bears Ears National Monument. Four of us had been going hard for a couple of days and the fatigue from difficult miles was stacking up. One of us was struggling. It might have been lack of training, or perhaps improper fueling for back-to-back 12-hour days…

3 min Read
The Disaster Training Plan: Running the Tour du Mont Blanc with Jenn Shelton
Photo: Andrew Burr
The Disaster Training Plan: Running the Tour du Mont Blanc with Jenn Shelton
Morgan Sjogren

“We just have to run 20, 30 or 50 miles a day over some mountains. What could go wrong?” When I received my itinerary from Jenn Shelton to run the Tour du Mont Blanc, I took a hard swallow of quickly drying saliva, knowing that my background as a middle-distance track racer (specializing in the 5K)…

7 min Read
Defending the Idea of Wilderness
Photo: Paul Hendricks
Defending the Idea of Wilderness
Paul Hendricks

The Secretary of the Interior arrived in Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument midday on May 10, 2017. He came to perform an “assessment” of the monument—to see whether the current boundaries overstepped their task of protecting natural and cultural resources and spurring economic growth. It was raining, windy and cold, but hundreds of locals gathered at…

7 min Read

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