Everybody has a few one-liners that always crop up in their heads when they’re out hiking, skiing, climbing, and/or having a good time or bad time outside. I brainstormed a few bits of this advice I’ve remembered over the years from mentors, friends, authors, plus some of my own mantras and a few that Facebook friends sent me. Hope some of these save your ass, or at least put a smile on your face.
- Always bring a headlamp.
- The best place to keep extra batteries for your headlamp is in another headlamp. —
- When you feel low, eat and eat more. When you feel good, slow down. —Vivian Doorn, advice about 100-mile races
- Don’t buy gear, buy plane tickets. —Yvon Chouinard
- Don’t try to muscle through anything—just keep spinning. —My friend Mick, on long-distance bike touring
- Always carry a spoon. You never want to miss out on free food.
- Always take a big bowl or mug on a group trip, or go hungry.
- Ounces equal pounds, and pounds equal pain. —Unknown
- Don’t get in your sleeping bag with damp socks on.
- Don’t expect a great night of sleep while camping—expect a series of naps.
- When you wake up wondering if you should get out of your sleeping bag/tent to pee or if you can get back to sleep without getting up to pee … just get up and go pee.
- Check your knot. —
- A helmet almost always protects your brain more than a stylish hat.
- Pain is just a feeling. —
- Geologic time includes now. —Gerry Roach
- Sometimes eating’s not about liking. —
- Always make sure the cap is on your water bottle.
- If it hurts to walk and it hurts to run, running will hurt for less time. —
- Commit. —, on ultrarunning
- If you can follow it, you can lead it.
- Sunburns are for amateurs.
- Basically you just don’t want to fall when leading ice climbs. —Lee Smith
- It’s not really a “dry suit.” It’s more like a “slowly getting damp suit.” —
- Eventually, they all become rock skis.
- Don’t say “photos don’t do it justice.” Somebody’s photos do.
- Somebody can ride that on a hardtail.
- Only do one stupid thing at a time. —Shannon Walton
- Start cold.
- The more you know, the less you need. —Yvon Chouinard
- If you’re going to go ultra-light, make sure you have ultra-experience. —Nicole Dautel
- The odds on very difficult climbs are not in your favor. So there’s no excuse to show up unprepared, to show up out of shape. —
- When skiing in the trees, don’t look at the trees, look at the spaces in between.
- There are no bad adventures, just bad company. —Libby VandeKamp Littler
- That’s the thing about goals, they don’t just fuckin lie down for you. —Jayson Sime
- There’s really no such thing as a self-arrest once you get going on a steep slope—you really have to stick the landing if you fall. —Lee Smith
- Never stand when you can sit. Never sit when you can lie down. (The first rule of mountaineering)
- Going one mile an hour with zero breaks is faster than going two miles an hour and stopping to catch your breath every five minutes.
- Most tents are no good without the poles
- Don’t plan on it not raining.
- There are two easy ways to die in the desert—thirst and drowning. —Craig Childs
- Learn how to fix a flat tire and always carry a spare tube.
- Breathe.
- It’s easier to stay out than get out. —Mark Twain
- You’ll be fine. —Alex Honnold/anyone who’s ever sandbagged a friend
- Pick your partners first, then the objective. —
- Ideal circumstances rarely make for interesting stories. —Scott Nowacki
- If you wouldn't ski it without your avy beacon, you still shouldn't ski it with your avy beacon. —Peter Wadsworth
- If you always eat your best food first, you'll always be eating your best food. —Unknown NOLS instructor
- Never judge the weather from your sleeping bag. —
- Go average, go often. —Reid Pitman
- If there is a solution to the problem, why worry? If there is no solution, why worry? —Bill Thompson
- Wear a hat. —My mom
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