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ϳԹ Magazine, Feb 2002
Stories
POSTs
Whenever adventure goes wrong, more than 5,000 everyday heroes stand ready for wilderness search and rescue. Meet six of the best in the business: unsung pioneers, backcountry veterans, and saviors of last resort who will risk everything to bring you back alive.
Twenty-seven specks of coral, lost in the Indian Ocean, 1,620 miles from Perth. And you thought Australia's interior was remote.
Only a few badgesLifesaving, Dog Care, and the impossible Seven-Minute Mile among themstood between this lapsed Scout and his boyhood dream of earning Scouting's highest honor
Innovations in synthetic insulation and a glut of high-quality down are making bags lighter and warmer than ever. We burrow into six of the best.
The just-in-time, let's-party, fear-no-evil Winter Olympics get ready to rip in the country that needs 'em now more than ever
What's that smell? It's a teeming avian sanctuary—and a sump of troubled waters. It's a mess that we created—and a puzzle we can't solve. It's California's Salton Sea, a hypersaline lake that kills the very life it shelters.
The marines' mountain warfare training center is the ultimate test for some of the world's toughest troops: a make-it-or-leave regimen of backcountry ski combat, torturous night maneuvers, and deadly cold. Any volunteers?
Two decades ago in Sarajevo, Bill Johnson won America's first Olympic gold medal in the downhill with an astonishing kamikaze performance. Now, in the wake of a comeback attempt that almost killed him, skiing's crash-course survivor struggles with the consequences of a life lived too fast.
F E A T U R E S
THE HEROES OF SEARCH AND RESCUE
Atop stormy mountains, on monster seas, in unmapped caves, wherever adventure goes wrong, a cadre of daring emergency rescuers stands ready to step in and save your butt—even if it means risking their own lives. Strap on your helmet and jump into the knife-edged world of America’s elite wilderness rescue squads: the perils they face, the risks they take, and the stories they tell.
Rainier’s a deadly place, but it’s lot safer thanks to Mike Gauthier’s dirtbag climbers. By Bruce Barcott
If you’re ever trapped deep underground, you’d better hope that Buddy Lane is on the way. By Hampton Sides
As Joel Hardin sees it, being an expert man-tracker is just a matter of reading dirt. By Bill Donahue
Canada’s premier avalanche-rescue specialist: He’s six years old, likes kibble, and answers to Keno. By Ki Bassett
Flying Coast Guard choppers in Alaska is nasty work, but Melissa Rivera likes it that way. By Natasha Singer
Chuck Demarest and his Boulder neighbors are the busiest volunteer rescuers in the U.S. By Peter Heller
PLUS: Reporter Rob Story’s —hair-raising stories from SAR veterans; the logic behind publishing the ; ; and .
California’s Salton Sea is a beautiful, enigmatic, repulsive mess—a rich fishery, a crucial bird refuge, and (yecch!) a foul lagoon seething with industrial toxins, weird pathogens, and bad juju. In a quest that nobody else should ever attempt, the author inflates a discount dinghy and sets out to explore the dark shores of America’s most baffling inland sea. By William T. Vollmann
The hardest, meanest, toughest U.S. Marines hail from the Corps’s Mountain Warfare Training Center, where extreme endurance skills are honed to lethal perfection. By Mark Jenkins
Bill Johnson, U.S. skiing’s unstoppable wildman, has traveled a rough road since he won the gold in 1984—and then, at 40, he almost died in an ill-starred comeback attempt. A tale of hubris, humility, and the redemptive powers of friendship beyond the Olympics’ hot glare. By Bill Donahue
D E P A R T M E N T S
DELUXE WINTER OLYMPICS PREVIEW
With a jittery public, security at a maximum, and U.S. athletes in pursuit of home-turf glory, Salt Lake gears up to try to deliver the global celebration America needs.
Gold rush: Will the U.S Ski and Snowboard Team make good on its promise to win an in Utah?
Introducing , America’s first medal threat in short-track speed skating.
up as women finally get a chance to weigh in.
It’s back: After a 54-year Olympic hiatus, skeleton (think headfirst luge) is the .
on where to eat, drink, climb, paraglide, and ski between Olympic events—compliments of Conrad Anker and other Salt Lake aficionados.
PLUS: Our roundup of —like carbon-fiber-soled ski boots—making its Olympic debut.
Do lost animals really travel long distances to get home? Why does campfire smoke follow you around? Do giraffes have vocal cords? If the head is the number-one route of heat loss, what’s number two? By Brad Wetzler
The tradition-lovin’ Boy Scouts are adamant about not granting Eagle Scout badges to lads over 18. That doesn’t stop our hard-charging writer, however, from going after his boyhood dream. By Bill Vaughn
Nearly 1,600 miles from the nearest point of land sits Australia’s best-kept secret: The kooky Cocos Islands, home to kayak-friendly seas, perfect surf, white-sand beaches, and an .
Plus: Club Med to lure the young and the feckless, ski resorts get environmentally graded, and for poquito dinero.
Our strengthens your core muscles so you can handle life’s unexpected bumps—and stay off the sidelines.
Eight essential exercises that will keep you strong and .
Getting good shut-eye is crucial, but not at the expense of a heavy load. Thanks to and innovative , now you can sleep warm and travel light. We’ve found the best new sleeping bags and pads for your next adventure.
Plus: .
The Future of Life, by E. O. Wilson; Servants of the Map, by Andrea Barrett; The Shell Collector, by Anthony Doerr; and The Dressing Station, by Jonathan Kaplan.