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  • Wild, Not Reckless: Safety Tips for Solo Adventuring

    Wild, Not Reckless: Safety Tips for Solo Adventuring

    You don’t need permission to wander solo. But you do need a plan. Being a woman alone in the outdoors can feel bold, liberating, even radical. But “wild” doesn’t have to mean reckless. In fact, the more informed and prepared you are, the more confident and grounded your time outside will feel. This post…

  • You Can Be Feminine and Outdoorsy — No, Really

    You Can Be Feminine and Outdoorsy — No, Really

    There’s a moment I always come back to. I was at 10,000 ft elevation. Kneeling in the dirt, windburned and sun-tired, tying a new fly onto my line with chipped toenail polish showing through my Teva’s and dirt under my fingernails. My hat was pulled low against the wind. And I caught a glimpse…

  • Hit the Trail: 5 Essentials to Get You Hiking

    Hit the Trail: 5 Essentials to Get You Hiking

    There’s nothing quite like stepping into the wild — the sound of your boots crunching on the trail, wind whistling through the trees, and that quiet thrill of knowing you’re doing something just for you. If you’re new to hiking, the idea of getting started can feel overwhelming. But the truth is: you don’t…

  • Being a Woman [in the Outdoors] is Hard

    Being a Woman [in the Outdoors] is Hard

    The wild doesn’t care about your gender. The mountains don’t lower themselves for your comfort, and the trail doesn’t ask your permission before it climbs. In nature, everything is earned. And for women navigating the outdoors — whether hiking solo, setting up camp, fishing alpine lakes, or glassing ridgelines for elk — the journey…

  • Taking Up Space in the Wild: Getting Past the Doubt

    Taking Up Space in the Wild: Getting Past the Doubt

    “Where’s your husband?”“Are you sure you know how to use that?”“You’re out here alone?” I’ve heard it all. And every time, I get a little more rooted in my why. When I first started hunting, hiking, and fly fishing, I thought I needed to downplay my inexperience, shrink my presence, or laugh off the…

  • Hello World: Why I Started Wild on Her Terms

    Hello World: Why I Started Wild on Her Terms

    Somewhere between packing out elk quarters and learning to fly fish, I realized something: I didn’t need to fit into anyone’s version of “outdoorsy.” I could make my own.