Difficulty Intermediate

What Is the Alpine Zone?

The alpine zone is the ecological region above treeline, where harsh cold, wind, and short summers allow only low-growing, fragile plants like grasses, sedges, and cushion plants. It offers stunning open terrain but is highly sensitive — hikers stay on rock or trail to avoid trampling vegetation that takes decades to recover.

What Is Slackpacking?

Slackpacking is hiking a long trail while someone else transports your overnight gear, so you carry only a light day pack between points. Often arranged through hostels or shuttle services, it lets hikers cover trail miles with far less weight, trading some self-sufficiency for comfort and speed.

What Is a Section Hike?

A section hike is completing a long-distance trail in separate trips over time, rather than in one continuous thru-hike. Section hikers tackle the trail piece by piece — over weekends, holidays, or years — making long trails accessible to people who can't take months off at once.

What Is Ultralight Backpacking?

Ultralight backpacking is a style of backpacking focused on minimizing pack weight, typically aiming for a base weight under 10 lb (4.5 kg) by carrying lighter, simpler, multi-use gear. Lower weight means less fatigue and faster travel, at the cost of comfort, durability, and margin — so it rewards skill and planning.

What Is Base Weight in Backpacking?

Base weight is the weight of a backpacker's gear excluding consumables — food, water, and fuel — that change over a trip. It's the standard way to compare pack loads because it stays constant. Lowering base weight is the central goal of ultralight backpacking, with benchmarks around 20 lb for lightweight and under 10 lb for ultralight.

What Is Scrambling?

Scrambling is moving over steep, rocky terrain that's harder than hiking but easier than technical climbing, using your hands as well as your feet for balance and progress. It bridges hiking and climbing, ranging from easy hands-on terrain to exposed routes where a fall would be serious.

What Is a Thru-Hike?

A thru-hike is hiking a long-distance trail from end to end in a single continuous journey, typically over weeks or months. Famous thru-hikes include the Appalachian Trail and Pacific Crest Trail. It demands resupply planning, lightweight gear, and the endurance to walk and camp for the whole route.

What Is a Kilter Board?

A Kilter Board is an adjustable-angle training wall with large, friendly holds and LED-lit problems set through an app, designed to be more accessible and fun than other system boards. The lights show each problem's holds, and the changeable angle suits a wide range of abilities, making it popular for both training and casual sessions.

What Is a MoonBoard?

A MoonBoard is a standardized, steeply overhanging training wall with a fixed layout of holds and an app that sets thousands of shareable benchmark problems. Because every MoonBoard is identical worldwide, climbers can compare their performance and train on the same problems anywhere, making it a benchmark tool for serious bouldering strength.

What Is a Hangboard?

A hangboard (or fingerboard) is a wall-mounted training board with edges, pockets, and slopers of varying sizes, used to build finger and grip strength through timed dead hangs and repeaters. It is the most popular and effective tool for targeted finger training, but its intense loading makes a careful, progressive approach essential to avoid injury.