Chasing the Sacred: Down the Ganges From Snow to Sea
In northern India, there is a river with over a hundred names. It starts in the Garhwal Himalaya and drops over 14,000 feet from the terminus of the Gangotri Glacier before marching some 1,550 miles to...
View ArticleHigh in the Himalaya: 36 Avalanches and a Silent Refuge
One river, 18,000 feet, 1,500 miles. In the fall of 2013, photographer and videographer Pete McBride, along with professional climbers Jake Norton and Dave Morton, followed the Ganges River from snow...
View ArticleIndustry on the Banks: Deep Inside Kanpur’s Tanneries
One river, 18,000 feet, 1,500 miles. In the fall of 2013, photographer and videographer Pete McBride, along with professional climbers Jake Norton and Dave Morton, followed the Ganges River from snow...
View ArticleThe Pyres of Varanasi: Breaking the Cycle of Death and Rebirth
One river, 18,000 feet, 1,500 miles. In the fall of 2013, photographer and videographer Pete McBride, along with professional climbers Jake Norton and Dave Morton, followed the Ganges River from snow...
View ArticleKissing the Bay of Bengal: Celebration, Reverence, and Mystery
One river, 18,000 feet, 1,500 miles. In the fall of 2013, photographer and videographer Pete McBride, along with professional climbers Jake Norton and Dave Morton, followed the Ganges River from snow...
View ArticleGet Out of the Office—Why Wilderness is Not a Luxury
Whenever I fly, I prefer a window seat. Despite my excessive time in the air traveling for work (accruing an embarrassing carbon footprint), I marvel at the patterns of our world from 30,000 feet. I am...
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