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We have around 84 most liked photos of Cory Richards with the thumbnails listed below. Click on any of them to view the full image along with its caption, like count, and a button to download the photo.

20.2K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : February 4th, 2011. // A lot changed after this photo. And if Iām honest, its taken 12 years to gratefully embrace the radical shifts. On one hand, the climb and avalanche launched a long and meaningful career with @natgeo I did 12 feature assignments for the magazine that affected policy and conservation. The the world opened up. I also took a lot of it for granted, often missing the moment, blinded by an onslaught of opportunity and arrogance. Just now am I really feeling the gravity of what I was offered. But the avalanche also led me into a long and often dark journey with complex post traumatic stress and acute PTSD, unraveling much of my inner world, influencing my actions, leading me to behave out of alignment with my values and virtue. All of that led me into my advocacy around mental health. I discovered that feigned vulnerability was a way to mask the inner turmoil. I had all the words, but none of the feelings. Speaking to it drove disconnection because I was was using vulnerability to hijack connection which drove isolation. By being āhonestā and āauthenticā, I could escape real accountability. I needed to go through it to understand. I was disconnected not only with the world around me, but with myself. In time, I learned what real authenticity looks and feels like. I learned that I can know it all, but knowledge isnāt healing. In fact, the knowing is often a trap, leading us into stories that hold us captive. Healing happens when we drop the story, stop hiding behind it to justify all the bullshit, and transcend the narrative. I see this a lot these days. One of the issues with the broader and much needed conversation around mental health is it gets used not to understand but excuse poor behavior. Choices are still ours. Stories are chosen. And even if actions feel out of our control, addressing the root issues is not. The work of mental health is not leveraging brokenness to sidestep responsibility. Brokenness itself is a story. Yes, things happen. Yes, they can change our brains. Our job is to care for and heal those wounds, understand our stories but not be defined by them, and bring us into alignment with ourselves.Likes : 20245

20.2K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : February 4th, 2011. // A lot changed after this photo. And if Iām honest, its taken 12 years to gratefully embrace the radical shifts. On one hand, the climb and avalanche launched a long and meaningful career with @natgeo I did 12 feature assignments for the magazine that affected policy and conservation. The the world opened up. I also took a lot of it for granted, often missing the moment, blinded by an onslaught of opportunity and arrogance. Just now am I really feeling the gravity of what I was offered. But the avalanche also led me into a long and often dark journey with complex post traumatic stress and acute PTSD, unraveling much of my inner world, influencing my actions, leading me to behave out of alignment with my values and virtue. All of that led me into my advocacy around mental health. I discovered that feigned vulnerability was a way to mask the inner turmoil. I had all the words, but none of the feelings. Speaking to it drove disconnection because I was was using vulnerability to hijack connection which drove isolation. By being āhonestā and āauthenticā, I could escape real accountability. I needed to go through it to understand. I was disconnected not only with the world around me, but with myself. In time, I learned what real authenticity looks and feels like. I learned that I can know it all, but knowledge isnāt healing. In fact, the knowing is often a trap, leading us into stories that hold us captive. Healing happens when we drop the story, stop hiding behind it to justify all the bullshit, and transcend the narrative. I see this a lot these days. One of the issues with the broader and much needed conversation around mental health is it gets used not to understand but excuse poor behavior. Choices are still ours. Stories are chosen. And even if actions feel out of our control, addressing the root issues is not. The work of mental health is not leveraging brokenness to sidestep responsibility. Brokenness itself is a story. Yes, things happen. Yes, they can change our brains. Our job is to care for and heal those wounds, understand our stories but not be defined by them, and bring us into alignment with ourselves.Likes : 20245

15.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : A few people have asked me to give a thought or something to this photo. I think that it’s one of those pictures that’s meant to let the viewer decide what it “means” or if it means anything at all. It was a beautiful evening out in Texas. The water was low and calm, and it was very quiet. @kayotejoseph and I were talking about stories and how they shape us and debating whether or not aging was just a story and I said, “As far as I know, Buddha still got old and died. I like the poetry of a beginning and end. If there wasn’t an end, the middle wouldn’t mean anything. Living forever as atoms is enough.” I like getting older because I know so much less. I’m less certain of anything. Maybe it is all some cosmic simulation. I don’t really care because we experience it as we do and all the ideas of manifestation and trying to live forever seems a bit arrogant. Don’t get me wrong. I believe in the power of manifestation and the mind. I just don’t need it to be an identity. For me, it’s quiet, personal work. I don’t need to wear beads and tell everyone how spiritual I am. I don’t need to do ayahuasca 60 times and make sure you know. The most spiritual, in touch people I’ve ever met were wearing overalls and had dirty hands. If they wore beads, they were hidden under a frayed flannel. I have a limited amount of time. I’m shooting for 92-94 years. Right now I’m just choosing to be grateful for what I have, accepting it, and making changes from self acceptance vs. self rejection. As far as I’ve experienced, lasting change doesn’t come from a pill or a plant or a book which all search outside of ourselves to unlock whats already in us. By all means, go on a journey. Get a glimpse of god. Feel connected. Just don’t mistake an experience for change. Just because you made fire in a dream doesnt mean you know how when you’ re awake. You gotta go rub some sticks togehter. It’s just information. It’s just like a book. You can read a thousand books about being a better version of yourself and still be wildly unhappy and never change a damn thing. In my experience, lasting change doesn’t come from what we aren’t, but what we are. I guess I did have something to say.Likes : 15388

10.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : On June 3, 1972 my parents were married. For 51 years, theyāve chosen love. And on the days when love was scarce, they chose patient commitment. I think a lot about what makes relationships last which seems rarer and rarer these days. Many people say communication. For me, and for my parents, it boils down to another word: safety. In safety, theyāve been able to overcome all that life has thrown at them from challenging children to cancer. Today Iām grateful for every decision theyāve made because without them, I would not be me. I inherited their curiosity, their deep appreciation for wild places, and their awe for the world and all its mystery. Iām proud of their example. Despite all the complexity of life, theyāve carried on, mostly smiling. Now, our family has crossed the threshold where every day is a gift. In these waning moments, Iāve watched them become more giving. Tonight is a full moon and they are celebrating under an Italian sky. They deserve it. Also, hereās some footage of dad eating gelatoā¦Likes : 10334

10.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : On June 3, 1972 my parents were married. For 51 years, theyāve chosen love. And on the days when love was scarce, they chose patient commitment. I think a lot about what makes relationships last which seems rarer and rarer these days. Many people say communication. For me, and for my parents, it boils down to another word: safety. In safety, theyāve been able to overcome all that life has thrown at them from challenging children to cancer. Today Iām grateful for every decision theyāve made because without them, I would not be me. I inherited their curiosity, their deep appreciation for wild places, and their awe for the world and all its mystery. Iām proud of their example. Despite all the complexity of life, theyāve carried on, mostly smiling. Now, our family has crossed the threshold where every day is a gift. In these waning moments, Iāve watched them become more giving. Tonight is a full moon and they are celebrating under an Italian sky. They deserve it. Also, hereās some footage of dad eating gelatoā¦Likes : 10334

10.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : On June 3, 1972 my parents were married. For 51 years, theyāve chosen love. And on the days when love was scarce, they chose patient commitment. I think a lot about what makes relationships last which seems rarer and rarer these days. Many people say communication. For me, and for my parents, it boils down to another word: safety. In safety, theyāve been able to overcome all that life has thrown at them from challenging children to cancer. Today Iām grateful for every decision theyāve made because without them, I would not be me. I inherited their curiosity, their deep appreciation for wild places, and their awe for the world and all its mystery. Iām proud of their example. Despite all the complexity of life, theyāve carried on, mostly smiling. Now, our family has crossed the threshold where every day is a gift. In these waning moments, Iāve watched them become more giving. Tonight is a full moon and they are celebrating under an Italian sky. They deserve it. Also, hereās some footage of dad eating gelatoā¦Likes : 10334

8.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Time is slippery. 13 years ago today we (barely) managed do the first winter ascent of one of Pakistanās 8000 m peaks, Gasherbrum II. So much has changed sinceā¦and so much remains the same. One thing that will never change is the love and gratitude I feel for @iamsimonemoro and @urubkodenis for their friendship and mentorship. This climb unquestionably changed the trajectory of everything. More on that in #TheColorOfEverything out July 9th, 2024.Likes : 8252

8.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Time is slippery. 13 years ago today we (barely) managed do the first winter ascent of one of Pakistanās 8000 m peaks, Gasherbrum II. So much has changed sinceā¦and so much remains the same. One thing that will never change is the love and gratitude I feel for @iamsimonemoro and @urubkodenis for their friendship and mentorship. This climb unquestionably changed the trajectory of everything. More on that in #TheColorOfEverything out July 9th, 2024.Likes : 8252

8.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Time is slippery. 13 years ago today we (barely) managed do the first winter ascent of one of Pakistanās 8000 m peaks, Gasherbrum II. So much has changed sinceā¦and so much remains the same. One thing that will never change is the love and gratitude I feel for @iamsimonemoro and @urubkodenis for their friendship and mentorship. This climb unquestionably changed the trajectory of everything. More on that in #TheColorOfEverything out July 9th, 2024.Likes : 8252

8.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Time is slippery. 13 years ago today we (barely) managed do the first winter ascent of one of Pakistanās 8000 m peaks, Gasherbrum II. So much has changed sinceā¦and so much remains the same. One thing that will never change is the love and gratitude I feel for @iamsimonemoro and @urubkodenis for their friendship and mentorship. This climb unquestionably changed the trajectory of everything. More on that in #TheColorOfEverything out July 9th, 2024.Likes : 8252

8.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Time is slippery. 13 years ago today we (barely) managed do the first winter ascent of one of Pakistanās 8000 m peaks, Gasherbrum II. So much has changed sinceā¦and so much remains the same. One thing that will never change is the love and gratitude I feel for @iamsimonemoro and @urubkodenis for their friendship and mentorship. This climb unquestionably changed the trajectory of everything. More on that in #TheColorOfEverything out July 9th, 2024.Likes : 8252

8.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Time is slippery. 13 years ago today we (barely) managed do the first winter ascent of one of Pakistanās 8000 m peaks, Gasherbrum II. So much has changed sinceā¦and so much remains the same. One thing that will never change is the love and gratitude I feel for @iamsimonemoro and @urubkodenis for their friendship and mentorship. This climb unquestionably changed the trajectory of everything. More on that in #TheColorOfEverything out July 9th, 2024.Likes : 8252

8.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Time is slippery. 13 years ago today we (barely) managed do the first winter ascent of one of Pakistanās 8000 m peaks, Gasherbrum II. So much has changed sinceā¦and so much remains the same. One thing that will never change is the love and gratitude I feel for @iamsimonemoro and @urubkodenis for their friendship and mentorship. This climb unquestionably changed the trajectory of everything. More on that in #TheColorOfEverything out July 9th, 2024.Likes : 8252

8.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Time is slippery. 13 years ago today we (barely) managed do the first winter ascent of one of Pakistanās 8000 m peaks, Gasherbrum II. So much has changed sinceā¦and so much remains the same. One thing that will never change is the love and gratitude I feel for @iamsimonemoro and @urubkodenis for their friendship and mentorship. This climb unquestionably changed the trajectory of everything. More on that in #TheColorOfEverything out July 9th, 2024.Likes : 8252

8.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Time is slippery. 13 years ago today we (barely) managed do the first winter ascent of one of Pakistanās 8000 m peaks, Gasherbrum II. So much has changed sinceā¦and so much remains the same. One thing that will never change is the love and gratitude I feel for @iamsimonemoro and @urubkodenis for their friendship and mentorship. This climb unquestionably changed the trajectory of everything. More on that in #TheColorOfEverything out July 9th, 2024.Likes : 8252

7.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : 12 years ago today. First winter ascent of Gasherbrum II 8,034 meters. Brothers for life @iamsimonemoro @urubkodenis I donāt know what the temperature was on the summit because our altimeters were frozen. We do know that it was -51 c inside the tent, out of the wind, with three grown men emitting heat. Winds were gusting to about 60-75 kph on the summit, so windchill was likely significant, potentially dropping the temps to around -70. By the time we left the summit, the forecasted storm had hit. Winds increased and visibility dropped until it was so white, it gave us a sense of vertigo. The only way I could keep balance was by staring at whoever was leading. When it was my turn, we dropped below the glacial plateau onto exposed rock, but by then it was getting dark and we were concerned that the tent had blown away. Summits are an interesting place. They mark the physical half way point, but youāve usually used about 80% of the gas in the tank. This climb never would have happened without the vast experience of both Simone and Denis. I was so incredibly lucky to be part of the team. Three guys, in winter, alone on the 13th highest mountain in the world. It was, to say the least, improbable. 16 expeditions over 26 years had tried and failed to make a winter ascent of one the five Pakistani 8000 meter summits. At the time, I had no idea Iād be the first American. I had no idea how much the climb would change me for better and for worse. I had no idea of the gravity of the undertaking. Had I, I probably wouldnāt have come. Ignorance can be bliss. Simone and Denis and I donāt talk often, but when we do it is a deep bond and resonance. Itās not that we donāt share profound love and respect, but that life simply moves on. I rarely think about the climb, but I always think of them. I have been so fucking lucky to have men like them in my life. Iāve always sought out brothers and mentors. Sometimes because I needed their shine to light my own way. I love them so much. All of them. I am so grateful. Stay tuned for post two on February 4th.Likes : 7449

7.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : 12 years ago today. First winter ascent of Gasherbrum II 8,034 meters. Brothers for life @iamsimonemoro @urubkodenis I donāt know what the temperature was on the summit because our altimeters were frozen. We do know that it was -51 c inside the tent, out of the wind, with three grown men emitting heat. Winds were gusting to about 60-75 kph on the summit, so windchill was likely significant, potentially dropping the temps to around -70. By the time we left the summit, the forecasted storm had hit. Winds increased and visibility dropped until it was so white, it gave us a sense of vertigo. The only way I could keep balance was by staring at whoever was leading. When it was my turn, we dropped below the glacial plateau onto exposed rock, but by then it was getting dark and we were concerned that the tent had blown away. Summits are an interesting place. They mark the physical half way point, but youāve usually used about 80% of the gas in the tank. This climb never would have happened without the vast experience of both Simone and Denis. I was so incredibly lucky to be part of the team. Three guys, in winter, alone on the 13th highest mountain in the world. It was, to say the least, improbable. 16 expeditions over 26 years had tried and failed to make a winter ascent of one the five Pakistani 8000 meter summits. At the time, I had no idea Iād be the first American. I had no idea how much the climb would change me for better and for worse. I had no idea of the gravity of the undertaking. Had I, I probably wouldnāt have come. Ignorance can be bliss. Simone and Denis and I donāt talk often, but when we do it is a deep bond and resonance. Itās not that we donāt share profound love and respect, but that life simply moves on. I rarely think about the climb, but I always think of them. I have been so fucking lucky to have men like them in my life. Iāve always sought out brothers and mentors. Sometimes because I needed their shine to light my own way. I love them so much. All of them. I am so grateful. Stay tuned for post two on February 4th.Likes : 7449

7.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : 12 years ago today. First winter ascent of Gasherbrum II 8,034 meters. Brothers for life @iamsimonemoro @urubkodenis I donāt know what the temperature was on the summit because our altimeters were frozen. We do know that it was -51 c inside the tent, out of the wind, with three grown men emitting heat. Winds were gusting to about 60-75 kph on the summit, so windchill was likely significant, potentially dropping the temps to around -70. By the time we left the summit, the forecasted storm had hit. Winds increased and visibility dropped until it was so white, it gave us a sense of vertigo. The only way I could keep balance was by staring at whoever was leading. When it was my turn, we dropped below the glacial plateau onto exposed rock, but by then it was getting dark and we were concerned that the tent had blown away. Summits are an interesting place. They mark the physical half way point, but youāve usually used about 80% of the gas in the tank. This climb never would have happened without the vast experience of both Simone and Denis. I was so incredibly lucky to be part of the team. Three guys, in winter, alone on the 13th highest mountain in the world. It was, to say the least, improbable. 16 expeditions over 26 years had tried and failed to make a winter ascent of one the five Pakistani 8000 meter summits. At the time, I had no idea Iād be the first American. I had no idea how much the climb would change me for better and for worse. I had no idea of the gravity of the undertaking. Had I, I probably wouldnāt have come. Ignorance can be bliss. Simone and Denis and I donāt talk often, but when we do it is a deep bond and resonance. Itās not that we donāt share profound love and respect, but that life simply moves on. I rarely think about the climb, but I always think of them. I have been so fucking lucky to have men like them in my life. Iāve always sought out brothers and mentors. Sometimes because I needed their shine to light my own way. I love them so much. All of them. I am so grateful. Stay tuned for post two on February 4th.Likes : 7449

7.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : 12 years ago today. First winter ascent of Gasherbrum II 8,034 meters. Brothers for life @iamsimonemoro @urubkodenis I donāt know what the temperature was on the summit because our altimeters were frozen. We do know that it was -51 c inside the tent, out of the wind, with three grown men emitting heat. Winds were gusting to about 60-75 kph on the summit, so windchill was likely significant, potentially dropping the temps to around -70. By the time we left the summit, the forecasted storm had hit. Winds increased and visibility dropped until it was so white, it gave us a sense of vertigo. The only way I could keep balance was by staring at whoever was leading. When it was my turn, we dropped below the glacial plateau onto exposed rock, but by then it was getting dark and we were concerned that the tent had blown away. Summits are an interesting place. They mark the physical half way point, but youāve usually used about 80% of the gas in the tank. This climb never would have happened without the vast experience of both Simone and Denis. I was so incredibly lucky to be part of the team. Three guys, in winter, alone on the 13th highest mountain in the world. It was, to say the least, improbable. 16 expeditions over 26 years had tried and failed to make a winter ascent of one the five Pakistani 8000 meter summits. At the time, I had no idea Iād be the first American. I had no idea how much the climb would change me for better and for worse. I had no idea of the gravity of the undertaking. Had I, I probably wouldnāt have come. Ignorance can be bliss. Simone and Denis and I donāt talk often, but when we do it is a deep bond and resonance. Itās not that we donāt share profound love and respect, but that life simply moves on. I rarely think about the climb, but I always think of them. I have been so fucking lucky to have men like them in my life. Iāve always sought out brothers and mentors. Sometimes because I needed their shine to light my own way. I love them so much. All of them. I am so grateful. Stay tuned for post two on February 4th.Likes : 7449

7.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : 12 years ago today. First winter ascent of Gasherbrum II 8,034 meters. Brothers for life @iamsimonemoro @urubkodenis I donāt know what the temperature was on the summit because our altimeters were frozen. We do know that it was -51 c inside the tent, out of the wind, with three grown men emitting heat. Winds were gusting to about 60-75 kph on the summit, so windchill was likely significant, potentially dropping the temps to around -70. By the time we left the summit, the forecasted storm had hit. Winds increased and visibility dropped until it was so white, it gave us a sense of vertigo. The only way I could keep balance was by staring at whoever was leading. When it was my turn, we dropped below the glacial plateau onto exposed rock, but by then it was getting dark and we were concerned that the tent had blown away. Summits are an interesting place. They mark the physical half way point, but youāve usually used about 80% of the gas in the tank. This climb never would have happened without the vast experience of both Simone and Denis. I was so incredibly lucky to be part of the team. Three guys, in winter, alone on the 13th highest mountain in the world. It was, to say the least, improbable. 16 expeditions over 26 years had tried and failed to make a winter ascent of one the five Pakistani 8000 meter summits. At the time, I had no idea Iād be the first American. I had no idea how much the climb would change me for better and for worse. I had no idea of the gravity of the undertaking. Had I, I probably wouldnāt have come. Ignorance can be bliss. Simone and Denis and I donāt talk often, but when we do it is a deep bond and resonance. Itās not that we donāt share profound love and respect, but that life simply moves on. I rarely think about the climb, but I always think of them. I have been so fucking lucky to have men like them in my life. Iāve always sought out brothers and mentors. Sometimes because I needed their shine to light my own way. I love them so much. All of them. I am so grateful. Stay tuned for post two on February 4th.Likes : 7449

7.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : 12 years ago today. First winter ascent of Gasherbrum II 8,034 meters. Brothers for life @iamsimonemoro @urubkodenis I donāt know what the temperature was on the summit because our altimeters were frozen. We do know that it was -51 c inside the tent, out of the wind, with three grown men emitting heat. Winds were gusting to about 60-75 kph on the summit, so windchill was likely significant, potentially dropping the temps to around -70. By the time we left the summit, the forecasted storm had hit. Winds increased and visibility dropped until it was so white, it gave us a sense of vertigo. The only way I could keep balance was by staring at whoever was leading. When it was my turn, we dropped below the glacial plateau onto exposed rock, but by then it was getting dark and we were concerned that the tent had blown away. Summits are an interesting place. They mark the physical half way point, but youāve usually used about 80% of the gas in the tank. This climb never would have happened without the vast experience of both Simone and Denis. I was so incredibly lucky to be part of the team. Three guys, in winter, alone on the 13th highest mountain in the world. It was, to say the least, improbable. 16 expeditions over 26 years had tried and failed to make a winter ascent of one the five Pakistani 8000 meter summits. At the time, I had no idea Iād be the first American. I had no idea how much the climb would change me for better and for worse. I had no idea of the gravity of the undertaking. Had I, I probably wouldnāt have come. Ignorance can be bliss. Simone and Denis and I donāt talk often, but when we do it is a deep bond and resonance. Itās not that we donāt share profound love and respect, but that life simply moves on. I rarely think about the climb, but I always think of them. I have been so fucking lucky to have men like them in my life. Iāve always sought out brothers and mentors. Sometimes because I needed their shine to light my own way. I love them so much. All of them. I am so grateful. Stay tuned for post two on February 4th.Likes : 7449

7.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : 12 years ago today. First winter ascent of Gasherbrum II 8,034 meters. Brothers for life @iamsimonemoro @urubkodenis I donāt know what the temperature was on the summit because our altimeters were frozen. We do know that it was -51 c inside the tent, out of the wind, with three grown men emitting heat. Winds were gusting to about 60-75 kph on the summit, so windchill was likely significant, potentially dropping the temps to around -70. By the time we left the summit, the forecasted storm had hit. Winds increased and visibility dropped until it was so white, it gave us a sense of vertigo. The only way I could keep balance was by staring at whoever was leading. When it was my turn, we dropped below the glacial plateau onto exposed rock, but by then it was getting dark and we were concerned that the tent had blown away. Summits are an interesting place. They mark the physical half way point, but youāve usually used about 80% of the gas in the tank. This climb never would have happened without the vast experience of both Simone and Denis. I was so incredibly lucky to be part of the team. Three guys, in winter, alone on the 13th highest mountain in the world. It was, to say the least, improbable. 16 expeditions over 26 years had tried and failed to make a winter ascent of one the five Pakistani 8000 meter summits. At the time, I had no idea Iād be the first American. I had no idea how much the climb would change me for better and for worse. I had no idea of the gravity of the undertaking. Had I, I probably wouldnāt have come. Ignorance can be bliss. Simone and Denis and I donāt talk often, but when we do it is a deep bond and resonance. Itās not that we donāt share profound love and respect, but that life simply moves on. I rarely think about the climb, but I always think of them. I have been so fucking lucky to have men like them in my life. Iāve always sought out brothers and mentors. Sometimes because I needed their shine to light my own way. I love them so much. All of them. I am so grateful. Stay tuned for post two on February 4th.Likes : 7449

7.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : 12 years ago today. First winter ascent of Gasherbrum II 8,034 meters. Brothers for life @iamsimonemoro @urubkodenis I donāt know what the temperature was on the summit because our altimeters were frozen. We do know that it was -51 c inside the tent, out of the wind, with three grown men emitting heat. Winds were gusting to about 60-75 kph on the summit, so windchill was likely significant, potentially dropping the temps to around -70. By the time we left the summit, the forecasted storm had hit. Winds increased and visibility dropped until it was so white, it gave us a sense of vertigo. The only way I could keep balance was by staring at whoever was leading. When it was my turn, we dropped below the glacial plateau onto exposed rock, but by then it was getting dark and we were concerned that the tent had blown away. Summits are an interesting place. They mark the physical half way point, but youāve usually used about 80% of the gas in the tank. This climb never would have happened without the vast experience of both Simone and Denis. I was so incredibly lucky to be part of the team. Three guys, in winter, alone on the 13th highest mountain in the world. It was, to say the least, improbable. 16 expeditions over 26 years had tried and failed to make a winter ascent of one the five Pakistani 8000 meter summits. At the time, I had no idea Iād be the first American. I had no idea how much the climb would change me for better and for worse. I had no idea of the gravity of the undertaking. Had I, I probably wouldnāt have come. Ignorance can be bliss. Simone and Denis and I donāt talk often, but when we do it is a deep bond and resonance. Itās not that we donāt share profound love and respect, but that life simply moves on. I rarely think about the climb, but I always think of them. I have been so fucking lucky to have men like them in my life. Iāve always sought out brothers and mentors. Sometimes because I needed their shine to light my own way. I love them so much. All of them. I am so grateful. Stay tuned for post two on February 4th.Likes : 7449

7.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : 12 years ago today. First winter ascent of Gasherbrum II 8,034 meters. Brothers for life @iamsimonemoro @urubkodenis I donāt know what the temperature was on the summit because our altimeters were frozen. We do know that it was -51 c inside the tent, out of the wind, with three grown men emitting heat. Winds were gusting to about 60-75 kph on the summit, so windchill was likely significant, potentially dropping the temps to around -70. By the time we left the summit, the forecasted storm had hit. Winds increased and visibility dropped until it was so white, it gave us a sense of vertigo. The only way I could keep balance was by staring at whoever was leading. When it was my turn, we dropped below the glacial plateau onto exposed rock, but by then it was getting dark and we were concerned that the tent had blown away. Summits are an interesting place. They mark the physical half way point, but youāve usually used about 80% of the gas in the tank. This climb never would have happened without the vast experience of both Simone and Denis. I was so incredibly lucky to be part of the team. Three guys, in winter, alone on the 13th highest mountain in the world. It was, to say the least, improbable. 16 expeditions over 26 years had tried and failed to make a winter ascent of one the five Pakistani 8000 meter summits. At the time, I had no idea Iād be the first American. I had no idea how much the climb would change me for better and for worse. I had no idea of the gravity of the undertaking. Had I, I probably wouldnāt have come. Ignorance can be bliss. Simone and Denis and I donāt talk often, but when we do it is a deep bond and resonance. Itās not that we donāt share profound love and respect, but that life simply moves on. I rarely think about the climb, but I always think of them. I have been so fucking lucky to have men like them in my life. Iāve always sought out brothers and mentors. Sometimes because I needed their shine to light my own way. I love them so much. All of them. I am so grateful. Stay tuned for post two on February 4th.Likes : 7449

6.1K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Intense green āļø This pink gold timepiece, worn by our One of Not Many Talent @coryrichards, features complications that assist the daily life of the traveler: a dual time zone combined with a day-night indicator and a date hand. Its self-winding movement offers a power reserve of nearly 3 days. Ā To accentuate the intensity of this new colour on the Overseas dual time, meticulous care has been lavished on the finishing touches. Against a translucent lacquered backdrop playing on depth effects, the centre is graced with sunburst satin-brushing, while the flange is delicately velvet-finished. Ā šŗļø Travel companion of @coryrichards Ā #VacheronConstantin #OneOfNotMany #vacheron #thehourlounge #watches #watch #watchesofinstagram #horology #watchoftheday #instawatch #geneva #swissmade #swisswatchLikes : 6094

4.2K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : As soon as we are trying to āpractice non attachmentā, we are already off course. We are rejecting our authentic experience. Practicing non attachment is detaching from reality. Pop-culture pseudoscientific spiritualism uses non attachment as a form of emotional bypassing: a rejection of the authentic human experience. Non attachment is not how the brain functions. Thatās a story we donāt get to choose. Instead, when we arrive at āit isā, we slowly divorce ourselves from outcomes. It requires practice and patience. To be attached is to be human. We are literally and physically born attached to our mothers. Itās what creates strong, healthy bonds. We need attachment to survive. Emotional attachment is an evolutionary necessity, and all attachment is emotional. Unhealthy attachments are those that reject our deepest truths and side step what is. By giving the authentic experience a voice, we exchanged the pursuit of non attachment (fighting against ourselves) for deep authenticity (aligning with experience). That doesnāt mean we wonāt suffer. We will. Iād argue that Buddha was not free from suffering sitting under a tree. He suffered deeply. He saw it clearly, felt it, and accepted it moment by moment. He didnāt manifest a better future. Each moment āmanifestedā naturally, leading to authentic non attachment. āIt isā, no matter how uncomfortable, is authentic presence. Bypassing what āisā by chasing non attachment is, quite frankly, a bullshit trope that prolongs suffering. Being authentic doesnāt keep us stuck in sadness. Instead, it moves us through it. If I want to not be in pain, I first need to accept, really really accept that I am in pain and embrace it, moment by moment. Emotions are necessary and we actually canāt choose to simply step out of them. Itās a form of self betrayal. They will always come back in a different way at a later date. Instead, we choose to step into them. Iām quite comfortable being attached. When I admit to my attachments and engage with the suffering and joy they bring, I become less concerned with outcomes and I think this is called non attachment. Stop trying to āpractice non attachmentā. Itās like running after the horizon.Likes : 4249

4.1K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Instagram vs. reality? This platform is filled with content showcasing only the best of our lives. @SollisHealth #sollishealthwarriors campaign peels it back, and I’m grateful. Curation fuels escapism and a relentless need to be different… better…than we are. We all want to improve, and that shows us one of the fundamental beauties of the human condition. But real change comes from radical acceptance of who we are now. And rarely do we expose the struggles we face alone. I opened up to Sollis about my experience with mental health. I am excited to stand next to the other Sollis Health Warriors to create a space for honest conversations about invisible and chronic illnesses. Read more about my journey in my stories and link in bio.Likes : 4140

4.1K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Instagram vs. reality? This platform is filled with content showcasing only the best of our lives. @SollisHealth #sollishealthwarriors campaign peels it back, and I’m grateful. Curation fuels escapism and a relentless need to be different… better…than we are. We all want to improve, and that shows us one of the fundamental beauties of the human condition. But real change comes from radical acceptance of who we are now. And rarely do we expose the struggles we face alone. I opened up to Sollis about my experience with mental health. I am excited to stand next to the other Sollis Health Warriors to create a space for honest conversations about invisible and chronic illnesses. Read more about my journey in my stories and link in bio.Likes : 4140

3.7K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Words by Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies // In the wide desert of Upper Mustang, the road planes along canyon walls and dry mountainsides dotted with hundreds of unspeakably ancient human-made caves. The light plays a slow game of chase with the shadows cast by the highest mountains on the planet, now behind us. We sweep the corners wide, drawn to cliff-edges teetering above the braided Kali Gandaki River below. We donāt know where to look ā the road, the layers of tortured mountains, or the sand-castle parapets of rock and mud towering above us. Instead, we watch the oncoming frame-bent jeeps as they roaring around the blind corners on bald tires. In Tsarang, the drivers share a rough kindness with us. We play snooker, a game we donāt know. Cory tries and fails to find a tutorial on YouTube. Nursing warm cans of beer, we realize the drivers donāt know how to play either. The evening passes in one long, impossible game of scratches and flubs until the young man running the hall flicks the light switch and kicks us out into the cold, thin air of a star-streaked night. @vacheronconstantinLikes : 3706

3.7K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Words by Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies // In the wide desert of Upper Mustang, the road planes along canyon walls and dry mountainsides dotted with hundreds of unspeakably ancient human-made caves. The light plays a slow game of chase with the shadows cast by the highest mountains on the planet, now behind us. We sweep the corners wide, drawn to cliff-edges teetering above the braided Kali Gandaki River below. We donāt know where to look ā the road, the layers of tortured mountains, or the sand-castle parapets of rock and mud towering above us. Instead, we watch the oncoming frame-bent jeeps as they roaring around the blind corners on bald tires. In Tsarang, the drivers share a rough kindness with us. We play snooker, a game we donāt know. Cory tries and fails to find a tutorial on YouTube. Nursing warm cans of beer, we realize the drivers donāt know how to play either. The evening passes in one long, impossible game of scratches and flubs until the young man running the hall flicks the light switch and kicks us out into the cold, thin air of a star-streaked night. @vacheronconstantinLikes : 3706

3.7K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Words by Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies // In the wide desert of Upper Mustang, the road planes along canyon walls and dry mountainsides dotted with hundreds of unspeakably ancient human-made caves. The light plays a slow game of chase with the shadows cast by the highest mountains on the planet, now behind us. We sweep the corners wide, drawn to cliff-edges teetering above the braided Kali Gandaki River below. We donāt know where to look ā the road, the layers of tortured mountains, or the sand-castle parapets of rock and mud towering above us. Instead, we watch the oncoming frame-bent jeeps as they roaring around the blind corners on bald tires. In Tsarang, the drivers share a rough kindness with us. We play snooker, a game we donāt know. Cory tries and fails to find a tutorial on YouTube. Nursing warm cans of beer, we realize the drivers donāt know how to play either. The evening passes in one long, impossible game of scratches and flubs until the young man running the hall flicks the light switch and kicks us out into the cold, thin air of a star-streaked night. @vacheronconstantinLikes : 3706

3.7K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Words by Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies // In the wide desert of Upper Mustang, the road planes along canyon walls and dry mountainsides dotted with hundreds of unspeakably ancient human-made caves. The light plays a slow game of chase with the shadows cast by the highest mountains on the planet, now behind us. We sweep the corners wide, drawn to cliff-edges teetering above the braided Kali Gandaki River below. We donāt know where to look ā the road, the layers of tortured mountains, or the sand-castle parapets of rock and mud towering above us. Instead, we watch the oncoming frame-bent jeeps as they roaring around the blind corners on bald tires. In Tsarang, the drivers share a rough kindness with us. We play snooker, a game we donāt know. Cory tries and fails to find a tutorial on YouTube. Nursing warm cans of beer, we realize the drivers donāt know how to play either. The evening passes in one long, impossible game of scratches and flubs until the young man running the hall flicks the light switch and kicks us out into the cold, thin air of a star-streaked night. @vacheronconstantinLikes : 3706

3.7K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Words by Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies // In the wide desert of Upper Mustang, the road planes along canyon walls and dry mountainsides dotted with hundreds of unspeakably ancient human-made caves. The light plays a slow game of chase with the shadows cast by the highest mountains on the planet, now behind us. We sweep the corners wide, drawn to cliff-edges teetering above the braided Kali Gandaki River below. We donāt know where to look ā the road, the layers of tortured mountains, or the sand-castle parapets of rock and mud towering above us. Instead, we watch the oncoming frame-bent jeeps as they roaring around the blind corners on bald tires. In Tsarang, the drivers share a rough kindness with us. We play snooker, a game we donāt know. Cory tries and fails to find a tutorial on YouTube. Nursing warm cans of beer, we realize the drivers donāt know how to play either. The evening passes in one long, impossible game of scratches and flubs until the young man running the hall flicks the light switch and kicks us out into the cold, thin air of a star-streaked night. @vacheronconstantinLikes : 3706

3.7K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Words by Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies // In the wide desert of Upper Mustang, the road planes along canyon walls and dry mountainsides dotted with hundreds of unspeakably ancient human-made caves. The light plays a slow game of chase with the shadows cast by the highest mountains on the planet, now behind us. We sweep the corners wide, drawn to cliff-edges teetering above the braided Kali Gandaki River below. We donāt know where to look ā the road, the layers of tortured mountains, or the sand-castle parapets of rock and mud towering above us. Instead, we watch the oncoming frame-bent jeeps as they roaring around the blind corners on bald tires. In Tsarang, the drivers share a rough kindness with us. We play snooker, a game we donāt know. Cory tries and fails to find a tutorial on YouTube. Nursing warm cans of beer, we realize the drivers donāt know how to play either. The evening passes in one long, impossible game of scratches and flubs until the young man running the hall flicks the light switch and kicks us out into the cold, thin air of a star-streaked night. @vacheronconstantinLikes : 3706

3.7K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Words by Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies // In the wide desert of Upper Mustang, the road planes along canyon walls and dry mountainsides dotted with hundreds of unspeakably ancient human-made caves. The light plays a slow game of chase with the shadows cast by the highest mountains on the planet, now behind us. We sweep the corners wide, drawn to cliff-edges teetering above the braided Kali Gandaki River below. We donāt know where to look ā the road, the layers of tortured mountains, or the sand-castle parapets of rock and mud towering above us. Instead, we watch the oncoming frame-bent jeeps as they roaring around the blind corners on bald tires. In Tsarang, the drivers share a rough kindness with us. We play snooker, a game we donāt know. Cory tries and fails to find a tutorial on YouTube. Nursing warm cans of beer, we realize the drivers donāt know how to play either. The evening passes in one long, impossible game of scratches and flubs until the young man running the hall flicks the light switch and kicks us out into the cold, thin air of a star-streaked night. @vacheronconstantinLikes : 3706

3.7K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Words by Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies // In the wide desert of Upper Mustang, the road planes along canyon walls and dry mountainsides dotted with hundreds of unspeakably ancient human-made caves. The light plays a slow game of chase with the shadows cast by the highest mountains on the planet, now behind us. We sweep the corners wide, drawn to cliff-edges teetering above the braided Kali Gandaki River below. We donāt know where to look ā the road, the layers of tortured mountains, or the sand-castle parapets of rock and mud towering above us. Instead, we watch the oncoming frame-bent jeeps as they roaring around the blind corners on bald tires. In Tsarang, the drivers share a rough kindness with us. We play snooker, a game we donāt know. Cory tries and fails to find a tutorial on YouTube. Nursing warm cans of beer, we realize the drivers donāt know how to play either. The evening passes in one long, impossible game of scratches and flubs until the young man running the hall flicks the light switch and kicks us out into the cold, thin air of a star-streaked night. @vacheronconstantinLikes : 3706

3.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption :Likes : 3440

3.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Iāve known Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies for over a decade. Heās a Kathmandu staple and has called Nepal home for twenty some years. He came for the mountains and stayed for the people, starting and running non-profits for pieces of the community. At his heart, heās an artist and filmmaker. Heās also a ferocious writer. Iāve been to Mustang with him before on assignment for NG. But this trip is just for us. The following posts are his words. Our other companion is Todd Hoffman. He doesnāt use Instagram. Heās one of those leather-faced legends of the eighties who lived hard and fast enough to know when to leave the racetrack. Even if you hardly know him, you want him on your team. At your back. If he looks familiar, it might be from that one time he took Pepsi to task over a Harrier jump jet. The following posts are from our motorcycle trip from Kathmandu to Lo Manthang. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 3427

3.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Iāve known Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies for over a decade. Heās a Kathmandu staple and has called Nepal home for twenty some years. He came for the mountains and stayed for the people, starting and running non-profits for pieces of the community. At his heart, heās an artist and filmmaker. Heās also a ferocious writer. Iāve been to Mustang with him before on assignment for NG. But this trip is just for us. The following posts are his words. Our other companion is Todd Hoffman. He doesnāt use Instagram. Heās one of those leather-faced legends of the eighties who lived hard and fast enough to know when to leave the racetrack. Even if you hardly know him, you want him on your team. At your back. If he looks familiar, it might be from that one time he took Pepsi to task over a Harrier jump jet. The following posts are from our motorcycle trip from Kathmandu to Lo Manthang. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 3427

3.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Iāve known Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies for over a decade. Heās a Kathmandu staple and has called Nepal home for twenty some years. He came for the mountains and stayed for the people, starting and running non-profits for pieces of the community. At his heart, heās an artist and filmmaker. Heās also a ferocious writer. Iāve been to Mustang with him before on assignment for NG. But this trip is just for us. The following posts are his words. Our other companion is Todd Hoffman. He doesnāt use Instagram. Heās one of those leather-faced legends of the eighties who lived hard and fast enough to know when to leave the racetrack. Even if you hardly know him, you want him on your team. At your back. If he looks familiar, it might be from that one time he took Pepsi to task over a Harrier jump jet. The following posts are from our motorcycle trip from Kathmandu to Lo Manthang. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 3427

3.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Iāve known Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies for over a decade. Heās a Kathmandu staple and has called Nepal home for twenty some years. He came for the mountains and stayed for the people, starting and running non-profits for pieces of the community. At his heart, heās an artist and filmmaker. Heās also a ferocious writer. Iāve been to Mustang with him before on assignment for NG. But this trip is just for us. The following posts are his words. Our other companion is Todd Hoffman. He doesnāt use Instagram. Heās one of those leather-faced legends of the eighties who lived hard and fast enough to know when to leave the racetrack. Even if you hardly know him, you want him on your team. At your back. If he looks familiar, it might be from that one time he took Pepsi to task over a Harrier jump jet. The following posts are from our motorcycle trip from Kathmandu to Lo Manthang. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 3427

3.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Iāve known Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies for over a decade. Heās a Kathmandu staple and has called Nepal home for twenty some years. He came for the mountains and stayed for the people, starting and running non-profits for pieces of the community. At his heart, heās an artist and filmmaker. Heās also a ferocious writer. Iāve been to Mustang with him before on assignment for NG. But this trip is just for us. The following posts are his words. Our other companion is Todd Hoffman. He doesnāt use Instagram. Heās one of those leather-faced legends of the eighties who lived hard and fast enough to know when to leave the racetrack. Even if you hardly know him, you want him on your team. At your back. If he looks familiar, it might be from that one time he took Pepsi to task over a Harrier jump jet. The following posts are from our motorcycle trip from Kathmandu to Lo Manthang. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 3427

3.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Iāve known Ben Ayers @jetbutterflies for over a decade. Heās a Kathmandu staple and has called Nepal home for twenty some years. He came for the mountains and stayed for the people, starting and running non-profits for pieces of the community. At his heart, heās an artist and filmmaker. Heās also a ferocious writer. Iāve been to Mustang with him before on assignment for NG. But this trip is just for us. The following posts are his words. Our other companion is Todd Hoffman. He doesnāt use Instagram. Heās one of those leather-faced legends of the eighties who lived hard and fast enough to know when to leave the racetrack. Even if you hardly know him, you want him on your team. At your back. If he looks familiar, it might be from that one time he took Pepsi to task over a Harrier jump jet. The following posts are from our motorcycle trip from Kathmandu to Lo Manthang. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 3427

3.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Link in Bio!!! 20″ x 26″ (SIGNED NUMBERED EDITION of 100) 5 color silkscreen print on 100# Cougar Smooth White Paper by the massively talented Ernesto Yerena @ernestoyerena based on one of my favorite images for National Geographic from an expedition to the Franz Josef Land Archipelago. @amplifierart is joining @natgeo and the Campaign for Nature’s conservation 30×30 initiative! This initiative – which is supported by over 100 countries worldwide – seeks to protect at least 30% of the planetās land and oceans by the year 2030. Increasing the acreage of protected zones will help achieve habitat conservation goals while also reversing the negative impacts of biodiversity decline and climate change. Each purchase helps us get this artwork and accompanying lesson plans on conservation for FREE into thousands of classrooms across the U.S. and beyond!Likes : 3404

3.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Link in Bio!!! 20″ x 26″ (SIGNED NUMBERED EDITION of 100) 5 color silkscreen print on 100# Cougar Smooth White Paper by the massively talented Ernesto Yerena @ernestoyerena based on one of my favorite images for National Geographic from an expedition to the Franz Josef Land Archipelago. @amplifierart is joining @natgeo and the Campaign for Nature’s conservation 30×30 initiative! This initiative – which is supported by over 100 countries worldwide – seeks to protect at least 30% of the planetās land and oceans by the year 2030. Increasing the acreage of protected zones will help achieve habitat conservation goals while also reversing the negative impacts of biodiversity decline and climate change. Each purchase helps us get this artwork and accompanying lesson plans on conservation for FREE into thousands of classrooms across the U.S. and beyond!Likes : 3404

3.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Link in Bio!!! 20″ x 26″ (SIGNED NUMBERED EDITION of 100) 5 color silkscreen print on 100# Cougar Smooth White Paper by the massively talented Ernesto Yerena @ernestoyerena based on one of my favorite images for National Geographic from an expedition to the Franz Josef Land Archipelago. @amplifierart is joining @natgeo and the Campaign for Nature’s conservation 30×30 initiative! This initiative – which is supported by over 100 countries worldwide – seeks to protect at least 30% of the planetās land and oceans by the year 2030. Increasing the acreage of protected zones will help achieve habitat conservation goals while also reversing the negative impacts of biodiversity decline and climate change. Each purchase helps us get this artwork and accompanying lesson plans on conservation for FREE into thousands of classrooms across the U.S. and beyond!Likes : 3404

3.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : #genericwisdomLikes : 3317

3.1K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : The thing about earthquakes is that they impact poor and vulnerable communities the most. Those who canāt afford to reinforce their homes, or who donāt have a surplus of resources like family, income, or grain to weather months of rebuilding and trauma. In light of the recent 6.4 magnitude earthquake that struck Western Nepal last night – just miles from Mustang – and our hope to focus public attention on supporting relief efforts, we will postpone our travelogue until next week. Currently, there are 150 known deaths from the quake with many hundreds more injured and tens of thousands left without shelter as winter approaches. Please watch this space for updates on how you can help the families in Jajarkot and Rukum recover and build back better. With love, Cory and BenLikes : 3102

2.6K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Our hearts remain with the thousands of families that have lost loved ones in the 6.4 magnitude earthquake in West Nepal. As winter approaches, tens of thousands remain without adequate shelter or warmth. If youād like to contribute please visit Blinknow.org – these are friends of ours working tirelessly on the ground, and every contribution matters. We will resume our Mustang travelogue starting today to celebrate all the beauty, resiliency, and magic of Nepal in the faith that if we all work together, brighter days will come soon. // following words by @jetbutterflies Hoping for mountains, we find fog. Climbing towards Sarangkot, the city disappears behind us. Marigolds line the road that falls away into steeped terraces dotted by clusters of roughhewn homes. An hour in, we find the main highway again, paved and twisted into tight curls across the steep hillsides like a pigās tail. Toddās back wheel blows up, death-wobbling him across the narrow road and directly into a stable of split-open motor scooters under a corrugated tin roof held together with wire. The mechanic opens the rear tire, and leaves the parts strewn across the shoulder of the highway. A metal-handled hammer and broken screwdriver finish the job: a blown bearing. The mechanic isnāt much of a talker. He saddles a scooter and buzzes off to somewhere while the town gathers around us, sharing stories and children and a, most proudly, new iPhone 12 ProMax. They return with two bearings ā āJapanā brand. āBest qualityā, he says. Four hours of riding to go. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 2608

2.6K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Our hearts remain with the thousands of families that have lost loved ones in the 6.4 magnitude earthquake in West Nepal. As winter approaches, tens of thousands remain without adequate shelter or warmth. If youād like to contribute please visit Blinknow.org – these are friends of ours working tirelessly on the ground, and every contribution matters. We will resume our Mustang travelogue starting today to celebrate all the beauty, resiliency, and magic of Nepal in the faith that if we all work together, brighter days will come soon. // following words by @jetbutterflies Hoping for mountains, we find fog. Climbing towards Sarangkot, the city disappears behind us. Marigolds line the road that falls away into steeped terraces dotted by clusters of roughhewn homes. An hour in, we find the main highway again, paved and twisted into tight curls across the steep hillsides like a pigās tail. Toddās back wheel blows up, death-wobbling him across the narrow road and directly into a stable of split-open motor scooters under a corrugated tin roof held together with wire. The mechanic opens the rear tire, and leaves the parts strewn across the shoulder of the highway. A metal-handled hammer and broken screwdriver finish the job: a blown bearing. The mechanic isnāt much of a talker. He saddles a scooter and buzzes off to somewhere while the town gathers around us, sharing stories and children and a, most proudly, new iPhone 12 ProMax. They return with two bearings ā āJapanā brand. āBest qualityā, he says. Four hours of riding to go. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 2608

2.6K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Our hearts remain with the thousands of families that have lost loved ones in the 6.4 magnitude earthquake in West Nepal. As winter approaches, tens of thousands remain without adequate shelter or warmth. If youād like to contribute please visit Blinknow.org – these are friends of ours working tirelessly on the ground, and every contribution matters. We will resume our Mustang travelogue starting today to celebrate all the beauty, resiliency, and magic of Nepal in the faith that if we all work together, brighter days will come soon. // following words by @jetbutterflies Hoping for mountains, we find fog. Climbing towards Sarangkot, the city disappears behind us. Marigolds line the road that falls away into steeped terraces dotted by clusters of roughhewn homes. An hour in, we find the main highway again, paved and twisted into tight curls across the steep hillsides like a pigās tail. Toddās back wheel blows up, death-wobbling him across the narrow road and directly into a stable of split-open motor scooters under a corrugated tin roof held together with wire. The mechanic opens the rear tire, and leaves the parts strewn across the shoulder of the highway. A metal-handled hammer and broken screwdriver finish the job: a blown bearing. The mechanic isnāt much of a talker. He saddles a scooter and buzzes off to somewhere while the town gathers around us, sharing stories and children and a, most proudly, new iPhone 12 ProMax. They return with two bearings ā āJapanā brand. āBest qualityā, he says. Four hours of riding to go. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 2608

2.6K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Our hearts remain with the thousands of families that have lost loved ones in the 6.4 magnitude earthquake in West Nepal. As winter approaches, tens of thousands remain without adequate shelter or warmth. If youād like to contribute please visit Blinknow.org – these are friends of ours working tirelessly on the ground, and every contribution matters. We will resume our Mustang travelogue starting today to celebrate all the beauty, resiliency, and magic of Nepal in the faith that if we all work together, brighter days will come soon. // following words by @jetbutterflies Hoping for mountains, we find fog. Climbing towards Sarangkot, the city disappears behind us. Marigolds line the road that falls away into steeped terraces dotted by clusters of roughhewn homes. An hour in, we find the main highway again, paved and twisted into tight curls across the steep hillsides like a pigās tail. Toddās back wheel blows up, death-wobbling him across the narrow road and directly into a stable of split-open motor scooters under a corrugated tin roof held together with wire. The mechanic opens the rear tire, and leaves the parts strewn across the shoulder of the highway. A metal-handled hammer and broken screwdriver finish the job: a blown bearing. The mechanic isnāt much of a talker. He saddles a scooter and buzzes off to somewhere while the town gathers around us, sharing stories and children and a, most proudly, new iPhone 12 ProMax. They return with two bearings ā āJapanā brand. āBest qualityā, he says. Four hours of riding to go. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 2608

2.6K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Our hearts remain with the thousands of families that have lost loved ones in the 6.4 magnitude earthquake in West Nepal. As winter approaches, tens of thousands remain without adequate shelter or warmth. If youād like to contribute please visit Blinknow.org – these are friends of ours working tirelessly on the ground, and every contribution matters. We will resume our Mustang travelogue starting today to celebrate all the beauty, resiliency, and magic of Nepal in the faith that if we all work together, brighter days will come soon. // following words by @jetbutterflies Hoping for mountains, we find fog. Climbing towards Sarangkot, the city disappears behind us. Marigolds line the road that falls away into steeped terraces dotted by clusters of roughhewn homes. An hour in, we find the main highway again, paved and twisted into tight curls across the steep hillsides like a pigās tail. Toddās back wheel blows up, death-wobbling him across the narrow road and directly into a stable of split-open motor scooters under a corrugated tin roof held together with wire. The mechanic opens the rear tire, and leaves the parts strewn across the shoulder of the highway. A metal-handled hammer and broken screwdriver finish the job: a blown bearing. The mechanic isnāt much of a talker. He saddles a scooter and buzzes off to somewhere while the town gathers around us, sharing stories and children and a, most proudly, new iPhone 12 ProMax. They return with two bearings ā āJapanā brand. āBest qualityā, he says. Four hours of riding to go. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 2608

2.6K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Our hearts remain with the thousands of families that have lost loved ones in the 6.4 magnitude earthquake in West Nepal. As winter approaches, tens of thousands remain without adequate shelter or warmth. If youād like to contribute please visit Blinknow.org – these are friends of ours working tirelessly on the ground, and every contribution matters. We will resume our Mustang travelogue starting today to celebrate all the beauty, resiliency, and magic of Nepal in the faith that if we all work together, brighter days will come soon. // following words by @jetbutterflies Hoping for mountains, we find fog. Climbing towards Sarangkot, the city disappears behind us. Marigolds line the road that falls away into steeped terraces dotted by clusters of roughhewn homes. An hour in, we find the main highway again, paved and twisted into tight curls across the steep hillsides like a pigās tail. Toddās back wheel blows up, death-wobbling him across the narrow road and directly into a stable of split-open motor scooters under a corrugated tin roof held together with wire. The mechanic opens the rear tire, and leaves the parts strewn across the shoulder of the highway. A metal-handled hammer and broken screwdriver finish the job: a blown bearing. The mechanic isnāt much of a talker. He saddles a scooter and buzzes off to somewhere while the town gathers around us, sharing stories and children and a, most proudly, new iPhone 12 ProMax. They return with two bearings ā āJapanā brand. āBest qualityā, he says. Four hours of riding to go. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 2608

2.6K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Our hearts remain with the thousands of families that have lost loved ones in the 6.4 magnitude earthquake in West Nepal. As winter approaches, tens of thousands remain without adequate shelter or warmth. If youād like to contribute please visit Blinknow.org – these are friends of ours working tirelessly on the ground, and every contribution matters. We will resume our Mustang travelogue starting today to celebrate all the beauty, resiliency, and magic of Nepal in the faith that if we all work together, brighter days will come soon. // following words by @jetbutterflies Hoping for mountains, we find fog. Climbing towards Sarangkot, the city disappears behind us. Marigolds line the road that falls away into steeped terraces dotted by clusters of roughhewn homes. An hour in, we find the main highway again, paved and twisted into tight curls across the steep hillsides like a pigās tail. Toddās back wheel blows up, death-wobbling him across the narrow road and directly into a stable of split-open motor scooters under a corrugated tin roof held together with wire. The mechanic opens the rear tire, and leaves the parts strewn across the shoulder of the highway. A metal-handled hammer and broken screwdriver finish the job: a blown bearing. The mechanic isnāt much of a talker. He saddles a scooter and buzzes off to somewhere while the town gathers around us, sharing stories and children and a, most proudly, new iPhone 12 ProMax. They return with two bearings ā āJapanā brand. āBest qualityā, he says. Four hours of riding to go. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 2608

2.6K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Our hearts remain with the thousands of families that have lost loved ones in the 6.4 magnitude earthquake in West Nepal. As winter approaches, tens of thousands remain without adequate shelter or warmth. If youād like to contribute please visit Blinknow.org – these are friends of ours working tirelessly on the ground, and every contribution matters. We will resume our Mustang travelogue starting today to celebrate all the beauty, resiliency, and magic of Nepal in the faith that if we all work together, brighter days will come soon. // following words by @jetbutterflies Hoping for mountains, we find fog. Climbing towards Sarangkot, the city disappears behind us. Marigolds line the road that falls away into steeped terraces dotted by clusters of roughhewn homes. An hour in, we find the main highway again, paved and twisted into tight curls across the steep hillsides like a pigās tail. Toddās back wheel blows up, death-wobbling him across the narrow road and directly into a stable of split-open motor scooters under a corrugated tin roof held together with wire. The mechanic opens the rear tire, and leaves the parts strewn across the shoulder of the highway. A metal-handled hammer and broken screwdriver finish the job: a blown bearing. The mechanic isnāt much of a talker. He saddles a scooter and buzzes off to somewhere while the town gathers around us, sharing stories and children and a, most proudly, new iPhone 12 ProMax. They return with two bearings ā āJapanā brand. āBest qualityā, he says. Four hours of riding to go. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 2608

2.6K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Our hearts remain with the thousands of families that have lost loved ones in the 6.4 magnitude earthquake in West Nepal. As winter approaches, tens of thousands remain without adequate shelter or warmth. If youād like to contribute please visit Blinknow.org – these are friends of ours working tirelessly on the ground, and every contribution matters. We will resume our Mustang travelogue starting today to celebrate all the beauty, resiliency, and magic of Nepal in the faith that if we all work together, brighter days will come soon. // following words by @jetbutterflies Hoping for mountains, we find fog. Climbing towards Sarangkot, the city disappears behind us. Marigolds line the road that falls away into steeped terraces dotted by clusters of roughhewn homes. An hour in, we find the main highway again, paved and twisted into tight curls across the steep hillsides like a pigās tail. Toddās back wheel blows up, death-wobbling him across the narrow road and directly into a stable of split-open motor scooters under a corrugated tin roof held together with wire. The mechanic opens the rear tire, and leaves the parts strewn across the shoulder of the highway. A metal-handled hammer and broken screwdriver finish the job: a blown bearing. The mechanic isnāt much of a talker. He saddles a scooter and buzzes off to somewhere while the town gathers around us, sharing stories and children and a, most proudly, new iPhone 12 ProMax. They return with two bearings ā āJapanā brand. āBest qualityā, he says. Four hours of riding to go. @vacheronconstantin @aetherapparelLikes : 2608

2.5K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Just a bunch of atoms that exploded 13.8 billion years ago and only exist when we are looking. Daily reminder to stop trying so hard for a moment and notice what youāre already a part of. #thecolorofeverythingLikes : 2543

2.5K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Just a bunch of atoms that exploded 13.8 billion years ago and only exist when we are looking. Daily reminder to stop trying so hard for a moment and notice what youāre already a part of. #thecolorofeverythingLikes : 2543

2.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : To the oldest part of our brain, the experience of climbing is interpreted as an act of survival and survival is stressful work. The sympathetic nervous system fires up and we step into fight, flight, or freeze and choose to fight. We fight gravity. We fight fear. We fight with our muscles and every cell of our body. We fight with our conscious and subconscious minds alike and the whole game is learning to manage the stress response and ultimately work in tandem with our brain and body in pursuit of a goal. In that way, it becomes an act of mindfulness because in order to survive, weāre forced to distill order from chaos and focus on the now. The discomfort of it all is offset by the highs that come with it. Itās beautiful and breathtaking and life-affirming in a way that few other sports can ever be. The conscious mind colors the experience with all sorts of stories and little self-deceptions about what weāre doing and why. But to the ancient part of the brain, itās all the same thing; in that five-hundred-million-year-old piece of the mind, there is no poetry or story and we can tell no lies to escape the fact that the neurobiological basis of climbing is sim-ple: Donāt die. Chaos is what I know best. – an excerpt from my memoir, The Color of Everything, coming out next week. Link to pre-order in my bio!Likes : 2373

2.4K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : To the oldest part of our brain, the experience of climbing is interpreted as an act of survival and survival is stressful work. The sympathetic nervous system fires up and we step into fight, flight, or freeze and choose to fight. We fight gravity. We fight fear. We fight with our muscles and every cell of our body. We fight with our conscious and subconscious minds alike and the whole game is learning to manage the stress response and ultimately work in tandem with our brain and body in pursuit of a goal. In that way, it becomes an act of mindfulness because in order to survive, weāre forced to distill order from chaos and focus on the now. The discomfort of it all is offset by the highs that come with it. Itās beautiful and breathtaking and life-affirming in a way that few other sports can ever be. The conscious mind colors the experience with all sorts of stories and little self-deceptions about what weāre doing and why. But to the ancient part of the brain, itās all the same thing; in that five-hundred-million-year-old piece of the mind, there is no poetry or story and we can tell no lies to escape the fact that the neurobiological basis of climbing is sim-ple: Donāt die. Chaos is what I know best. – an excerpt from my memoir, The Color of Everything, coming out next week. Link to pre-order in my bio!Likes : 2373

2.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Walrus, Franz Josef Land, Russia.Likes : 2268

2.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Walrus, Franz Josef Land, Russia.Likes : 2268

2.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Walrus, Franz Josef Land, Russia.Likes : 2268

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Itās been a moment since I shared some photos, so here are two from the archives. Shot on assignment for National Geographic Magazine in 2015. Okavango source story profiling the source of the Okavangoās water in the Angolan highlands. The team, lead by Steven Boyes PhD traveled over 1,000 miles by Mekoro doing a mega transect of the Okavangoās source and its ultimate outlet in the delta.Likes : 1942

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Itās been a moment since I shared some photos, so here are two from the archives. Shot on assignment for National Geographic Magazine in 2015. Okavango source story profiling the source of the Okavangoās water in the Angolan highlands. The team, lead by Steven Boyes PhD traveled over 1,000 miles by Mekoro doing a mega transect of the Okavangoās source and its ultimate outlet in the delta.Likes : 1942

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Where it started and where it went. First image: @alexhonnold climbing near Moab, UT ā08/ā09 Second image: @alexhonnold for the @ESPN body issue in 2019.Likes : 1933

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Where it started and where it went. First image: @alexhonnold climbing near Moab, UT ā08/ā09 Second image: @alexhonnold for the @ESPN body issue in 2019.Likes : 1933

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : The curb weight of the Porsche 356, the first Porsche automobile, was 1700 ā 2,296 lbs. The weight of the Porsche name is much heavier. Ferdinand āFerdiā Porsche, an architect by trade and the great grandson of the companyās founder Prof. Ferdinand Porsche, is now adding his fingerprint to the familyās rich motor-sports legacy. At 30 yrs old, Ferdi defies all the seriousness and pomp of racing cars. Heās affable, warm, and almost boyish in his excitement. To put it bluntly, heās ācoolā without effort, working hard to invite the next generation into the motorsports world. On February 24, Ferdiās @fat.international held its first ice race in Zell am See, Austria, and has now followed it up in Aspen, Colorado. Over the past two days on an icy track in Carbondale, the @fat.icerace has included models from the @aetherapparel Half11 (half Porsche, half F1) to the Rivian R1T, to a host of various @mobil1 cars and drivers tearing around corners, over-steering, under-steering, and generally bringing joy as they spit rooster tails of snow from their tires. I watch as an enthusiast warm his hands in the exhaust of a loud engine. He brings them to his nose, closes his eyes and inhales deeply, letting his senses coalesce into something whole and visceral. Ferdi sits in his car nearby grinning. Itās an expression of sincere, palpable joy. As an arm drops, he accelerates onto the track. In a burst of exhaust, something old becomes new again. Itās a Herculean task and these are enormous shoes to fill, but Ferdi seems to be carrying the weight of legacy effortlessly.Likes : 1900

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : The curb weight of the Porsche 356, the first Porsche automobile, was 1700 ā 2,296 lbs. The weight of the Porsche name is much heavier. Ferdinand āFerdiā Porsche, an architect by trade and the great grandson of the companyās founder Prof. Ferdinand Porsche, is now adding his fingerprint to the familyās rich motor-sports legacy. At 30 yrs old, Ferdi defies all the seriousness and pomp of racing cars. Heās affable, warm, and almost boyish in his excitement. To put it bluntly, heās ācoolā without effort, working hard to invite the next generation into the motorsports world. On February 24, Ferdiās @fat.international held its first ice race in Zell am See, Austria, and has now followed it up in Aspen, Colorado. Over the past two days on an icy track in Carbondale, the @fat.icerace has included models from the @aetherapparel Half11 (half Porsche, half F1) to the Rivian R1T, to a host of various @mobil1 cars and drivers tearing around corners, over-steering, under-steering, and generally bringing joy as they spit rooster tails of snow from their tires. I watch as an enthusiast warm his hands in the exhaust of a loud engine. He brings them to his nose, closes his eyes and inhales deeply, letting his senses coalesce into something whole and visceral. Ferdi sits in his car nearby grinning. Itās an expression of sincere, palpable joy. As an arm drops, he accelerates onto the track. In a burst of exhaust, something old becomes new again. Itās a Herculean task and these are enormous shoes to fill, but Ferdi seems to be carrying the weight of legacy effortlessly.Likes : 1900

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : The curb weight of the Porsche 356, the first Porsche automobile, was 1700 ā 2,296 lbs. The weight of the Porsche name is much heavier. Ferdinand āFerdiā Porsche, an architect by trade and the great grandson of the companyās founder Prof. Ferdinand Porsche, is now adding his fingerprint to the familyās rich motor-sports legacy. At 30 yrs old, Ferdi defies all the seriousness and pomp of racing cars. Heās affable, warm, and almost boyish in his excitement. To put it bluntly, heās ācoolā without effort, working hard to invite the next generation into the motorsports world. On February 24, Ferdiās @fat.international held its first ice race in Zell am See, Austria, and has now followed it up in Aspen, Colorado. Over the past two days on an icy track in Carbondale, the @fat.icerace has included models from the @aetherapparel Half11 (half Porsche, half F1) to the Rivian R1T, to a host of various @mobil1 cars and drivers tearing around corners, over-steering, under-steering, and generally bringing joy as they spit rooster tails of snow from their tires. I watch as an enthusiast warm his hands in the exhaust of a loud engine. He brings them to his nose, closes his eyes and inhales deeply, letting his senses coalesce into something whole and visceral. Ferdi sits in his car nearby grinning. Itās an expression of sincere, palpable joy. As an arm drops, he accelerates onto the track. In a burst of exhaust, something old becomes new again. Itās a Herculean task and these are enormous shoes to fill, but Ferdi seems to be carrying the weight of legacy effortlessly.Likes : 1900

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : The curb weight of the Porsche 356, the first Porsche automobile, was 1700 ā 2,296 lbs. The weight of the Porsche name is much heavier. Ferdinand āFerdiā Porsche, an architect by trade and the great grandson of the companyās founder Prof. Ferdinand Porsche, is now adding his fingerprint to the familyās rich motor-sports legacy. At 30 yrs old, Ferdi defies all the seriousness and pomp of racing cars. Heās affable, warm, and almost boyish in his excitement. To put it bluntly, heās ācoolā without effort, working hard to invite the next generation into the motorsports world. On February 24, Ferdiās @fat.international held its first ice race in Zell am See, Austria, and has now followed it up in Aspen, Colorado. Over the past two days on an icy track in Carbondale, the @fat.icerace has included models from the @aetherapparel Half11 (half Porsche, half F1) to the Rivian R1T, to a host of various @mobil1 cars and drivers tearing around corners, over-steering, under-steering, and generally bringing joy as they spit rooster tails of snow from their tires. I watch as an enthusiast warm his hands in the exhaust of a loud engine. He brings them to his nose, closes his eyes and inhales deeply, letting his senses coalesce into something whole and visceral. Ferdi sits in his car nearby grinning. Itās an expression of sincere, palpable joy. As an arm drops, he accelerates onto the track. In a burst of exhaust, something old becomes new again. Itās a Herculean task and these are enormous shoes to fill, but Ferdi seems to be carrying the weight of legacy effortlessly.Likes : 1900

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : The curb weight of the Porsche 356, the first Porsche automobile, was 1700 ā 2,296 lbs. The weight of the Porsche name is much heavier. Ferdinand āFerdiā Porsche, an architect by trade and the great grandson of the companyās founder Prof. Ferdinand Porsche, is now adding his fingerprint to the familyās rich motor-sports legacy. At 30 yrs old, Ferdi defies all the seriousness and pomp of racing cars. Heās affable, warm, and almost boyish in his excitement. To put it bluntly, heās ācoolā without effort, working hard to invite the next generation into the motorsports world. On February 24, Ferdiās @fat.international held its first ice race in Zell am See, Austria, and has now followed it up in Aspen, Colorado. Over the past two days on an icy track in Carbondale, the @fat.icerace has included models from the @aetherapparel Half11 (half Porsche, half F1) to the Rivian R1T, to a host of various @mobil1 cars and drivers tearing around corners, over-steering, under-steering, and generally bringing joy as they spit rooster tails of snow from their tires. I watch as an enthusiast warm his hands in the exhaust of a loud engine. He brings them to his nose, closes his eyes and inhales deeply, letting his senses coalesce into something whole and visceral. Ferdi sits in his car nearby grinning. Itās an expression of sincere, palpable joy. As an arm drops, he accelerates onto the track. In a burst of exhaust, something old becomes new again. Itās a Herculean task and these are enormous shoes to fill, but Ferdi seems to be carrying the weight of legacy effortlessly.Likes : 1900

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : The curb weight of the Porsche 356, the first Porsche automobile, was 1700 ā 2,296 lbs. The weight of the Porsche name is much heavier. Ferdinand āFerdiā Porsche, an architect by trade and the great grandson of the companyās founder Prof. Ferdinand Porsche, is now adding his fingerprint to the familyās rich motor-sports legacy. At 30 yrs old, Ferdi defies all the seriousness and pomp of racing cars. Heās affable, warm, and almost boyish in his excitement. To put it bluntly, heās ācoolā without effort, working hard to invite the next generation into the motorsports world. On February 24, Ferdiās @fat.international held its first ice race in Zell am See, Austria, and has now followed it up in Aspen, Colorado. Over the past two days on an icy track in Carbondale, the @fat.icerace has included models from the @aetherapparel Half11 (half Porsche, half F1) to the Rivian R1T, to a host of various @mobil1 cars and drivers tearing around corners, over-steering, under-steering, and generally bringing joy as they spit rooster tails of snow from their tires. I watch as an enthusiast warm his hands in the exhaust of a loud engine. He brings them to his nose, closes his eyes and inhales deeply, letting his senses coalesce into something whole and visceral. Ferdi sits in his car nearby grinning. Itās an expression of sincere, palpable joy. As an arm drops, he accelerates onto the track. In a burst of exhaust, something old becomes new again. Itās a Herculean task and these are enormous shoes to fill, but Ferdi seems to be carrying the weight of legacy effortlessly.Likes : 1900

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : The curb weight of the Porsche 356, the first Porsche automobile, was 1700 ā 2,296 lbs. The weight of the Porsche name is much heavier. Ferdinand āFerdiā Porsche, an architect by trade and the great grandson of the companyās founder Prof. Ferdinand Porsche, is now adding his fingerprint to the familyās rich motor-sports legacy. At 30 yrs old, Ferdi defies all the seriousness and pomp of racing cars. Heās affable, warm, and almost boyish in his excitement. To put it bluntly, heās ācoolā without effort, working hard to invite the next generation into the motorsports world. On February 24, Ferdiās @fat.international held its first ice race in Zell am See, Austria, and has now followed it up in Aspen, Colorado. Over the past two days on an icy track in Carbondale, the @fat.icerace has included models from the @aetherapparel Half11 (half Porsche, half F1) to the Rivian R1T, to a host of various @mobil1 cars and drivers tearing around corners, over-steering, under-steering, and generally bringing joy as they spit rooster tails of snow from their tires. I watch as an enthusiast warm his hands in the exhaust of a loud engine. He brings them to his nose, closes his eyes and inhales deeply, letting his senses coalesce into something whole and visceral. Ferdi sits in his car nearby grinning. Itās an expression of sincere, palpable joy. As an arm drops, he accelerates onto the track. In a burst of exhaust, something old becomes new again. Itās a Herculean task and these are enormous shoes to fill, but Ferdi seems to be carrying the weight of legacy effortlessly.Likes : 1900

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : The curb weight of the Porsche 356, the first Porsche automobile, was 1700 ā 2,296 lbs. The weight of the Porsche name is much heavier. Ferdinand āFerdiā Porsche, an architect by trade and the great grandson of the companyās founder Prof. Ferdinand Porsche, is now adding his fingerprint to the familyās rich motor-sports legacy. At 30 yrs old, Ferdi defies all the seriousness and pomp of racing cars. Heās affable, warm, and almost boyish in his excitement. To put it bluntly, heās ācoolā without effort, working hard to invite the next generation into the motorsports world. On February 24, Ferdiās @fat.international held its first ice race in Zell am See, Austria, and has now followed it up in Aspen, Colorado. Over the past two days on an icy track in Carbondale, the @fat.icerace has included models from the @aetherapparel Half11 (half Porsche, half F1) to the Rivian R1T, to a host of various @mobil1 cars and drivers tearing around corners, over-steering, under-steering, and generally bringing joy as they spit rooster tails of snow from their tires. I watch as an enthusiast warm his hands in the exhaust of a loud engine. He brings them to his nose, closes his eyes and inhales deeply, letting his senses coalesce into something whole and visceral. Ferdi sits in his car nearby grinning. Itās an expression of sincere, palpable joy. As an arm drops, he accelerates onto the track. In a burst of exhaust, something old becomes new again. Itās a Herculean task and these are enormous shoes to fill, but Ferdi seems to be carrying the weight of legacy effortlessly.Likes : 1900

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : The curb weight of the Porsche 356, the first Porsche automobile, was 1700 ā 2,296 lbs. The weight of the Porsche name is much heavier. Ferdinand āFerdiā Porsche, an architect by trade and the great grandson of the companyās founder Prof. Ferdinand Porsche, is now adding his fingerprint to the familyās rich motor-sports legacy. At 30 yrs old, Ferdi defies all the seriousness and pomp of racing cars. Heās affable, warm, and almost boyish in his excitement. To put it bluntly, heās ācoolā without effort, working hard to invite the next generation into the motorsports world. On February 24, Ferdiās @fat.international held its first ice race in Zell am See, Austria, and has now followed it up in Aspen, Colorado. Over the past two days on an icy track in Carbondale, the @fat.icerace has included models from the @aetherapparel Half11 (half Porsche, half F1) to the Rivian R1T, to a host of various @mobil1 cars and drivers tearing around corners, over-steering, under-steering, and generally bringing joy as they spit rooster tails of snow from their tires. I watch as an enthusiast warm his hands in the exhaust of a loud engine. He brings them to his nose, closes his eyes and inhales deeply, letting his senses coalesce into something whole and visceral. Ferdi sits in his car nearby grinning. Itās an expression of sincere, palpable joy. As an arm drops, he accelerates onto the track. In a burst of exhaust, something old becomes new again. Itās a Herculean task and these are enormous shoes to fill, but Ferdi seems to be carrying the weight of legacy effortlessly.Likes : 1900

1.9K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : The curb weight of the Porsche 356, the first Porsche automobile, was 1700 ā 2,296 lbs. The weight of the Porsche name is much heavier. Ferdinand āFerdiā Porsche, an architect by trade and the great grandson of the companyās founder Prof. Ferdinand Porsche, is now adding his fingerprint to the familyās rich motor-sports legacy. At 30 yrs old, Ferdi defies all the seriousness and pomp of racing cars. Heās affable, warm, and almost boyish in his excitement. To put it bluntly, heās ācoolā without effort, working hard to invite the next generation into the motorsports world. On February 24, Ferdiās @fat.international held its first ice race in Zell am See, Austria, and has now followed it up in Aspen, Colorado. Over the past two days on an icy track in Carbondale, the @fat.icerace has included models from the @aetherapparel Half11 (half Porsche, half F1) to the Rivian R1T, to a host of various @mobil1 cars and drivers tearing around corners, over-steering, under-steering, and generally bringing joy as they spit rooster tails of snow from their tires. I watch as an enthusiast warm his hands in the exhaust of a loud engine. He brings them to his nose, closes his eyes and inhales deeply, letting his senses coalesce into something whole and visceral. Ferdi sits in his car nearby grinning. Itās an expression of sincere, palpable joy. As an arm drops, he accelerates onto the track. In a burst of exhaust, something old becomes new again. Itās a Herculean task and these are enormous shoes to fill, but Ferdi seems to be carrying the weight of legacy effortlessly.Likes : 1900

1.6K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : In these crucial first days after the quake, rescue efforts give way to the critical, and complex, process of providing impacted communities with food, warmth, and shelter. Rebuilding takes time, but helping provide these basic needs can make a tremendous difference in the long run. @maggiedoyne and @blinknoworg are on the ground at the epicenter and are focusing their efforts on vulnerable groups like pregnant women, and the most isolated communities that are typically the last to receive aid. Supporting their work is the best way you can help from afar. Donations of every size matter. Nepal has given us both so much, please help us in our efforts to give a tiny bit of that back when it matters the most. http://www.blinknow.org/earthquake š· @rushsturges @coryrichardsLikes : 1568

1.6K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : In these crucial first days after the quake, rescue efforts give way to the critical, and complex, process of providing impacted communities with food, warmth, and shelter. Rebuilding takes time, but helping provide these basic needs can make a tremendous difference in the long run. @maggiedoyne and @blinknoworg are on the ground at the epicenter and are focusing their efforts on vulnerable groups like pregnant women, and the most isolated communities that are typically the last to receive aid. Supporting their work is the best way you can help from afar. Donations of every size matter. Nepal has given us both so much, please help us in our efforts to give a tiny bit of that back when it matters the most. http://www.blinknow.org/earthquake š· @rushsturges @coryrichardsLikes : 1568

1.6K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : In these crucial first days after the quake, rescue efforts give way to the critical, and complex, process of providing impacted communities with food, warmth, and shelter. Rebuilding takes time, but helping provide these basic needs can make a tremendous difference in the long run. @maggiedoyne and @blinknoworg are on the ground at the epicenter and are focusing their efforts on vulnerable groups like pregnant women, and the most isolated communities that are typically the last to receive aid. Supporting their work is the best way you can help from afar. Donations of every size matter. Nepal has given us both so much, please help us in our efforts to give a tiny bit of that back when it matters the most. http://www.blinknow.org/earthquake š· @rushsturges @coryrichardsLikes : 1568

1.3K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : Whatās better than art and true crime?! Just finished The Art Thief by my friend Michael Finkel @mike_finkel (the first writer I worked with for @natgeo) Go get itā¦itās great! Mike has a way of finding incredibly complex and often dark characters in real life, and somehow making them accessibleā¦even relatable. StĆ©phane Breitwieser, the character at the center of The Art Thief, managed to steal around 2 billion dollars of art before it all came crashing down. He wasnāt rich and resourced. He didnāt use guns. He stole in broad daylight and walked out the front door. Was is it narcissism? Was it kleptomania? Why did he never sell anything he stole, but instead kept it locked in his bedroom as a secret in plain sight? What is the pathology of the worlds most prolific art thief? No secret is forever and even the best make mistakes (often of hubrisā¦.like trying to unscrew 30 screws from a display while guards and tourists are moving around you.) Eventually cat becomes aware of mouse and the chase is on.Likes : 1269

1.2K Likes – Cory Richards Instagram
Caption : @gregoryalanisakov at home in CO. I love Greogory’s music and as much as he has played an important musical role in my past, I find myself listening to him on repeat as I sit in cafĆ©s and write. I found these images from a day at his house during the pandemic and realized I’d never posted them. One of the themes that has dug its way into this book is music and lyrics, like a soundtrack of my history and many identities. I didnāt ever see that coming when I decided to write out my life. Most of us remember our first album or our family soundtrack. My dad had a big collection of vinyl that was mostly classic rock and classical music and I remember the sound of the needle underneath the Beatles 1962-66. My first album was @metallica And Justice For All. I bought it in 1989 when I was eight. Satanic Panic was at its peak and I’m certain mom thought I was going to end up worshipping the devil. On some level she was right. We all worship our own devils, we just call them by different names. Until I started writing, I didn’t understand the profound impact music, and especially lyrics, had on me…How I found the right poetry at the right times. I’ve never understood musical composition, but I love the words. It’s common for me to find myself crying to songs that bring me back to a moment of heartbreak or when I was the hero of my own movie. As I’ve gotten older, I’ve been incredibly lucky to spend time with some of the musicians I love most. I listen to Gregory’s lyrics over and over and try to dissect and understand songwriting. It is one of the most unique and special forms of storytelling and I think everyone who writes can learn from its nuance and brevity. I owe deep thanks to all the musicians that have filled my life. That list is long and far more complete in the book. But today, I’ll just say thanks Greogory. “If it weren’t for second chances, we’d all be alone.” @ladzinski @andy_mann #thecolorofeverythingLikes : 1215