A field guide to endurance gear, written for people who finish what they start.
Long-form reviews of swim, bike, run, and multisport equipment — published on the URL that hosted the Nautica Malibu Triathlon for thirty-seven years.
We test gear the way the original race tested athletes — slowly, in real conditions, and against the next thirty-seven miles.
This URL is a quiet rebuild. For most of four decades it pointed at the official site of one of the most iconic triathlons in the United States — a race that began on Zuma Beach in 1987 and raised more than fourteen million dollars for pediatric cancer research before its final running.
The race is gone. The address remains. We took the name because the audience that stayed loyal to it for thirty-seven years still deserves the kind of careful, unhurried gear writing that most modern publications no longer have time to produce. We will not test fast. We will not chase ten reviews a week. We will publish when a piece of equipment has actually been put through what it claims to be built for.
The Course
Four disciplines. Every review on the journal lives inside one of them.
Swim
Open-water wetsuits, racing goggles, swim watches, and the gear that handles cold Pacific mornings without a fight.
Enter the lane → 02Bike
Tri bikes, road helmets, GPS computers, power meters, and the small components that decide whether a long ride feels long.
Enter the lane → 03Run
Running shoes, hydration vests, GPS watches, and the equipment that keeps a four-mile finish from feeling like a fourteen-mile one.
Enter the lane → 04Multi
Tri-suits, transition bags, race nutrition, and the multisport gear that has to work across all three legs without a swap.
Enter the lane →We tested seventeen hydration vests across a year of long runs. Only four made it past mile twenty without rubbing. This is what the marketing copy will not tell you.
What seventeen hydration vests taught us about a four-mile finish
Read the full pieceLatest Dispatches
New writing from the journal. Arrives when finished. Never on a schedule.
- 12 Best Portable Power Banks for Camping (July 2026) TestedBy the time you have hiked three miles into the backcountry and your phone hits 12 percent, you realize exactly why the best portable power … Read more
- 12 Best Fishing Waders for Men (July 2026) Tested and ReviewedThere is nothing worse than being knee-deep in a freezing river and feeling that telltale trickle of cold water creeping down your leg. A leaky … Read more
- 8 Best Self Inflating Sleeping Pads for Camping (July 2026) TestedNothing ruins a camping trip faster than a terrible night of sleep. I have spent years testing sleeping pads in everything from summer tent camping … Read more
- 12 Best Camping Cots for Tall People (July 2026) Ranked and TestedIf you are over six feet tall, you already know the struggle of trying to sleep on a standard camping cot. Your feet hang off … Read more
- 8 Best Driving Sunglasses for Men (July 2026) Top PicksDriving into a low-angle sun on the highway is one of the most dangerous things you deal with on a daily basis. That blinding glare … Read more
- 10 Best Golf Sunglasses for Men (July 2026) Tested & ReviewedFinding the best golf sunglasses for men means choosing eyewear that actually helps you read greens, track your ball flight, and stay comfortable through a … Read more
- 12 Best Prescription Sports Goggles for Racquetball (July 2026) ReviewedRacquetball is one of the fastest court sports on the planet, with the ball traveling at speeds exceeding 150 mph during competitive play. When you … Read more
- 10 Best Tactical Sunglasses for Men (July 2026) Ranked & TestedWhen your eyes depend on ballistic-rated protection, a cheap pair of gas station shades is not going to cut it. Whether you are at the … Read more
- 10 Best Sports Goggles for Basketball (July 2026) Protective Eyewear GuideBasketball causes thousands of eye injuries every year, from corneal scratches to retinal damage. I learned this the hard way when an accidental elbow during … Read more
- 10 Best Portable Camping Showers for Road Trips (July 2026) Top PicksAfter three months of testing portable camping showers on road trips across the Southwest, I learned one thing fast: not all camp showers are built … Read more
- 12 Best Workout Leggings for Petite Women (July 2026) Top PicksIf you are 5’4″ or under, you already know the struggle. Regular leggings bunch at the ankles, waistbands roll down mid-squat, and the crotch area … Read more
- 15 Best Adaptive Workout Equipment for Wheelchair Users (July 2026)Finding workout equipment that actually works when you use a wheelchair can feel impossible. Most gym machines assume you’re standing, and half the “accessible” equipment … Read more
- 8 Best Dip Stations for Home Gyms (July 2026) Complete Buyers GuideBuilding serious upper body strength at home requires the right equipment, and dip stations for home gyms have become one of the most popular additions … Read more
- 6 Best Golf Irons for Beginners (July 2026) Top PicksStarting golf with the wrong irons can make the game feel nearly impossible. Every mishit stings your hands, the ball barely gets off the ground, … Read more
- 8 Best Climbing Quickdraws for Sport Climbing (July 2026) Top PicksWhen you are pumped out of your mind at the third bolt, the last thing you want is a quickdraw that fights back. The right … Read more
Pace Notes
A wetsuit that does not fit you is slower than no wetsuit at all.
The drag from a poor seal at the neck and shoulders is measurable. Most athletes underestimate how much stroke economy they lose to a half-size error.
The cheapest performance upgrade on a road bike is a proper saddle fitting.
Before deep-section wheels, before a power meter, before any electronics — get the contact point right. Everything else is downstream of that one fix.
Running cadence matters more than running shoes, and almost no review will say so.
A shoe will not save a runner from a 158-step-per-minute habit. Cadence is free. The shoe industry quietly prefers we keep talking about foam stacks.
Course History
A short record of what happened at this address before the journal began.
The race begins at Zuma Beach.
Founded by Michael Epstein and inspired by the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Robert Amiel Triathlon, the first Malibu Triathlon brings a few hundred athletes to the sands of Zuma Beach for a half-mile ocean swim, a seventeen-mile bike, and a four-mile run.
Robin Williams becomes the first A-list celebrity to enter.
The race quietly establishes itself as the place Hollywood comes to test its endurance. The celebrity division becomes a cultural fixture. Nautica signs on as title sponsor and stays for the next twenty-three years.
Jennifer Lopez and Matthew McConaughey both finish.
Lopez raises more than one hundred thousand dollars for charity and lands a podium spot in her division. The race becomes one of the most televised triathlons in the country and one of the largest single-event fundraisers for Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.
Over fourteen million dollars raised, lifetime.
More than five thousand athletes compete each year. Registration sells out in three hours. The triathlon becomes a permanent fixture of the Southern California endurance calendar and a model for charity-anchored multisport events worldwide.
The City of Malibu permits expire.
After thirty-seven years and several ownership changes, the race is unable to secure its operating permits. The event is suspended. The original domain eventually lapses, and the URL becomes available to register again for the first time since 2003.
A new kind of writing, on the same address.
We took the name because the audience that trusted it for thirty-seven years deserves something more careful than the current state of gear publishing. The race is over. The reading continues.
Cross the line, then start reading.
Written by people who train, race, and read datasheets. New work arrives when it has been earned. The archive grows the way a long ride grows — one mile at a time.














