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You can now purchase digital copies of your favorite GRID Magazine issue at special rates. (Don't worry, we haven't left print behind! All our back issues are still available in print as well.)
This issue is an exploration of various paths and terrains, including the incredible story of mountaineer Carina Dayondon, the first Filipina to climb the highest mountain in every continent.
Cyclists, divers, surfers, and climbers: this issue celebrates the pioneers of outdoor sports in this country who show us all the possibilities of the great, humbling, joyful world outside.
From the folk healers of Siquijor to the bakwit artisans of Lanao del Sur, we explore the stories and destinations that exist comfortably where nobody is looking.
This issue is ripe with aspiration—both in the stories we tell and behind the scenes at GRID, as a new generation of storytellers begin to take the fore.
From our new President’s hometown of Davao to the protected environments of Taal Lake, this issue serves as a reminder that the places we visit are also the places others call home.
It’s our second anniversary! To celebrate, we’re letting you in on what went down behind some of our most memorable stories of the last year—bad spills included.
From Bohol’s journey of rising above the rubble, to the new generation that is reinventing Culion, we celebrate the people and spirit behind every destination.
Featuring the sprawling, epic story of an adventurous traveler, whose round-the-world journey in the 1970s took him from Britanny to Tahiti, and then to the Philippines’ last frontier, all in search of the perfect pearl.
We dive into the fascinating story of one of the legendary divers from the Sama tribe in Davao, and of his friendship with an Austrian freediver who wants to unlock their secrets.
While on the road to Anilao, we take a detour through Tagaytay and Taal for GRID’s first trip out after the pandemic. But do we still remember how to travel?
This is the decades-long story of how the Filipino divers who made Tubbataha famous–at the cost of unsustainable fishing nearly destroying the reef–helped establish one of the most successful marine parks in the Philippines.