Short answer: you really shouldn’t. Apple says Vision Pro is meant for controlled, level areas and explicitly warns against use in places where you could trip or collide with obstacles—exactly what hiking trails are. It’s also not water‑resistant, has a narrow operating temperature window, and its object‑awareness only works at eye level (it may miss roots, rocks, or holes). Battery life is roughly ~2 hours off the pack. Put together, that makes hiking with it a bad idea from both a safety and device‑care standpoint.  question —> can you go hiking with an Apple Vision Pro?

Why it’s a poor fit for hiking

If you still choose to use it briefly (not recommended)

If you insist on momentary, stationary use (e.g., to view a map or record a quick clip at a viewpoint), minimize risk by:

Better tools for hiking

For navigation, stats, and durability, something like Apple Watch Ultra (with proper water resistance and outdoor‑oriented features) is built for trails; pair it with an iPhone for maps/photos. 

Bottom line: While you can physically wear Vision Pro outdoors, hiking with it is unsafe and outside Apple’s recommended use. If you want to capture a moment on the trail, take it out only when you’re stopped on safe, level ground—otherwise stick to gear designed for the backcountry.