Training for climbing a big mountain like Denali or Mount Everest is a huge commitment of time and energy. Get a plan so you can spend your training time efficiently! It’s not just the will to succeed on a big mountain, its the will to prepare.
Here is another great article from our friends at Uphill Athlete about Muscular Enurance training. This kind of training is key for climbing big mountains and should definitely be a part of your training program. I (Bill) used these workouts extensively in 2016 leading up to our Everest Expedition and they do work. It’s a different sort of training, and if you do it right it can be a low impact workout with big results, but you’ve got to have the big aerobic base to build on. Get yourself some water jugs and get out there!
I’ll paste the article below, and you can click the link here to go directly to the Uphill Athlete website.
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Vertical Beast Mode. What is Muscular Endurance? Why it is Important for any Alpinist or Mountaineer and How do You Train it?
The What:
Why is that some alpinists can ascend 1000 meters in an hour with a 15kg pack when others struggle with 1000 feet in an hour? What is it that gives this seemingly super human ability to cover vertical terrain?
Muscular Endurance (ME), sometimes referred to as Strength Endurance, is of utmost importance to all athletes involved in cyclic sports (ones that use repetitive movements for locomotion) lasting over 30 seconds. Famed Russian coach and researcher, Yuri Verkhoshansky was one of the first to deal directly with this quality’s impact on sport performance. He defines ME as the capacity to maintain a high percentage of muscle contractile force for many repetitions of the propelling movement.
The Why:
In events that are highly dependent on the aerobic system (any lasting more than 2 minutes) the ability of the muscles to make maximal use of the available oxygen supplied to them is as important as the heart’s ability to deliver sufficient oxygen to the muscles. Verkhoshansky’s own research showed that ME is the main determinant of the athlete’s maximum sustainable speed in efforts lasting more than a few minutes. This is often and confusingly referred to as the Anaerobic Threshold, Lactate Threshold, Maximum Lactate Steady State, and more recently Critical Power or Functional Power. This is a bewildering array of names for what essentially amounts to the quality we call “Endurance”: The ability to maintain high power outputs for extended periods of time, often hours on end. Alpinists and Mountaineers are almost totally reliant on their aerobic engines at higher altitudes. They must also carry substantial weight for hours on end, making improving ME very important for those looking to move faster on steep terrain.
We have developed a simple variant of Verkhoshansky’s ME training ideas, using it very successfully for many years preparing alpinists and big mountain climbers. Our own experience supports the research findings by Verkhoshansky. This training needs to be a part of every serious training plan for those headed into the vertical world.
Remember:
The ability of the working muscles to utilize the Oxygen delivered to them by the heart will be the limitation to your endurance when hiking/climbing steeply.
The How:
There are literally as many ways to skin this cat as your imagination can conjure. We’ve tried many, many variants and arrived at some simple guidelines we use with all our athletes. But first, this important warning:
Caveat:
The stuff really works and works fast. Keep in mind that the higher the basic aerobic capacity (AeT) the bigger the gains from this training will be. This is why we continue to beat the aerobic capacity drum so hard and so often. The excitement of seeing rapid gains when using these ME workouts often leads many folks to over emphasize them in their training program by replacing time spent training easier aerobic paces (Recovery and Zone 1 and 2) with these “money” workouts. DO NOT make this mistake. You MUST maintain your lower intensity aerobic volume and add this training on top of that. If you don’t, the gains you see will be quick (10-20% in only a few workouts) followed at first by a plateau and later a decline in performance. We cover this in depth in our book Training for the New Alpinism and articles on training (“The Importance of the Aerobic Base” and “Death by Threshold”).
Bearing in mind the above warning: After you have gone though an extensive (how extensive? See note below) Aerobic Base building period and elevated your Aerobic Threshold to it highest level for the current training cycle, you are ready to start adding some ME training to your program.
Note: We like to see our athletes have their AeT be within 10% of their AnT as measured by heart rate before they begin this program. If they are aerobically deficient then they still have big gains to make by focusing on their aerobic system; this training will be more effective then. See article on Anaerobic Threshold Determination here.
The simplest way to increase the ME training effect of your workouts is to add resistance while doing some of your high-intensity (Z3-4) workouts. Our favored way of doing this is to use water jugs in a backpack so that the water can be dumped out at the top and not beat your legs up so badly when coming down. Note: Some climbers will find great benefit from carrying the weight down steep hills as well for the strength and stability training it affords, but if you do this know that your knees may suffer for it.
While you can get decent gains using this method in Z1 and 2, we prefer to make use the higher aerobic zone to target the maximum pool of motor units you can recruit for the full extent of the workout. This seems to give the biggest gains. We also recommend doing these sessions in a sport specific manner. For example: While you could do (and we have done) this workout by standing up in a big gear while riding your bike uphill and see gains, we instead suggest hiking steep up-hills (as steep as you will be climbing) to maximize the sport specific muscle recruitment patterns.
The Theory: Hyper Gravity
The point of adding the extra weight is to increase the recruitment of the working muscle’s motor units. Your brain will increase the mass of muscle recruited as needed to get the job done up to the point of maximal strength. The extra weight causes motor units not well endurance-trained to be called upon to assist in getting the job done. This recruitment will expose these fibers to an endurance training stimulus that they don’t normally see. Recall from Training for the New Alpinism that if you can’t recruit them, you can’t train them. Due to these fibers’ relatively poor endurance (aerobic) capacity, they will be what determines your anaerobic threshold heart rate (HR) for this type of work. If it is done correctly, that HR will be lower than your unweighted AnT heart rate.
Intensity Guide:
The first thing you may notice is that your HR will not be a great guide for intensity when doing these workouts. We may call it Zone 3 but your HR will very likely be lower than normal Z3 while the leg work will feel much higher. THAT’S perfect. That is just what we are looking for in these workouts. You want the limitation to come from your muscles and not feel like you are running out of breath. A great gauge we use is that you should be able to carry on a conversation while your legs are burning. The effort should feel sustainable but just barely so, and if you went any harder your legs would give out in a few seconds. To find this sweet spot of intensity requires that you adjust the steepness of the hill and the weight on your back. It will take some doing and everyone is different.
How Much Weight:
This depends on your state of fitness and goals for the workout. See the Intensity Guide above for more info. We can only give general guidance here and you will need to adjust accordingly. Normally we start folks out with 5-10% of body weight (BW) if they have no experience with this type of training and are relatively new to hard aerobic work. Many very fit climbers feel comfortable with a 10-30% of BW load. The final goal for this sort of training progression should be carrying loads at above the weight you’ll have on the climb.
How Steep:
Your locale will need to be factored in, but it is no excuse. In general, steeper is better for this effect (the more it looks like your climb’s terrain the better, but not absolutely necessary). Low angle hiking trails are not very effective. We have had good success using slopes ranging from 30-100% grades (17-45 degrees). 60% is a slope on which you can just barely reach out to stabilize yourself for balance with your hand while only slightly bending forward at the waist. Ski/hiking poles can be helpful for balance.
Steve House used this training method in his peak preparation periods on steep slopes and long 3rd to low 5th class rock climbs where he felt comfortable climbing without a rope. We have also used this very effectively with guides training for their alpine and ski exams.
These workouts can be done as continuous Z3 efforts (remember they will feel like Z3 even if the HR is not in Z3) or as long repetitions done Interval style. The length of your hill may require many laps or one single long push to the top.
We’ve used both methods and both are effective. If you have the luxury of training in alpine terrain you can do these workouts front pointing up steep slopes, like David Geottler does around Chamonix. But if you are stuck in Manhattan, you can avail yourself of the local vertical terrain by doing laps in tall buildings like David Reoske did before knocking off both Cho Oyu and Everest, without oxygen, inside of 3 weeks. The most common barriers to effective training are motivation and imagination.
Progression:
It is important to use this training in a structured progressive manner. You’ll be doing 6-10 of these workouts over the course of a couple of months and the training stimulus needs to increase gradually as you adapt to the new loads. We like to progress either the weight or the volume (total vertical) in a stair step fashion and not both at the same time. Beginners to this will need to be cautious, however experienced climbers using this progression for the second or third time can push ahead harder as they know their previous limits.
A typical ME progression will include one workout a week and last about 6-8 weeks. Due to the duration and heavy muscular loading of these workouts, fitting additional high-intensity training into the week will only be possible for athletes with an extensive background in this sort of high-intensity work. Allow at least 3 days of easy recovery workouts after each ME workout to start with as you learn how your body reacts to these. As mentioned earlier you MUST maintain your aerobic base during this period or you will actually detrain. This training block is best used during the late base period and into the specific preparation period.
How Much Vertical?
That is the $64,000 question, isn’t it? As with all training there is no good stock answer. What might barely budge the training needle off zero for Steve House or Ueli Steck might exhaust another less fit climber. We suggest some very broad and simple guidelines for a progression of this kind of training in Training for the New Alpinism.
Ideally we’d like to end up with the final workouts encompassing more vertical and more weight than will be covered and carried on the biggest day of the upcoming climb. This holds true for those who are training at low elevations and whose ME training days do not include any technical terrain. If you are doing this type of work above 3000m then adjustments need to be made.
Nice Article ,
Water Meters
http://watflux.in/