Winter Fitness The Woofing Way

Winter mountains make more demands on your body and your fitness, here's our advice on how to make sure you're up for it


Posted: 7 November 2002
by Canny Canine

Butcher's Dog! Regular outdoor fitness tips from the canine on creatine. Cold wet nose and glossy coat guaranteed.

Get Fit For Winter Mountains

Winter mountains are like old time bus conductors and parkies - brutal and unforgiving. No really, winter walking and climbing is tougher for a number of reasons:

• You'll most likely be carrying more on your back

• The ground is more likely to be soft and energy sapping

• Crampons add around 10 per-cent effort to walking, which is why you shouldn't use them unless you really need to

• Shorter days mean the pressure is on to move faster

• Cooler temperatures mean that you're burning more energy just staying comfortable.

Being fit in these conditions isn't just about being more comfortable in the hills, it's also, in a very real way, about safety. So how do you kick your butt into winter shape?

What You Need...

Your main requirements are a combination of good cardio-vascular fitness and localised muscle strength and endurance. If you're mainly walking, ascents and descents are the real killers - climbs, particularly with a heavy pack, will give your heart a good kicking as well as punishing leg and back muscles. If you're climbing or mountaineering, you'll also need good strength and muscle endurance in your upper body too. Placing axes repeatedly on steep snow and ice will take its toll both on your arms and, in particular, calf muscles.

Background

If you've been mountain walking regularly over the summer and autumn months then you're already pretty well prepared. Long days in the hills should have built good basic fitness, but the extra demands of winter still mean it's worth investing some extra time and effort before winter really starts.

Outdoors Training

Running, and running hills in particular, is far and away the most effective outdoor training activity. Using the major muscles of the legs means that the cardio vascular system gets a thorough work out and crucially the hilly element will work the ascending muscles on the way up and, particularly, the hard to activate descending muscles - notably on the front of the thigh - on the downs.

Don't get obsessed with running hard, for mountains, running steadily for longer periods is the key. Start off with a 30 minute session three times a week leaving a day's rest between each run and aim for a pace where you're not consistently out of breath. Don't worry if that means a fast walk up steeper slopes. Build up the time you're running, but not by more than 10 per-cent per week or you risk stress fractures. Your progress will be fastest over the first four to eight weeks, which means now - November - is a good time to start, because you'll feel real benefits by January. As you get fitter, designate one run as your longer session and gradually extend it, while keeping the others relatively short, say 40 minutes.

Once you're reached a decent level of fitness, it's easy to get bored. Try Fartlek training, literally it means 'Speedplay' which involves varying your pace over the course of a session from slow jogging through to sprinting, striding and even walking. You'll be training your heart to work in all its ranges - like a car engine revving - and helping it adapt to, say, sudden, short, steep sections on a mountain ascent. Running off road, if you can, will also help with your balance and strengthen the muscles and tendons in your legs as you work to keep upright on uneven ground.

The one downside with running is the impact on joints and muscles, you can reduce this by sticking to soft surfaces as much as possible and investing in expert advice and a good set of shoes from a specialist running shop. Stretching after your sessions will help reduce soreness the next day.

• for excellent specialist running advice and shoe reviews, take a look at the Runner's World web site.

Another excellent work-out is mountain biking. It's not weight bearing in the same way as running, but off road biking in hilly terrain will act rather like Fartlek in giving your heart and lungs a good thrashing without joint impact. You'll also strengthen your upper body. If you do bike, be aware that it can shorten your hamstrings unless you stretch properly afterwards.

• for more mountain biking information see our sister site BIKEmagic.com

Indoor Training

If you're stuck in the concrete jungle, there's always the gym. Broadly the same principles apply to the cardio vascular machines. The two we'd suggest are treadmills and stepper or stair climber machines.

With treadmills, use the gradient adjustment to simulate hills and be aware that the lack of resistant on the 'flat' setting means that you should still set it up a few degrees even for a flat workout. For less impact, try a stepper or stairmaster, which has similar cardio vascular benefits and also uses the same muscles as walking uphill in a similar and transferrable way.

For more advanced fitness, speak to the pros at the gym about heart rate monitor training. The controlled environment of indoor training makes it easy to hold a particular pulse rate consistently.

The other plus with gyms is access to weights machines that you can use to strengthen specific muscles or muscle groups. Again consult a gym professional for specific advice, but we'd suggest a combination of a main leg muscle group exercise like squats or leg press, with more specific exercises like leg extensions - they strengthen the muscle that stabilises the knee joint - and calf raises. Tend towards high numbers of reps, 15 or so plus, that will build localised endurance without adding bulk.

Swimming adds variety but isn't weight bearing, so we'd tend to concentrate on more specific activities. Finally, if you're a climber, a combination of indoor climbing wall training and upper body weights, think tricep endurance for ice axe placements and pull-ups for, erm, pulling up will help your upper body strength.

Stretching

See my previous article below, but regular stretching seems to reduce after-exercise soreness and there's also some evidence that it reduces the possibility of injuries, though there's also evidence that it doesn't. Take your pick...

Last But Not Least

Remember that simply sitting still in winter burns more calories than in warmer weather. Make sure you eat properly and regularly and have adequate warm and spare clothing. And remember folks, alcohol is bad for you in cold weather cos it dilates your blood vessels and dissipates body heat. Pass the brandy...

The Butcher's Dog.


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Discuss this story

Any top tips for getting fit for winter? Do you crampon up trees, carry your granny up hills or what? Or do you just ignore it all and hope for the best?

Posted: 07/11/2002 at 16:48

Gym, gym and more gym I'm afraid.

The Cosford microclimate makes it such that it's just plain nasty to go out when at work (during lunch) so it's back to the gym.

Posted: 07/11/2002 at 17:09

Can't do the gym it bores me senseless and I was pretty senseless already!

Running on roads is it for me but I do that in the summer too.

Posted: 07/11/2002 at 17:11

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