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mattyg

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  1. This is easily found on the web but I thought I'd post it here for posterity. The Workout from Hell By John Long The "Workout from Hell" (WFH), is not my invention (though the name is), nor was it designed for climbers; but having struggled through it, I'm confident the training will work like magic for any climber. Be forewarned: it is time-consuming and arduous. Some months ago when I began competitive flatwater kayaking, a professional trainer -sort of an iron guru- was assigned to me, with direct orders to whip me into race shape. As I've done my time in the gym, the notion of a special weight geek shadowing me seemed absurd. Just type up the routine and I'll do it myself! WRONG. My "trainer" was no geek, and whatever he was doing worked, because pound for pound, he was the strongest fellow I'd ever seen. More that just an "iron rat", he had recently run a 2:37 marathon. I never would have made it through the workout's first phase had he not been on my case. On occasion, I wanted to kill that man. Now I'd buy him the moon if I could afford it. I was the first guinea pig my trainer put through the WFH, a cruel experiment combining various strategies and philosophies, proven and otherwise. The routine is strictly a weight program designed to significantly increase both strength and endurance, with no increase in body weight (providing you watch your diet). High strength to weight ratio is the ideal for flatwater kayaking, as well as climbing. No doubt someone, somewhere, has gone through a similar "progressive" program, but was considerate enough to keep it a relative secret! This routine assumes certain physiological laws and techniques which are often ignored by climbers, though they are followed religiously by serious lifters. And the "WFH" is dead serious. First Law: You train the WHOLE physique, not just the muscles associated with climbing or kayaking movements. If you neglect training the antagonistic muscles, an imbalanced, injury-prone machine results. It's fine to center on sport specific muscles, but not to the exclusion of the rest of your body! Second Law: Pick a muscle group, do exercises which best isolate those muscles, then trash them. Third Law: Allow the muscles at least 48 hours to recover before blasting them again. Ignore any of these precepts and you'll get something less than the maximum results. No one of flesh and blood can avoid it. Phase I 2 days on, 1 day off, 2 days on, 2 days off. That means 4 days a week in the gym. Day 1 you work back and chest; Day 2, shoulders and arms. Then take a day off. Repeat the process before enjoying 2 days off. DAY ONE: (Back and Chest) Crank 3 sets of 4 back exercises, equaling a total of 12 sets. Of the many back exercises, concentrate on the primary ones: Pull-downs, cable rows, T-bar rows, and maybe 1 final set on a machine (or wide-grip chins). 3 sets of 4 exercises applies to the chest as well. Again, go with free-weight exercises, which tend to be more effective than machines. I usually did flys, flat-back and incline dumbbell presses and finished on the pec-deck. You can consider the last exercises a bonus and change it weekly to add variety. DAY TWO: (Shoulders and Arms) 3 sets of 4 exercises for shoulders, (12 total). 3 sets of 3 exercises for both biceps and triceps, (9 sets for both). Again, concentrate on the grueling, primary exercises: Seated military presses, standing cable rows, and lateral dumbbell raises for the shoulders (plus you bonus machine exercise); preacher E-Z bar curls, seated dumbbell curls, etc... for the guns; close-grip presses, standing (with bar or rope) and flat back extensions for the triceps. A Note: "Primary" simply refers to the motions which bomb the muscles most effectively - the basic, fundamental movements. The refining exercises (like concentration curls and cable cross-overs) are not part of this routine. Fact is, no one short of the bionic man would have enough gas to bother with anything beyond the recommended sets. "The crux": You must do 30 reps per set! Yes.. you read that correctly. It's an insane amount of reps and will absolutely trash you for the first few weeks. You'll definitely need a training partner. Otherwise, once you get to around 20 reps, you'll quit. It's also important to load the weights so you can do 30 reps but no more. Expect to fail miserably and have to stop for short breathers at first. After a few weeks you should manage to pump off 30 reps, if just barely. After that, increase the poundage ASAP. More important that weight is form, which must be correct. This is very hard after 20 reps. Your training partner should watch closely and correct you form when it gets loose. A couple important things: The initial weeks of this first phase are devastating. I slogged through this routine after paddling for 1.5 hours in the morning and spent much of the first 2 weeks taking naps and bluffing my way through work. You must get adequate rest and eat ample amounts of complex carbs -spuds and brown rice in particular- to fuel the effort. Also eat enough protein. You certainly don't need the 150 grams body builders consume to create those freaky builds; but you'll probably need somewhere around 40 grams to avoid lassitude and zero drive. About 3 weeks into the first phase I got dead lazy and couldn't figure out why. A blood test determined I had mild sports anemia, easily rectified by eating a can of tuna or several pieces of chicken daily. I'm not sure what a vegetarian would have to do - soybeans, frijoles, whatever. Skip the protein, you'll go down HARD. Don't get discouraged by the fact that initially you'll probably have to use baby weights to accomplish 30 reps. (You know, those funky little chrome dumbbells with 15 lbs. stamped on the end. If you're in an honest to god iron gym, you might have to blow the dust off of em') the difference between 20 and 30 reps is the difference between 5.8 and 5.12 (providing you maintain perfect form). If you are in reasonable overall shape, getting adequate rest and nutrition, you will adjust in a matter of weeks. The remarkable burn you'll feel at around 20 reps is nothing more than lactic acid build-up. The best way to limit this is to make sure you continue breathing as you pump out the reps - particularly important after 20. You will never get totally used to it, but you can get to where working through the burn is at least possible. And remember..., stretch between sets. After you can finish the workout without stopping mid-set to rest, continue the 30 rep routine for 1 month. It may well be the longest month of your life (It was for me), though there's some insane satisfaction in simply surviving such a grueling program. It's no fun, but one doesn't embark on this purely for fun! Phase II This involves exactly the same routine, 2 days on 1 off, 2 on, 2 off. Now reduce the reps to 14. You'll savor going to the gym because you don't have to crank off 30 reps on every exercise. Adjust you poundage so that when you hit 15 reps on a given exercise, you have nothing left -absolutely nothing! You will not be able to double the poundage, but should be able to increase it considerably, perhaps by 30%. Remarkably, you can continue adding weight and cutting down rests between sets, which signals that you are coming into you own. Once you've dialed into it, continue with the 15-rep cycle for 3 weeks. Phase III Same routine, but cut reps down to 5-6 and go for the max. weight you can possibly heft on every last set. Don't worry about how long you rest between, just go after the big-time iron. Do this for 3 weeks, adding more weight every session. This is the least tortuous phase in terms of pain, but requires the most concentrated effort. Always remember to maintain you form... perfect form! Phase IV Still pump 3 sets of every exercise but now do 30, 15 and 5 reps for each. This is a tapering or "peaking" phase and after 2 weeks, you cut down to every other day and finally 2 days on and 3 days off. At the end, both your strength and endurance have increased dramatically and you're ready to third-class the Salathe'! Summary Phase 1 is a conditioning cycle which increases you vascularity and endurance, tones, and kicks your ass something terrible. Phase 2 maintains endurance and builds strength commensurate to how much weight you stack on. Phase 3 goes after "raw-power", which is easily summoned after the tremendous conditioning you have received from the previous 2 cycles. The last phase blends everything together. I supplemented the weight bit with heavy aerobic conditioning during the off days (bicycling and jump rope), though I was getting a wicked aerobic pump from a 6 day/week paddling routine. At the end of the whole cycle, my strength increased about 15%, my endurance about 30%, my body fat decreased 5%, my resting heartrate dropped to 50 bpm and I stayed exactly the same weight. The routine is a polecat to perform, but the results are amazing. During that first phase I wanted to quit many times. I just couldn't believe how hard it was! One my "off" days I would usually do some leg presses and extensions, plus a little calf work after jumping rope. At the end of my "on" days I would crank some sit-ups and hyperextensions for 15 min. or so, long enough to cool down a little. If you need greater lower body strength, not obtainable via running or jump-rope work, you wont "enjoy" the off days and will instead spend them doing squats or whatever. If you do choose this route, bear in mind you are tackling a workload greater than that of most professional athletes. But, however you shake it, the important thing is the cycle of 30, 15, and 5 reps, followed by the peaking phase. I personally don't go for supplements and amino acids and such, feeling the bulk of them end up in the toilet or shrubs. Good balanced vitals, a basic multi-vitamin, plus a little extra C seems to do the trick. I also tried to drink a couple of light beers an evening for no apparent reason at all! The "WFH" is ideally suited for a climber as an off-season routine and will insure some big-league artillery once the clouds part and it's time to jump back on the crags.....Go after It !!!
  2. You don't clarify if you are using the Stairmaster or the Stepmill (that's what I call it). The Stairmaster is the older style stair machine with the pistons that move up and down. The Stepmill is the rotating staircase (kind of like a very small escalator) that closely mimics actually climbing stairs. I much prefer this last machine as I find (with a weighted pack) that it is as close as you can get to actually hiking or climbing. I feel I get a good calf workout with about a 50# pack for 60 minutes at about 50% of the machines maximum rate. Intersperse the heavy carry days with a good interval workout and you are good to go on whatever big lava pile you select.
  3. At Exit 38 about 8-9 years ago I saw a guy dressed in camo setting up a rappel off the bridge. Don't remember his setup clearly but I do remember being a little sketched out by his actions. So I watch as he starts bounding down the side of the tressle on an olive drab rope wearing combat boots. He gets almost all the way down and all of a sudden he drops like a stone for maybe the last 15' or so. Right off the end of his rope. I thought I was going to have to go rescue him but he got up and was all pissed off. I couldn't believe it. Then I got pissed thinking about how irresponsible it all was.
  4. Rescued climber dies By The Associated Press AP Peter Cooley, left, and Scott Richards, right, are seen in this 2001 family photo. The two men, both from Cape Elizabeth, Maine, were stranded on Mount Rainier after Cooley was injured Saturday in a fall in Mount Rainier National Park. The climber rescued today from Mount Rainier has died, a Pierce County Medical Examiner's spokeswoman said this evening. This afternoon, an Oregon National Guard helicopter took advantage of a sudden break in the clouds to retrieve the man, who was seriously injured. The climbers were stranded at 12,300 feet since Saturday on a 45-degree slope with steep and rocky terrain above and below them, Mount Rainier National Park spokeswoman Lee Taylor said. "There couldn't be a worse place on the mountain to try to do a rescue; it's very extreme terrain," she said. Peter Cooley, 39, of Cape Elizabeth, Maine, fell 30 feet early Saturday on Liberty Ridge — one of the most difficult routes up the 14,410-foot mountain. His climbing partner, Scott Richards, 42, also of Cape Elizabeth, was able to reach him, set up a tent and call for help on a cell phone. This afternoon, Cooley had been in stable condition but was exhibiting signs of a life-threatening head injury and also appeared to have shoulder and leg injuries, park ranger Patti Wold said. He was in and out of consciousness, incoherent and agitated. "When our climbing rangers approach him, he's able to sense that they are not his climbing partner, and he becomes combative," Wold said. The rangers, specialists in mountain rescues, set out Saturday afternoon but were held up by poor visibility. A helicopter was able to drop supplies to the climbers Sunday night, including a radio, food, water, warm clothing and sleeping bags. Richards had been keeping Cooley hydrated by dripping water into his mouth. An Oregon National Guard helicopter also tried to reach the stranded men this morning but failed due to heavy cloud cover. Eighteen rescuers were on the mountain. Both men were described as experienced climbers who had scaled Rainier before. In 2001, they tried to climb Liberty Ridge, but bad weather forced them to take an easier route. Cooley once worked on a search-and-rescue team on Mount McKinley in Alaska and climbed that mountain solo. This was his fourth ascent of Mount Rainier. "He's an excellent mountain climber," said Cooley's aunt, Kristi Witker of New York, earlier today. "All of us wanted him to stop mountain climbing, but he's very skilled at it, and it's his passion." Richards had climbed Mount Blanc and Mount Chamonix in the Alps. "These are experienced climbers in peak condition and this trip wasn't taken lightly, and the proof of that is the fact that Scott was able to get to Peter and protect him and they're hanging in there," a friend, Virginia Hanson of Cape Elizabeth, told the Portland (Maine) Press Herald. Mount Rainier, about 60 miles southeast of Seattle in the Cascade range, is a popular destination for hikers and mountaineers.
  5. The Nike Oregon Alti-Compass runs $200. It's pretty circular tho - not really oval. Alti-Compass There is a flash demo on the page that has a real nice overview of the product. There's also the Alti, which is like $150. The main difference between the two is that the Alti-Compass has a (duh) compass and also a barometric trend (Weather) mode which is nice.
  6. How do you like the Axis? Right now I'm looking at the Nike Oregon Alti-Compass. Anyone want to chime in on that one?
  7. Nope, just thought it was decent routine. What other types of training info are you looking for? More weight-lifting related stuff? That one pretty well covers the cardio/endurance requirements of climbing but only briefly touches on anaerobic training.
  8. Here's a fairly decent routine for getting someone used to humping loads who is or isn't in shape. http://www.alpineascents.com/denali-train.asp I'm in month 5 right now. . .
  9. The road is gated about a 1/2 mi before the climber's cutoff up into boston basin. The road into Cascade Pass has been completely washed out in one area. It's pretty bad. Dunno when they'll be able to fix it by.
  10. elephant foot Just tried out a FF Vireo.
  11. Awesome possum! I am sold on the elephant foot. The thing packs down to the size of a grapefruit, weighs like a pound and keeps me warm too. It was a pretty warm night tho. I'll be using it on Baker in a few weeks - that'll probably be a better test. Thanks.
  12. Was up there this past weekend to attempt the West Ridge. Got up to BB @ about 4 or so on Saturday. A really warm, beautiful night up there: mughjie you must've had a nice climb! Woke up to light rain and clouds on Sunday. Dern!
  13. For Those of you who've been up to Boston Basin recently: What's the rock look like on Forbidden? Is it still snow coated or could it possibly go? Specifically the ridges. Thanx.
  14. Nice work. I've climber Baker numerous times but always via the easy routes. Would this be a good first climb to sink my tools into steep stuff in the mountains? Will the conditions be easier or harder later in the year?
  15. Stupid units, 21k. What've you got?
  16. Analog. Does Thommen make digital altimeters?
  17. Anyone have one they aren't using anymore? I'm in the market.
  18. Does he have a new book out? Well duh - he must. What is it?
  19. Ya - I've had overall good experiences with their gear - mostly rock stuff. Was passing through SLC on a road trip when I was in college. MET @ WWU so I was interested in their production techniques. They gave me and my techie friends a tour of their entire campus. Saw all their processes and testing rigs. A good company. Too bad they're in Utah, I'd try to get hired.
  20. Were you able to do it by yourself? I always thought I wouldn't have the gusto to get through that routine without a partner. Just curious - what are you peaking for right now?
  21. Anybody here bought a down jacket from Feathered Friends? I need to get the run down (without marketing hype) of the fabrics they use for their coats. What is the difference between the Epic, Event and Quantum shell fabrics?
  22. Almost 100% now. Went back to the doc last week because it was still hurting. Got an X-Ray and saw no tears in the ligament. He put me on Vioxx to reduce localized swelling. I felt a noticeable difference the next day after starting the drug. Just finished it up this past Tuesday. I can barely even feel it anymore. That's a month and a half heal time. Thanks for the suggestions everyone - I'm healthy again!
  23. Well it's been about a week and a half since the *twist*. My knee is still stiff and sometimes sore laterally. I get around ok. I've been able to get on the stepmill several times at the gym and even ran around Greenlake last night. It went ok but I noticed that I had to keep my leg pretty stiff so the knee wouldn't rotate. So I was able to jog, but not run full out. Does anyone have specific recommendations for stretches to increase ROM and/or reduce scar tissue?
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