ivan Posted November 24, 2005 Posted November 24, 2005 it's all about the music, baby oh, and the soccer-mom ass too, it's all about entering the zone while blanking out to the MILFs Quote
alpinerat Posted November 24, 2005 Posted November 24, 2005 To train my skills I went climbing in bad weather last winter, knowing it would get really bad by forecast. Had to flee out of that area due to avalanche risks at night in a bad snowstorm. All intended... But I got to know my new GPS very well in that moment. Finally came to a road (Julierpass) in the morning just after dawn for hitchhike. The snowplough-drivers gave me some big questioned looks. Since, I trust in that small device. My girlfriend suffers throughout winter, actually last night she already started a 4 month suffering, due to my cool room. No heating - no cheating. I will leave my sleeping bag at home, just to test my down clothing. This can bring me to smashing a window from a snowed in alp-hut, then spending a cold night trying to make a fire in the fireplace. Recently I tested some solar panells in town, in the streets and got some weird looks. Luckily I was wearing sunglasses. Quote
bigwalling Posted November 24, 2005 Posted November 24, 2005 Hmm, I trained really solid for a month doin Extreme Alpinism foundation period. Like 1-2 of cardio and then hour or 2 in the gym on weights and core stuff. My cardio is weigh up from the summer, my bodyfat went down 5% or more, my pull up number had more than doubled. I need to get back into trainin and stop puffin tough. But I think my 2 weeks of rest did me good in fact. I just train when it sounds fun and don't when it doesn't. I'd rather sit around and puff than train somedays and vice versa others. Who knows what I will be able to climb in the alpine tho. I've finally woken up enough to think about real climbin again! Quote
Billy Posted November 25, 2005 Posted November 25, 2005 Just have kids. Then you always climb with no sleep, and you have to climb when you really don't want to. Now that, is alpinism. Quote
Doug Posted November 26, 2005 Posted November 26, 2005 Blake, you're a freakin' marketing genius! I might even offer up my private Stairmaster to work on the prototype! However, in order to work on the mental stamina part, I think recordings of your worst and whiniest partner should be included. Quote
Dru Posted November 26, 2005 Posted November 26, 2005 I read this interview where Middendorf said that him and Walt Shipley would drop acid and freesolo in the Valley to prepare for being at high altitude, starving, and hallucinating from fatique on Karakoram alpine big walls... I did try that and free soloing thing once, once was enough. Quote
Doug Posted November 26, 2005 Posted November 26, 2005 Holy shit! I'd be terrified that I wouldn't have any feeling in my hands! Quote
kurthicks Posted November 29, 2005 Posted November 29, 2005 When I was training for Denali I would put on a pack with 50lbs of weight in it, then drag a plastic kiddy sled with 50 lbs on it around the hills of Pullman in my plastics for a couple hours at a shot. The wheat farmers and sorority girls didn't know what to think. Quote
EWolfe Posted November 29, 2005 Posted November 29, 2005 Getting drunk and dancing to techno all night is great leg training. Quote
Doug Posted November 29, 2005 Posted November 29, 2005 The wheat farmers and sorority girls didn't know what to think. Most sorority girls don't know what to think anyway. Quote
John Frieh Posted November 29, 2005 Author Posted November 29, 2005 Especially the ones that are cheerleaders Quote
bigwalling Posted November 29, 2005 Posted November 29, 2005 Getting drunk and dancing to techno all night is great leg training. HEll YES!!! That change drunk to high and that is a normal day for me. Except it don't last all night... i get sleepy. Quote
bigwalling Posted November 29, 2005 Posted November 29, 2005 The wheat farmers and sorority girls didn't know what to think. Most sorority girls don't know what to think anyway. That is a good thing too!!! Quote
Blake Posted November 30, 2005 Posted November 30, 2005 Blake, you're a freakin' marketing genius! Thanks Doug, PM for address to send royalties. Quote
glm Posted December 5, 2005 Posted December 5, 2005 Stupid, but appreciated - I hiked up to Camp Muir on a warm summer afternoon with over 40 pounds of water in my backpack in the form of a bunch of gallon jugs and 2 liter pop bottles, along with my harness, ice ax, and a bunch of other stuff I knew I wouldn't need. The appreciated part came in when I gave all the extra water away at Muir so I wouldn't hammer my joints on the way back down. Apparantly, people like it if you haul their water up to Muir for them. Quote
JackY Posted December 5, 2005 Posted December 5, 2005 Haul some beer up there. You'll be a hero, or you could get rich, maybe both! Quote
alpinespider Posted December 6, 2005 Posted December 6, 2005 Me and my cousin practicing self rescue hanging from the Ravenna St. Bridge at midnight so the cops wouldn't see us. One cop actually drove by and didn't even turn his head. There is or was some nasty brush under that bridge too...so it doubled as a nice cascades approach simulation. Quote
EWolfe Posted December 6, 2005 Posted December 6, 2005 Me and my cousin practicing self rescue hanging from the Ravenna St. Bridge at midnight so the cops wouldn't see us. One cop actually drove by and didn't even turn his head. There is or was some nasty brush under that bridge too...so it doubled as a nice cascades approach simulation. I used to rappel from there for practice! I lived 5 blocks away! Quote
ditchdigger Posted January 8, 2006 Posted January 8, 2006 Back in my military days, an instructor of mine had a training tool called the chariot of fire. This training aid was a wooden pallet with a lawn chair, a cooler, a radio that played nothing but tejano, and an umbrella bolted on to the wood. Plus two sand bags being dragged behind it. We would drag that pallet up and down the beach for hours, while he would sit in the chair and contemplate our next training evolution. That got a lot of strange looks from the girls on the beach. But I will say this after a few weeks of that; there was no pain humping around a 100-pound ruck. Quote
jstone Posted January 8, 2006 Posted January 8, 2006 nailing left handed at work to build accuracy for ice tool placements. My boss never asked, he learned not to when I used to steal his hammer and chin myself with two estwings on the rafters. all good until you figure 4 and slip off the old worn grips. ugh. Quote
joel20 Posted January 10, 2006 Posted January 10, 2006 http://www.cascadeclimbers.com/plab/showgallery.php?cat=503 Quote
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