Minus 44 with the Wind Chill

  Part of my training for Everest is not just increasing endurance, cardio and strength. There is also gear prep and making sure the systems all work together the way they should. With that in mind, I have been marching around in my new high altitude boots to break them in. Further to that goal, I have left the outer boots in my garage overnight (they are a double boot system) to simulate putting on a frozen boot in the morning on the mountain. Trust me, it can be quite challenging – there have been times at altitude in which putting on my boots took 15 minutes alone! All that said, when a weather watch was announced on the radio that outside temperatures would be plummeting below -40, I got excited! Perfect! I can try out my high altitude system to see...

Back on Ice: Guinness Gully and Guinness Stout

At 5:00 am while driving out to Field, BC from Calgary,  I mentioned to my climbing partner Jeff Dmytrowich: “One of the these weekend climbing trips I want to roll into it with lots of sleep instead of none from travelling the week prior.” So that was the start of a long day –  I was already tired with ambitions to climb 5 pitches of vertical ice (Grade 4 and Grade 4 +)  with a bit of a grinding slog between pitch 3 and 4. We parked at the trailhead, read the route description and began slogging our way up through trees on steep terrain until we found a trail.  The route description indicated a 15 -20 minute approach,  so at 35 minutes we knew something was wrong, but felt we must be going towards the climb or at least the upper pitches.  The path...

Dealing With Old Pains

The week of training after a week on the road and a climbing weekend was not fun.  On Monday morning the yoga hurt and the noon hour cardio was terrible. Fast forward to Tuesday – the morning and noon workouts were exercises in mental will more than body and the Tuesday night climbing session was a lack luster showing at best. By Wednesday things turned around and life goes on. A week later, just when I thought I was getting back into the swing of things, old friends started popping up. My tendons in my arms ached a couple of nights. Over a year ago from mixed climbing (climbing on rock to get to ice) I started to get tendonitis. Was the tendonitis coming back? I also noticed my right hamstring was tight and beginning to throb a bit, just a bit during some of...

Challenging New Years

Without a doubt, all of us have read at least one blog or article or watched one program about setting New Years Goals.  I am not about to weigh in on the advice from the various pundits.  But I will tell you what I have done and am in the process of doing. I gained weight during the holidays,  I always do.  I eat more (and not “good for you” more) and I train less; not an unexpected result. I feel sluggish after the holidays as a result of #1. I start back into the training at an easy pace. I pick a date to get back to a healthy diet,  and usually I allow myself to keep cheating until January 1st (let’s be serious, with treats everywhere at home and at work it is hard to resist). I read a lot of workouts and climbing technique articles over the break...

Outside Training

The best way to train for climbing is to climb: a common comment in the climbing world. Pick up any book by any of the world’s great climbers on training  from Mark Twight to Will Gadd and you will find some form of that comment.  So with that in mind, I went climbing. After a long week on the road for work (Saskatoon, Regina, Saskatoon, Lethbridge, Calgary), I picked up my climbing partner late Friday night at the Calgary airport and the next morning at 4:45 am we headed out of Calgary up the ice fields highway to find some ice. For Jeff and I, who are both Saskatoon climbers (is that an oxymoron?), this would be our first time on ice this season and we were not interested in hitting anything epic. (We also felt that this being the first ice climb of the...