Wednesday, November 25, 2009

November 24 Bounding with the Knoll People









A full quarter of the group of 15 showed up wearing shorts on November 24th, huh? The temp was pegged at 44 degrees and we beat the rain by two hours making for a great night. Steve's HRM (be sure and click on it) shows the crescendo like effort we had. The needle like spikes are in contrast to earlier in the year where the recovery interval took longer than the working phase. The POOF Theory of Stroke Initiation was born out last light as most demonstrated a longer push off on their strides. Remember that pushing off the outside edge is an advanced model but easily [?] mastered and is what seperates the good from the great. Practice that one....a lot.
A bunch more notes: The 17th Birkie Class is a go on Dec. 8th. Our roster list is coming along and you can sign up at www.incompetition.com .
Erick (the K is silent) Wikum has linked in the complete hill video on YouTube, find it at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rfy_hVXsNbc . A star is born.
Next week we wrap up the year in bounding as snow is scheduled to be on the ground on Dec. 6th. Steve said the 30 reps last night felt easy, conditioning will do that to you. Get out and practice some "push a ways" from the Thanksgiving table. Eat the veggies and try Sprite misted on your salad instead of dressing, it's really good. Have a great week and we wrap it up next Tue. at 5:27pm.


Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Hillbound Nov.17 Feelin' Owly







Twenty skiers enjoyed a somewhat cooler night (not too cool for shorts for at least 6 folks) and 30 reps up the hill. We spent a little more time enjoying the rope and a “ramped” lactate interval of nearly five minutes. Technically things went much better and most did well to maintain their technique to nearly the end. Most show the ability to maintain a high effort for two to three minutes and only regress when called upon to go longer. Check out Steve’s HRM (click on it to expand) note the “step” in the middle where we did rope repeats and the ramped LI at the end. Those are hard but similar to the real world where you start major events (climbs) with an already elevated heart rate. I have a few shots linked in to http://www.flickr.com/photos/incomp/?saved=1 and hopefully some video we can link in soon. UPDATE: VIDEO LINKED IN NOW. Erik Wikum Productions Directed, produced (and starred) in this new release of The good, the bad and the fried.
We have two more scheduled weeks to go before we start the 17th year Birkie class (see http://www.incompetition.com/ for signup. That begins Dec. 8th with our last bounding session Dec. 1st (how sad). There is snow out west and some trail reports have begun to trickle in on http://www.skinnyski.com/ check them out. My sighting of a Snowy Owl yesterday makes me convinced of a good year. I think next year we might start our season earlier with some Saturday soft start technique sessions. We see good technical progress now that was not there in the beginning and doing some skill work early may help a lot, don’t let me forget. We meet again next week at 5:26pm. Be aware that the city may close the gate so that you may have to park at the bottom. Don’t forget to POOF Push Off Outside of Foot
As you go about your days and remember that we are only weeks from snow. Nice night, well done, keep training.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Nov.10th Bound To Tell the Truth




Twenty six folks joined in last night for Hillbounding week eight. As we reached the physical plateau last week we only needed to improve technique and maintain our previous [high] output. I really heard some breathing last night and technically it was the best yet although there is always room for improvement. The Belly Rope was a great hit and its benefits were carried throughout the night and hopefully the remainder of the season. The reps have increased in speed with most skiers shaving about 20% any given rep since the start of the year. The savings is probably from both technique and conditioning showing that it really is a concerted effort of the two tasks that make you faster. The Deep Tucks are looking a little ragged. They require discipline. It looked a little like To Tell the Truth at the end http://video.google.com/videosearch?hl=en&source=hp&q=to+tell+the+truth+episodes&rlz=1R2ADSA_enUS352&um=1&ie=UTF-8&ei=n-P6SsupKIjEMKfnvNsK&sa=X&oi=video_result_group&ct=title&resnum=1&ved=0CBMQqwQwAA#
Steve sent his HRM strip from this weekends Trail Race at the camp. Notice the drop off that occur es as you fatigue and the little forays into level 3-4 and then the need for recovery. Skiing is more dramatic than this as recovery is more complete on descents and exertion is higher on ascents. Tough effort.
I have a lot of photos up at http://www.flickr.com/photos/incomp/?saved=1 . They are starting to look better. Note the shin angles and extension through the body. Nice.
The 17th Annual Birkie Class is open. We may be using the sport court rather than turf this season. More stable, less rubber....just as hard but neater. See http://www.incompetition.com/ for the sign up.
Week eight was our best yet. Technically we hit a milestone. Be sure and hit the roads now and keep your hour base up as we close in on the ski season. I have absolute certainty that some of us will be skiing on snow in less than three weeks. Until then we bound. Next week at 5:27PM. Nice job.




Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Hillbounding Nov. 3 What a Hoot!







A big bright moon and a Great Horned Owl gave 22 bounders an ominous greeting as what was the longest (32 reps) and perhaps hardest effort of the year. I think from now on the effort will be that of improving technical skills and speed. There is a balance between fatigue and technique that has to be maintained and physically we peaked. From here on out it should get physically better but technically harder with a goal of (only) perfection even when gassed.

Our "Belly Rope" rep was a keeper. I saw tremendous weight forward positions when we did that. The goal should be to mimic that position without the rope. It will come. The groups collective balance is noticeably better. I see less shakes and more fluidity in movement. For some the resemblance of hill bounding to skiing is striking. THAT is what we are doing this for and while you may not feel it at the time (sucking air) it will pay big dividends come snow.

The lactate interval went well and I could see the technical effort put force. They are hard efforts but important, quite possibly the most important 3 minutes of the week. These are the type of quality efforts that raise your ability. Note in Steve's HRM (click on it to expand) the minimal recovery time. That would not have happened 7 weeks ago. You really do improve your tolerance.....really!

There are several things to note: The Stump Farm Trail Run and Duathlon is Sat. This is a cool event and the weather is forcasted to be awesome so get the running shoes and or bike out for a great last fling before snow. See http://ashwaubenonnordic.pbworks.com/f/Stump+Farm+Trail+Race+Info.pdf for race form.
The 17th Annual Birkie Training Class at Aurora Sports Medicine is on! We start Tuesday December 8th from 6-7:30pm. The format is similar but there will be a few changes. We will be in the main gym on the sport court [no rubber beads] and a more stable surface and much quieter, all the better to hear me with! We go through the Birkie so save the date. We will start sign up soon on our homepage http://www.incompetition.com/. We have a ceiling of 40 folks so don't wait too long.
I have some nice photo's this week that show all the power and drama of the night. Go to http://www.flickr.com/photos/incomp/?saved=1 and expand some images to get a tighter view.

And finally....the only thing on a moonlit night better than Dan serenading us in song http://www.imeem.com/people/nBq85/music/nOtdHzft/van-morrison-moondance/
Nice night tonight. It was a tough workout and these are the events that really count. Feel good about this one. See you next week under the lights at 5:26pm.