5 Tips How I Build My Ski Legs

1. Preseason Cardio and General Leg Conditioning.

For me the preseason is about riding my bike. Mountain biking is great because it not only develops cardio and endurance muscle but maintains athletic ability and coordination on those technical trails. Things come at you fast on a bike so everything feels more hectic and its perfect training for reading terrain and adapting your line to whats coming up. I’m coming into the season in good shape and after a summer of being a skinny climber have already put on about 6 kg on muscle with long rides on my mountain bike.

2.Isometric Muscle Conditioning.

The cardio fitness and muscle is there but skiing requires the muscle to work in a 3rd way – isometric contraction. On a bike the muscle goes through its usual contraction during activation, then extension as it relaxes. During relaxation its easier for the blood to flow through the tissues to feed the muscle and remove waste products. In skiing you are often in a position half way in between with the muscle partially contracted and staying a constant length and holding tension for long periods. This is especially true for offpiste skiing where wide modern skis need less of an up’n’ down, weight unweight piste style and more just weight shift left or right. One way to achieve this is doing wall squats and simply hold the squat position for as long as possible, rest for a set time and repeat, adding weight as necessary.                                                                                           wall squats

For me I love to train outdoors and use the terrain we have. The gym is good for the odd hit but its not much fun unless you like the smell of sweaty balls. Training on skis builds coordination, overall body conditioning for skiing and acclimatisation while being fun! I can develop my isometric muscle conditioning and power endurance at the same time while skiing. To do this you need to select suitable terrain that will provide enough load for my muscles current strength. Muscle load increases proportionally with gradient due to the acceleration due to gravity going up proportionally with gradient so its important to find the slope thats right for you, it may be 20 degrees, 30 degrees, 40 degrees but you want to be able to ski continuously and fluidly without technique holding you back and without it being too easy. So for me the perfect terrain to start training is the cable face of Skyway which averages about 40 degrees and with 1200 m of vertical is long enough to create fatigue when skiing non stop top to bottoms.

3.Low Time, High Intensity Workouts.

For many of us time and location means finding other ways to prepare for the season. We’ve all come on a ski trip unprepared and by day 3 can barely walk through delayed onset muscle soreness. If you are in this category check out this handy training app from Clinic du Sport Chamonix which I recommend. Ski Fit App. There is a free phaselite version, a condensed 8 minute version and if you like it you can sign up for a year’s subscription to a 4 phase program for 10 bucks! So far I’ve only progressed to phase 3 and I’m sure you could win the Olympics if you complete phase 4.

4.Building Pelvic Stability.

I wish I’d know about this 20 years ago. For a long time I was getting twinges in my lower back with it locking out for a few days every year and I never got to the bottom of it. Then last year I blew a section of my lowest spinal disc onto the root of my sciatic nerve. It feels like you are being electrocuted and weeks of insomnia followed. Believe me you want to avoid this at all cost. The MRI was not pretty and revealed my lowest 3 discs were like that of an 80 year old. Finally we got to the bottom of why my spine was so damaged – very strong exterior muscles but significant core weakness and hyper flexibility in my lower back. You are only as strong as your weakest link and all the force coming up your legs is transmitted through your pelvis into your upper body so that area needs to be as strong or stronger.                                                                                                                      pelvic bridge

Pelvic Bridges build core strength which protects your spine and will allow you to ski harder for longer. Try keep the pelvic floor muscles engaged while maintaining good breathing. Try straightening one leg by raising the foot so all the load is on the opposite leg. The hips must be kept horizontal, don’t allow the hip to drop on the side of the raised foot. Further progression can be made by adding weight over your stomach.

5.Build Strength and Power.

Pistol squats are a great exercise to build leg, hip and core strength while working all the balance muscles. Progress by doing them on a wobble board and adding weight.

pistol-squat

Dead lifts will work hamgstrings, glutes and back which is perfect for landing jumps!

dead lifts

Box jumps will develop explosive or plyometric strength in glutes, hamstrings and calf muscles, and maintain athletic ability, balance and coordination. Perfect for those jumps turns in tight couloirs.

box jump

Don’t forget to eat healthily with plenty of fruit, veg, nuts, seeds and protein to meet your body’s requirements!

First Turns of the Ski Season

The Indian summer in the Alps came to an abrupt end overnight with the arrival of a monumental storm of the Med that battered the Ligurian coast, washed out roads, left many stranded without vehicles and sadly killed 10 or so people. I was away visiting my sister in Basel but was keeping a close eye on how much snow it would bring to the Alps south of the divide with Wepowder forecasting over 2 m. My friend Chipie who came on my last Baffin expedition was in Tignes and he keeping tabs on the snowfall as the storm progressed. Late Thursday night he sent me a note in the form of a photo of himself shredding powder – it took me about 3 seconds to text him back that I would be there in the morning. I spent the rest of the night feverishly searching for all my ski kit and packing the car, went to bed as excited as a kid the night before Christmas, got a few hours sleep and hit the road at 6am to make the 3 hour drive.

Arriving in Tignes there was certainly a couple of feet roadside but the visibility was poor and we spent the morning doing a very humid skin about 400 m vertical out of town. Once back in Tignes there was signs of the sun coming out and we decided to be positive about it and go up the Grands Motte. The clouds parted, the sun came out and so it began, with a little taste of the magic, hooning down the glacier whooping with delight, blowing up cold smoke behind us.

We were back the next day for more and found some good turns but strong wind was starting to do its dirty work on the powder and strip the glacier back to bare ice. The pistes up there have great corduroy and were perfect for carving turns, race training and getting the glutes back in shape. Hopefully this week will see more snow arrive from the south and build on whats there.

It’s great to get some preseason skiing in to see where the body is at and have a chance to work on the ski fitness before the season proper begins. It also reminds me what kit works and what I need going forward. This year I am  proud to have the additional sponsorship from the specialist online ski and snowboard shop snowcountry.eu who will plug my gear gaps and the Sapaudia Brewing Company for rehydration matters!

The Italian Job

This week we have been camped out in Italy and skied about 40000 m of vertical in incredible terrain. These are the days I dream about all year, skiing with friends, untracked powder, no one around and the just doing lap after lap. I also had the pleasure and honour of skiing with Italian big mountain ski legends Luca Rolli and Davide Capozzi.

My 5 days riding abruptly came to an end when my ski pre-released and launched off a the cliff under the cables and landing on a ledge.

 

pow-1-3pow-2Luca Pandolfi-1 Luca Pandolfi-2Italians-1 Italians-2 Italians-3 Italians-4Davide Capozzi-1

Dabbling on Col Diable and then North Face of Aiguille Noire

The plan was to go flat out from first bin to Col du Diable before the snow got too heavy. Fast progress was made round into Cirque Maudit and up the South facing access couloir next to the Grand Capucin onto the hanging serac. Above, the line blasts esthetically up the headwall to the ridge next to the Aiguilles Diables.  As we raced up the couloir the snow was deteriorating fast in the heat and we had no choice but to turn round at half height. The shallow snow pack here peppered with rocks didn’t make for a flowing ski.  It will be good to ski in better conditions another time.

10 minutes later we were down to the Mont Maudit cirque and both still motivated to ski before the bad weather arrived the following day. We headed off in the direction of the Noire above the Geant icefall and romped up the access couloir before it got too much sun.

The summit ridge revealed acres of our preferred ski medium – coldsmoke. After running around for a few hours we enjoyed a couple of minutes on this high perch over the Mer de Glace while eating lunch before cruising on down the North Face.  The skiing is never hard but it would be worth having a photo of this face on your phone as route finding could be problematic and rock slabs aren’t helpful for anchors. We managed to sketch over the first slab choke on skis, the snow was only 2-3 inches deep and after Dave passed I had some bare rock to edge over. Then there is a 30 m rap over an icefall which we kept our skis on for. Long easy slopes led to the base of the face where an awkward little step to runnelled, crevassed, hard snow forced us to downclimb – no anchors in sight here.

Col du DiableCol du Diable (Macho Couloir)

Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-5

God damned heat!
Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-7

The stunning view to the Breche Carabiniers between the Grand and Petit Capucins  Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-62

The North Face of the NoireDave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-13Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-15Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-17 Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-19 Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-27 Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-43 Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-47 Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-49

Like a kiddie in a candy shop – pow awaits
Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-52 Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-56 Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-57 Dave Searle Col Diable and Noire NW Face_-59

Col de Cristaux

Col de CristauxMichelle has been wanting to go to Col de Cristaux for a while now so I’d been saving it up for a nice sunny spring day when things would soften up. We were joined by fellow Aberdonian climber-skiers Sandy Simpson and Andy Inglis a very social lap on this Chamonix Classic from the sunny right hand finish.

I was surprised to see a large team start up the face behind us when were we 3/4 of the way up. As things were softening up fast and I started to ski down towards them, they appeared quite distressed by the volume of sluff that the skiers on the (other) direct finish were sending down. Surely if you didn’t manage to get out of bed early enough to start with the others, you would question the wisdom of questing up a route knowing people will be skiing down and dislodging anything from 1 to 1000 Te of snow? Would you go onto a big ice route behind people without expecting to get a lot of ice in the face? A few years ago another team followed us up the ice route Omega on the Petit Jorasses. By the end both of them were bloodied and bruised from direct hits from falling ice. It certainly spoiled my day knowing that anything we dislodged was going to harm them to some degree. Cristaux Michelle Blaydon-7

Sandy booting it.Cristaux Michelle Blaydon-11 Cristaux Michelle Blaydon-14 Cristaux Michelle Blaydon-16

Spot the guy climbing.Cristaux Michelle Blaydon-17 Cristaux Michelle Blaydon-23

This guy definitely felt the need to get a bit more rad than necessary for a 5.1.Cristaux Michelle Blaydon-30

Michelle all cosy in a down jacket. The boys were down to mankinis.Cristaux Michelle Blaydon-35 Cristaux Michelle Blaydon-44 Cristaux Michelle Blaydon-45 Cristaux Michelle Blaydon-48 Cristaux Michelle Blaydon-55