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Blog > SlopeSide Blog > October 2007 > 70 Years of Fitness and a Road Trip

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70 Years of Fitness and a Road Trip

By Paul Hooge I dont mind short road trips; perhaps 500 miles each way is a sane distance. I dont often fly because you cannot haul a bunch of old or antique skis on planes easily (packaged they may resemble some sort of missile). This September my trip began in crested Butte, Colorado (9250 ft elevation at the house) to Ohio (900 ft) and on to New Hampshire (around 1200 ft) and back in twenty days. I had meetings in Kansas City, Columbus, Ohio and finally at the New England Ski Museum in Franconia, NH where we discussed a conference for Ski Historians in 2009 in Crested Butte. I planned to keep up my workouts, packed my road bike, forgot the dumb bells and was too busy to locate gyms along the way. So I arrived back in CB feeling a bit bloated and stale, knowing that it would take a week to get my training program back on schedule. While in NH I purchased a copy of Skiing: The International Sport, published 1937.This text rates among the top ten books ever published about our sport. The first chapter I read was Training for Ski Racing by Peter Lunn. I started here because while scanning the chapter I saw the word stale and at this moment I was feeling very stale. Lunn lists three critical elements in training for skiing (from his perspective exactly seventy years ago): exercise, food and sleep. Then he states that the mind is trained to avoid staleness and to develop sufficient power to conquer the nervous reactions of ones body to high speed skiing.Regarding training he has three primary recommendations: 1. Plenty of up hill climbing,which, he says will condition muscles that skiing cannot target specifically. 2. Plenty of distance running, interspersed with high speed sprints (Lunn believes that this will help prepare the skier to deal with “risk taking during high speed runs. 3. He recommends that skiers quit smoking prior to the ski season because “the resultant effect on the nerves is bad for form, race form specifically. Regarding alcohol, Lunn states that wine and beer taken in moderations after a day of skiing are good for training, but cocktails should be eliminated. Red wine is better for training than white. Lunn covers a lot of territory including sleep and diet. Sleep, according to Lunn, should adhere to Ben Franklin’s advice “early to bed and early to rise and sleep should be on a regular schedule. Concerning diet, he advises, “Personally I eat normal meals though I try to avoid eating bread with my lunch or dinner… I think it is advisable to eat in between meals; recent research among factory workers has shown increased work productivity among those who have taken additional meals in the middle of the morning and afternoon. When skiing I generally carry chocolate in my pocket!Finally he states that the skier with a fit body and mind has an edge over all others. All of this advice from seventy years ago and much of it seems timely; however l'll defer to Andrew to compare and contrast elements of training then and now.

Posted: 10/16/2007 8:33:28 PM by Dawn Snyder | with 10 comments
Trackback URL: http://www.fitskiing.com/trackback/7480ee65-5f32-437b-9618-abaf18173f92/70-Years-of-Fitness-and-a-Road-Trip.aspx

Comments
health insurance commented on 4/28/2012 12:10:50 AM

if u wana go faster then get realy fat since your weight will go faster because of gravity.if you want to be realistic then do core work. try to run, bike, hike, and swim. sports will help too. i dont nkow anyone who is exceptionaly good at skiing that is overweight so keep it skinny.

 
online life insurance commented on 4/23/2012 11:47:33 PM

Dude, you need to lose some weight. Do lots of cardio and stop eating. I am not telling you what to do, but you would feel better about yourself if you did. Oh and guess what, you skiing would improve drastically if you weren’t lugging around all that excess fat! Good luck!

 
home insurance commented on 4/21/2012 3:56:49 AM

Start with your sports that you enjoy in a team situation, add a couple of other things, like a jump rope for 15 minutes every day, and step touch drills in a soccer drill. Try to develop your core strength and keep your muscles fast.I am one of the larger ski instructors in the school, my size was what yours was in November, I’m down 25 lbs, and am starting to get in shape finally. I’m also 64, and ski a little slower now than when I was a kid your age. 55 MPH is fast enough for me now. To get good at skiing, you must ski, take good lessons and ski, use a proper fitting ski boot and ski. You will get better by skiing as much as possible.

 
low income health insurance commented on 4/19/2012 1:10:41 AM

well, unless you play sports three to four times a week, you’ll need to add some good ol’ fashioned exercises in there. however, i’ll give you ideas where you don’t need a gym. the pushup–best overall strength exercise imosquats/lunges–impt for skiing, add weight if you canplank/side plank–look it up to see a picturepull ups–if you can find a bar or ledge, use it (alot). don’t worry if you can’t do even one, then challenge yourself by hanging for as long as you can.adding muscle will help you lose fat since it raises your metabolic rate. start humbly, then try to add more repetitions to your previous best. make it fun, and it will be.

 
online auto insurance quotes commented on 4/14/2012 9:15:27 PM

hi Tom,easter? we are having the holy week, then easter comes on the sunday after black saturday, and that´s at the end of this week…oh nevermind.it´s a part of life to have silent, even boring moments. use the time to rest, even do a bit of your studies. or simply catch up with sleep. it would do you a lot of good.take care. good night. sleep tight.your fan forever,

 
cheapest car insurance commented on 4/11/2012 8:56:15 PM

I love this sketch! The hear-shape prints are so appropriate for this season, and it looks cold, calm, and peaceful — what fun it must be to be able to ski in such a lovely surrounding. Mom

 
auto insurance quotes commented on 4/6/2012 1:23:43 AM

This got me all excited for my ski weekend up at Steven's in a couple weeks! Looks like you guys had an awesome time. More adults should take the time to make snowmen. :-)

 
viagra commented on 4/3/2012 2:47:28 AM

Leeds is masterful at analogies, simplifying thoughts to understandable and easily implemented concepts. I can now make the critical movements required to initiate successful turns. In a matter of 1 hour Leeds eliminated a 15 year bad habit. Now she’s teaching my wife!

 
viagra commented on 4/2/2012 1:49:52 AM

M45Позвольти с Вами не согласится. Этот фильм расчитан на тех, кто первый раз собирается встать на лыжи.Классика обучения. Любой инструктор именно так в начале Вас будет обучать, а потом уже техникой карвинга. Я совершенно не понял, что не правильно? Или уже появился карвинговый плуг?Не вводите пожалуйста в заблуждение начинающих. Для теории – этот фильм прекрасный, а для практики конечно нужен инструктор. Но азы можно освоить и самому.

 
Najib commented on 3/29/2012 8:48:16 PM

This got me all excited for my ski enkewed up at Steven's in a couple weeks! Looks like you guys had an awesome time. More adults should take the time to make snowmen. :-)

 
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