Fitness Standards
Physical fitness is critical to the success of the rappel program. The following minimums are intended to serve as a baseline to ensure we are all sufficiently prepared for the season. Fitness standards are as follows:
1.5 mile run in 11:00 or less
25 pushups
7 pullups
85 pound pack test (3 miles) in 90 minutes or less
110 pound pack-out over typical terrain
Training Plan
Attached below is a 12-week training plan intended to be started 3 months prior to the start of the season. Please adapt it to your needs and fitness level, and try to avoid injury above all else. Missing a workout or two is better than sustaining an overuse injury.
There are several types of workouts listed, each can be tailored to your specific situation.
Helpful resources used to create this training plan are:
LSS (Long Steady State)
This is long, steady cardio. Running and hiking are the most specific, but these workouts can be accomplished with whatever form of cardio you prefer. Biking, rowing, swimming, or a stair-stepper are all great low impact options.
This type of cardio is the foundation of aerobic endurance. Most of your cardiovascular workouts should be long and easy. Keep in mind that we will do extensive hiking and running throughout the season, so it is highly recommended to prioritize these skills.
It is easy to work TOO HARD during these workouts. They are intended to be easy.
A good way to determine if you are working at the correct effort level is to pay attention to how hard you are breathing, you should be able to breathe through your nose the entire time or speak in full sentences throughout the entire workout. If you find yourself unable to do those things, you are probably working too hard.
A training partner makes this even easier; you should be able to hold a conversation throughout your run or hike.
For those who are so inclined, a heart rate monitor (while not necessary) is very helpful.
220 minus your age = your estimated max heart rate
Aim to keep your heart rate between 65% and 75% of your max heart rate during these workouts.
Example: If Max HR = 195, aim keep HR between 125-145 bpm
Training this way may result in your running times seeming exceptionally slow. That’s ok. The time to run fast will come, these workouts SHOULD BE EASY. Your pace will improve over time.
Hiking is the most important form of fitness we have, obviously it is difficult to hike a lot when the mountains are covered in feet of snow. As spring approaches and the weather warms up, start to swap some of your LSS for hikes.
Resistance Training (RT)
These are strength and muscle building workouts. We are not bodybuilders or powerlifters, but the stronger we are the less likely we are to be injured, and a solid foundation of strength can only help in other fitness endeavors.
Build a Cluster: Pick 3 to 5 movements that you enjoy and think you can make progress with over several months. These can be weighted or body weight. Your movement cluster should include a lower body exercise, a pushing movement, a pulling movement, and a hinge.
Examples: squats, lunges, pushups, dips, overhead press, pull-ups, deadlifts, kettlebell swings, etc.
Aim for 3-5 sets (not including warmups) of 5-10 reps on weighted exercises, 10-20 on body weight exercises
A good way to choose your weights or total reps is to imagine your Reps in Reserve (RIR). After your set you should have a feeling for how many reps you had left in the tank. Aim to have 2-3 RIR. If you feel you could’ve done 10 more reps, you likely are lifting too light a weight, or are not doing enough reps. If you feel you only had 1 or 0 reps left in the tank, you will still make progress, but you may find getting adequate recovery between workouts difficult.
Over time you should see your total reps increase, once you have increased your maximum repetitions at a given weight by 3-5, increase the weight by a small amount (5-10 pounds). Small consistent improvements are better than sudden large ones.
If you are not seeing improvement week to week or month to month, several things could be hindering your progress:
You could be training too light, or too hard (See RIR above)
You are not allowing enough time between RT workouts to recover
Your diet may need some work (not a dietician, just try to get some more protein and total calories in)
Evaluate your sleep schedule, 7-8 hours of quality sleep is a good goal to aim for.
If you have seen several weeks or months of improvement but are suddenly regressing, you may be overtraining and are due for a deload week.
High Intensity Training (HIT)
HIT is the opposite of long steady cardio. This is the time to run fast, these workouts should be hard. These training sessions are intended to build top end power and speed. There are tons of options here, any interval workout applies, as well as the running workouts listed below.
Hill Ladder: run uphill HARD for time, jog downhill EASY for the same amount of time.
Example: 1 minute up, 1 minute down, 2 up 2 down, 3,4,5,4,3,2,1
Tempo Run: 1 mile warmup, 3 miles at near max sustainable pace (think “comfortably hard”) 1 mile cool down
Mile Repeats: 1 mile warmup, run 1 mile fast, then walk or jog for half as long as the mile took. Repeat 3-5x
Example: rest for 4 minutes after an 8-minute mile
4x4 VO2 Max: 4 minutes at highest sustainable pace, 4 minutes recovery jog. Repeat 4-6x.
Rest Days and Deload Weeks:
Rest and recovery are just as important as the training itself. These workouts will not matter if you do not give your body time to recover and adapt to the strain you have put on it.
Rest Days: Most training weeks have 2 rest days scheduled. Move these around within the week as needed based on your schedule and how you are feeling. It’s ok to miss a workout or two if you are feeling overly beat up, so long as week to week you are completing most of the programmed training.
Deload Weeks: Every 4th week is a deload week, during which overall mileage and time spent training are greatly reduced to allow your body to recover more fully than it can over a one or two day period. It is important to remain active during these weeks though, being completely sedentary is not productive. A few easy jogs and some stretching is plenty.
Below is a calendar for the 12 weeks of training. The acronym denotes which type of workout to do, the numbers after LSS show how long each workout should last. (LSS 30-60 means easy jog for 30-60 minutes)