Great Training Tricks

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Great Training Tricks

The more birds you hit with your training stone the better it is.

The less alienated it is. The closer to home it can be.

So come home from that training roller ski with a pack full

of groceries! Save gas!

Work out in your yard instead of at the gym. Or pick the gym

closer to home.

Mow the yard real fast instead of go running.

Make all your household activities LOTS HEAVIER instead of

lifting weights. Circuit sweeping!

(Altho I’m not sure how babysitting fits into this. I’m a bit

dubious of the Sport Families with those poor babies in their

SuperStrollers whippin along. Did you see now they have

wrestling cages for babies? You wear it on your back, it

has something like a roll-cage, so you can do wrestling

workouts with your baby and it won’t get hurt.)

******

Summer: lawn-mowing & hoeing: best training!

In autumn, we now all know that *leaf-raking* is the best training.

(V1 specificity, lats, delts, rotation, etc….)

However, in summer, I’m sure that most of us are aware that success comes

from weekly lawn-mowing and garden hoeing.

The very best skiers mow with manual rotary mowers and keep them

well-waxed, I mean oiled. And there’s nothing like a big garden and a

sharp base-preped hoe to work the poling muscles.

Actually, World Class skiers are those who find the extra

time for *digging* and other shovel work (mattocks for the

truly elite).

Lastly, as is almost common knowledge, riding your bike to

work and for all errands (loaded with groceries, etc.), is the

main way that the elite worldwide build their endurance base.

I’m sorry to dwell on so many summer activities, but I just

thought we needed a little refresher so everyone can know where

they stand as we prepare for the upcoming season. If you come

up a little short, you’ll know why.

Are you ready?

Once more—-this is a drill, after all—here is what you need for

training success:

*Phase One (base): lawn-mowing, hoeing, digging, commuting and

errand-cycling. (wheelbarrowing if necessary, post-holing if the

coach has you built up to ‘two-a-days’)

*Phase Two (specificity): autumn leaf raking, (with the most elite

being pulled out of some work-outs to go TRAIL-BUILDING—this

is most common in Olympic years, and the source of most team

jealousy)

*Phase Three (peaking): snow shoveling, (sled-pulling–depending

on age)

*Phase Four (shopping): —For ultra-light, high-performance hoe, shovel,

rake, mower, wheelbarrow. (Believe me, I have fantasized about all these

things! Carbon handles…titanium parts…kevlar!) (Now that I think of

it, I’m not sure that yardwork footwear and apparel is where it

needs to be for best results. Wicking anyone?)

There it is, it’s finally come to me, the name for this new

training system: *YARDWORK*

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