“SO YOU WANT TO CLIMB MCKINLEY?” A Training Program for the Prospective Mountaineering Hardman By Stacy Taniguchi
So the lure of the “Great One” is getting to the point where you have to either settle for just reading about other peoples’ adventures or get out of that chair to do something about that unexplainable urge. Mount McKinley (a.k.a. Denali) has certainly received her share of publicity over the last ninety years or so. Between the written accounts of climbing this massive geological feature and her spectacular photo images, it is no wonder to anyone with the love of climbing, that you are thinking about venturing on her slopes. The experience of being on this mountain is definitely worth the try. Contrary to what a few people say, climbing Mt. McKinley is not a glorified extended hiking trip, even by the popular West Buttress route. For many climbers, new and pros to the high altitude scene, climbing McKinley could be the hardest thing they have physically tried to do. Preparing yourself is a definite precursor to having a great experience on this mountain. Mt. McKinley will call upon all your strength and fortitude to face up to the challenges that she will lie before you. Some climbers will tell you that they had good weather, no adverse altitude affects, and no serious problems on their expedition. They were the fortunate ones. For the number of times that I have been on this mountain, as a guide and recreational climber, no two trips ever came out the same. I have done trips that had very few problems, yet in the same season, returned to have what I would recall as “the Denali trip from hell”. Do not take this climb for granted. One of the most often asked questions I receive as a mountaineering guide, is “How should I train for climbing McKinley?” Since each individual has his or her own schedule, physical and mental abilities, goals, and determination, the answer to that question is not set in stone. But, in order to help my clients, I have come up with suggestions on how to prepare for the rigors of climbing this mountain. You may find that it is a good place to start. Use it as you see fit and modify it for your own purposes, but keep in mind that your ultimate goal is to be as physically prepared as you can possibly be for this adventure. This physical conditioning program is designed for those of you who aspire to attempt a Mt. McKinley Expedition or something similar to it.
You should have a clean medical bill of health or, at least, a physician’s approval to attempt this adventure. This program assumes that you are not the type of person who has been working out on a regular basis and you do not have easy access to a nearby mountain of any substantial altitude. Of course, the more physically fit you are the easier this program could fit into your lifestyle. You should keep in mind that however you use or modify this suggested training program, the purpose of it is to tax your physical stamina and strength gradually. You may find that this program is too easy, so you need to increase the duration or modify the exercise to cause you to exert more energy. For some of you, this program may start off too hard and so you must gradually work into the routines and increase your stamina and strength one day at a time. Whatever you do, once you have made the serious commitment to this program, stick with it! Give yourself ample time to get ready for this expedition.
OBJECTIVES OF THIS TRAINING PROGRAM: At the end of this training program: • You should be able to walk and climb moderate snow and ice slopes for up to six to eight hours a day, carrying up to fifty pounds of supplies on your back and pulling up to one hundred pounds of supplies on a sled (at the same time!). • You should be able to recover from a hard day’s climbing within an eight to twelve hour period to resume another day of hard physical exertion. • You should be able to physically and mentally go the extra mile when called upon for survival reasons.
THE PROGRAM: SIX MONTHS PRIOR TO EXPEDITION: During this month, work on getting into the training routine. Physically, by the end of this month, you should be fit enough so that your body does not ache the day after a workout. Mentally, you should feel that you cheated yourself if you do not follow your routine regularly. (Caution: Do not get fanatical about this! Keep your exercise routine enjoyable and exploratory. Do your workouts so that you will not mind doing it again tomorrow. Find exercises that are fun to do and go to places that are new. Be creative. Do not think that all must be done at a high intensity now. There’s plenty of time for that later.) Work out four days a week this month, rest one to two days and, if you are up to it, use one of the rest days to do a fun workout (e.g. ice or rock climb, biking, skiing, skating, etc.). Try to find friends that will workout with you. They can be the motivation for you to get into the routine. It is harder to forgo a workout when you know that someone is planning to workout with you that day.
Aerobic training is the emphasis of your program. You want to have the endurance to exert energy for hours at a time, day after day. This month put in at least two hours per week (thirty minutes per day) of aerobic exercise. This exercise should be a continuous effort for the given time period. The most popular type of aerobic exercise is running, but biking, swimming, cross-country skiing, and hiking are also good substitutes. Interchange them each day if one gets boring. Both my editor and guiding boss are biking fanatics and they highly recommend mountain biking and road biking as excellent forms of aerobic and leg strengthening exercises. The objective of this month’s aerobic workout is to get your heart rate up to between thirty and forty beats faster per minute (over the thirty-minute workout) than your resting heart rate. Some workout professionals call this the “conversation intensity” where you are working out at a level that allows you to talk to someone during the workout, without dying. You may not start off thinking that you can talk with your heart rate up that high for long periods of time, but you will need to gradually work up to that ability. Strength training needs to be slowly incorporated this month. You should be working on building strength in your back, shoulders, arms, and abdominal muscles. Your leg muscles will get stronger through the aerobic exercises, but you can include exercises that specifically work the leg muscles too if you feel up to it. Again, don’t overdo your routine, which could cause you to lose interest. A strength program should include a three days per week routine (this is besides the aerobic training!). You do not have to join a health club to get a good strength workout. The following examples can be done at home:
• One set of sit ups (abdominal crunches)--as many as you can do.
• Three sets of pull-ups and/or chin ups-- up to fifteen repetitions per set.
• Three sets of as many push ups you can do--up to forty repetitions per set. If you have access to a weight set or can improvise, you can include the following as well:
• Three sets of bent rowing exercises with weights that will allow you to do ten to fifteen repetitions per set, but no more than fifteen.
• Three sets of military presses with weights that will allow you to do eight to ten repetitions per set but no more than ten. Muscle fatigue should set in on the last few repetitions of each set and muscle failure should occur on the last repetition of the third set, if you have selected the proper resistance. Do not make your strength routine time consuming or boring at this early stage.
Example week for this month:
• Monday: Run for thirty minutes at a “conversation” pace. Try not to stop, but if you feel that you have to, try to maintain a brisk walking pace. Strength train today with the sit ups, pull-ups, and push ups routine.
• Tuesday: Bike (or substitute another aerobic exercise) for thirty minutes or longer. (Remember that you want to get a workout!) Try to go somewhere different today than on Monday’s workout. No strength workout today.
• Wednesday: Strength workout today. You may want to include a few more strength exercises than you did on Monday. Rest from aerobic exercise.
• Thursday: Run for thirty minutes like you did on Monday. Find a different route again. You might want to travel to a wilderness trail, if one is close by. No strength workout today.
• Friday: Cross-country ski (or substitute another aerobic exercise) for thirty minutes or longer. Repeat Monday’s strength workout.
• Saturday: Rest day or do something recreational. Go climbing or hiking for fun.
• Sunday: Rest day.
• Some forms of aerobic exercise, such as biking, may not require you to exert the same amount of energy in a given amount of time as compared to running.
You will need to monitor how you feel and adjust the duration and/ or
intensity. I recommend that you do not jump into any form of exercise without a
light form of warming up first. Some stretching of the muscles you are about to
use heavily is a good way to prevent injuries and get your skeletal-muscular
system prepared for your exercise routine. You should also drink lots of water.
Your body will need it with these workouts, but it also needs to get use to
hydrating. A common cause of adverse altitude affects is dehydration. You will
need to drink large amounts of liquids on Denali (three to four quarts, minimum,
per day) and your body should now start getting use to taking in those copious
amounts. We have a saying on Denali concerning hydration, “clear and copious”
referring to urine output. For now, drinking two to three quarts of water per
day is recommended. (Caution: Those of you with kidney problems should check
with a doctor for recommended amounts.) Remember that you are not training to
compete in the Olympics next week and this workout schedule is probably a change
in your current lifestyle, so take it gradually and easily to begin with this
month. You want to maintain the training, so it is better to do parts of this
program rather than none at all.
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FIVE MONTHS PRIOR TO EXPEDITION: The focus of this month is building a
foundation for your mountaineering fitness. Aerobic workouts should still be, at
least, four days a week with no more than two days rest per week. You should
substitute one rest day for your recreational day. Increase the duration of
these workouts to at least forty minutes, but you must now make sure these
sessions are a continuous effort. Strength workouts should remain at three days
per week. Try to increase your weights and/ or reps, but do not exceed the
maximum reps stated earlier. This month you should include hill climbing or
stair climbing as part of your weekly routine. At least once a week, but no more
than twice a week, find a long hill or flights of stairs to climb. The duration
of the climb should be no less than five minutes. Repeat the climb until you
have completed a thirty-minute session. If you find something that allows you to
climb continuously for thirty plus minutes before coming back down, that would
be excellent. Carry a backpack that has about twenty pounds in it. Avoid
stopping during this routine. This workout is probably the best simulation of
what you will be doing most on McKinley. (Caution: Do not carry too much weight
in your pack now because the coming down portion of this workout can kill your
knees if you are not use to the weight.)
FOUR MONTHS PRIOR TO EXPEDITION: The focus for this month is building your
endurance. Aerobic workouts should now be five days per week, with one day rest.
Increase your workout sessions to a minimum of forty-five minutes. Concentrate
on working continuously throughout the entire forty-five minutes. Continue to
include a hill or stair-climbing workout with a backpack at least once a week.
Increase the weight carried in your backpack by ten pounds and the duration of
this session to 35 – 45 minutes. You can substitute one or two of your aerobic
workouts with the hill or stair climbing session. Be careful with your knees on
downhills. Strength workouts should increase to four days a week. Increase
weights and repetitions, but again, do not exceed maximum repetitions already
mentioned. At this point of your training you may find that motivation might be
lacking at times. Don’t give up! Be creative, find new places to train, more
friends to train with, go climbing to get psyched, read books on mountaineering,
and watch videos or slide shows of other mountaineering adventures.
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THREE MONTHS PRIOR TO EXPEDITION: This month you begin your training in earnest.
You must now get mentally conditioned, as well as physically. Take each day as
it comes. You may want to consider taking a good daily multiple vitamin with the
RDA of iron, if you do not already do so. This will make sure that your body is
getting its recommended amounts of vitamins and minerals that you might need
with your increased exercise routines. The iron will assure that your blood will
have the iron needed to maintain the hemoglobin in your red blood cells (good
for carrying oxygen). Don’t forget your daily intake of water and eat a healthy
diet. Your aerobic workouts should remain at five days per week and take one
rest day per week. Your sessions should now last a minimum of fifty minutes.
Incorporate a shortened “stress” or anaerobic workout session for one day of the
week. This workout should be around thirty minutes and you want this session to
get your heart rate up to around 130 to 180 beats per minute for at least one
minute duration at a time, but not longer than two minutes. Recuperate between
these high intensity bursts within three minutes before going at it again.
Physiologically, the faster your heart rate during the stress exercise and the
less rest time you give yourself between the exercises, the more training
benefit you will reap. You should really be working hard during this session and
feel relatively exhausted at its end. An example of this type of workout is
running a hilly course, sprinting the uphills (as your high intensity burst),
and jogging the downhills and flats, for your recuperation. This type of workout
is one of the best natural ways to build up your red blood cell count (which is
responsible for getting oxygen to your cells) and getting your cells to get rid
of lactic acid (a waste product of cellular respiration and cause of muscle
fatigue) more efficiently. On one of your aerobic workouts, include what I call
the “McKinley Edge”. This is an extra uphill, a longer or added loop, or an
extra spurt of effort included in a workout to get your mind ready to handle the
“extra mile” effort that might be required on Denali. You need to determine the
“McKinley Edge” before you start the workout and stick to that plan. Strength
workouts remain at four days per week and should be a habit for you by this
time. Increase your weights and repetitions accordingly. Continue your hill and/
or stair climbing workouts, but do this twice a week now. This can be a
replacement of two of your aerobic sessions. Increase your backpack weight by
another ten pounds. You may want to consider carrying jugs of water for weight
so you can empty them at the top of your elevation gain, assuming that you do
not have to repeat the climb often in the one session. This way you do not have
to carry the weight down and pound your knees. (Caution: Remember that you will
be carrying very heavy loads down the mountain when the expedition is over, so
strengthening your leg muscles for downhills should be considered.) This month
try to get out into the wilderness once or twice to test your gear. Make sure
your boots are comfortable, apparel fits and does what you want it to do, tent
sets up easily, backpack fits and handles the heavy loads, sleeping bag feels
good, and you are getting familiar with the stoves, etc. The only way to do
these things is to go camping and climbing. You do not want to find out that
things are not just right on Denali. You can substitute two of your aerobic
workouts for this outing if it is an overnighter.
TWO MONTHS PRIOR TO EXPEDITION: Maintaining your routines and your health is
key for this month. Continue your aerobic workouts at five days per week and at
least one rest day. Workouts should be a minimum of an hour in duration. One
aerobic workout per week should last for at least an hour and a half. Continue
with at least one stress session per week and shorten the rest periods between
the high intensity portions. Remember to include the “McKinley Edge” to a couple
of your workouts every week. Your uphill and/ or stair climbing workouts should
now be a regular substitute for an aerobic session twice a week with at least
forty pounds in the backpack. Wear your climbing boots for these sessions to get
use to them, if you have not been doing so already. Strength training is now for
endurance purposes. Continue to strength train four times per week, but use two
of those days for emphasizing repetitions done quickly. If you have someone who
can time you, do your exercises in the same number of sets, but use lighter
weights (decrease your resistance by 40% of what you used before) and do as many
repetitions as you can in a minute per set. You should use a weight that gets
you to almost complete exhaustion at the end of the minute. If no one is
available, do your exercises till muscle failure. (Caution: Do not lift free
weights alone!). The other two days should be used to maintain your routine from
last month. Again this month, get out to the wilderness and test your gear. Get
the kinks out of them and you. Remember to still drink your quarts of water, eat
well, and get lots of rest.
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ONE MONTH PRIOR TO EXPEDITION: THIS IS IT! The final month to tune up for this
long awaited climb. This is the month of training that will get you physically
up the mountain. You will probably be busy with all the logistics of your
expedition this month, but don’t neglect your training. Your aerobic workouts
will still be five days a week. Remember to rest at least one day per week. Each
workout session should be maintained at a minimum of one hour in duration. You
should be able to do two stress sessions per week. You can forego the stress
sessions the week prior to departure. These stress sessions do not need to
increase in duration, but the recovery periods should be shortened again. The
hill and/ or stair climbing workouts, with a loaded backpack, should dominate
your aerobic workouts now. Increase the weight in your backpack by ten pounds.
If you hate to give up the running or other aerobic exercises, then do the hill
and/or stair climbing workouts in addition to the others. Remember what you will
be primarily doing on the mountain. The “McKinley Edge” should now be a part of
every aerobic workout session. Your strength workouts should still be maintained
at four times per week, concentrating on the number of reps with lower weights.
You are not interested in building bulk at this point. By this point, you should
be physically prepared to become the mountain hardman that you’ve always dreamed
about. Denali will have to give you a good run for your money. Always remember
that nothing is for sure on Denali. Without being at high altitudes at that
latitude, you cannot predict the affects of altitude and no one can accurately
predict the weather. Both of these factors have stopped even the most physically
fit mountaineers. I would recommend that every prospective McKinley climber get
as much advice as they can from experienced high altitude climbers, especially
seasoned Denali ones. If you cannot personally talk to one, check out the many
books on Denali at your local library. There are many facets to climbing Mt.
McKinley. Being in decent physical condition is only one of those facets. Be
prepared for the total mountaineering adventure. Hopefully, your experience will
be a good one. Good luck and BE SAFE!