First off, if you haven't yet seen my listserv posting: SURPRISE! I'm coming to NYC next weekend, and teaching Sunday, 9/28 NYSC 41st/3rd 9:30AM. You have no idea how excited I am.
Second, of course, here's your latest installment of the "Coach Yourself" corner, a 45 minute training session that I'll actually be debuting tonight here in Vermont (so you can pretend you're actually doing it with me!). Giacco (the Spinning bike in my bedroom) and I rode this this AM, and it fleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeew by.
Objectives
"THREE WAYS TO CLIMB" has two primary objectives:
(1) To develop and practice your Perfect Pedal Stroke while climbing seated, running with resistance, and climbing standing.
(2) To increase lactate threshold (the point where you switch from fat-burning to sugar-burning... so that you're burning fat as fuel more of the time!) by training just below it -- working, pushing AND recovering all hovering around 80% MHR, using effective breathing techniques to support your efforts.
Why do we want to do that? By training at a certain point for a prolonged period of time, we teach the heart to get VERY efficient while working at that certain point. 80% is hard work! If we can train our hearts to perform well at 80% (and still using fat for fuel!) without requiring extensive recovery, that's fantastic. Once we do that, we can ultimately work HARDER than that (and accomplish even more) -- but training ourselves to work at 80%, sustain it without needing to stop, that's the first step. That's what this training session, and others like it, are designed to do.
Methods
As an overview, here's how it will work:
We'll start by gradually building up to 80%, and then we'll hold it over the course of 3 hills- first one, medium length; second, long; third, short.
Each hill is a loop: seated climb with a few accelerations (maintain HR) --> running with resistance (maintain HR) --> standing climb with a few accelerations (maintain HR).
Between hills, our recoveries will be active -- re-fueling via breathing, but trying very much to keep your HR within 5 beats of 80% at all times (so, 5 beats lower during recoveries; perhaps 5 beats higher during those accelerations).
Do-able? Yes. Let's go.
This time, I have my iPod sitting right next to me -- so I can actually tell you the specifics of what I'm playing, when. Absolutely use the tunes that work best for you!
If you get nothing else from this posting, let it be this:
PLAN YOUR MUSIC IN ADVANCE. If you hop onto a Spin bike or an elliptical or a treadmill and start wheelin' around your iPod on the fly, you are more likely to a) get distracted; b) give up early. Prep your playlists with specific training sessions in mind -- when will you want to hear what song, and why? When do you need your favorite mindblowing techno -- at your warmup? At the 20 minute mark when you're miserable? Riiiiiiiiiiiight before the point at which you know you're planning a recovery? The last 5 minutes when you HATE this, and hate me? I don't know. But ask yourself those questions.
Warm-up
Use the first song to gently bring your HR up to 65%, get into your breathing, then do some loose stretches. Spend at least 4-5 minutes at or below 65%.
Please Don't Stop the Music (dance remix) - Rihanna>> I haaaaaate this song (except when I LOVE it!). It's so deliciously awful, so have fun with it or use something that doesn't make you squirm.
HILL #1
Seated Climb: 70-75% 2 minutes --> 75% 2 minutes --> 80% 2 minutes
Running with resistance: 80% 4 minutes (with 3 accelerations - same HR)
Standing climb: 80% 6 minutes
Seated Climb: 6 minutes
Sweet Dreams (techno remix) - Cranberries
Let's start the first seated climb - progressively load ("increase and breathe") up to 70%.
Every minute for 3 minutes, load smidgeons of resistance while maintaining pace.
Go through some pedal stroke drills -- mentally deconstruct the pedal stroke into that clock we talk about. "DRIVE THE KNEE FORWARD" from 11-1, "WIPING BACK" from 5-7, "PULL UP" from 7 to 11. Use the beats to create your own drills. Revisit the Spintastic archives to remind yourself which muscle groups should feel engaged at each part of the pedal stroke. Remember to drop your heel slightly as you go into the "wipe" part.
Maybe you want to think about just the "forward" part of the stroke with the right leg being emphasized (left leg still going, but just let it go to sleep...), then do it on the left. Try the "wipe back" portion with the right, then the left. Try the "pulling up" portion. Then put them together.
You can also try focusing on one leg at a time doing the full pedal stroke (instead of saying "right foot is only doing the FORWARD drive," for example), switching, then putting them together. Hint: This will help your pedal stroke... and it's also a great coping strategy when you get bored.
Nobody Listens to Techno - DJ Tiesto
Seated climb pace gets a little bit faster with the beat of the music. Achieve 75%, progressively load to 80%.
Run (4 minutes)
When the music makes you want to transition up to a run - go ahead and do it. But maintain 80%.
Focus on your breathing and your form, minimizing the choppiness and stiffness that robs us of energy and raises your HR unnecessarily. Smooth, light and fluid.
Everlong - Foo Fighters
3x accelerations on the choruses. Maintain your 80% -- remind yourself why you're doing it. You're becoming a fat-burning machine. Close your eyes. Keep breathing. Find your groove. If you're using this song, you might find it very emotional... you will need to focus extra hard on your breathing in order to keep your HR from rising more than a few beats above 80%. In through the nose, out through the mouth. Fluid breaths, fluid pedal strokes.
Ball of the foot still over the center of the pedal. Feet are flat (make sure the toes do not point down), and it's still a round clock-esque stroke. Forward, wipe back, up. Check your upper body posture. Shoulders rolled back and down, chest open. Core muscles engaged for a gentle shifting of weight over the pedals, minimal up and down "bouncing" -- just a natural, easy, gentle side-to-side groove as you shift your weight.
On your third acceration, if you'd like to, transition out to a standing climb. If your hips start rocking side to side and you don't feel a very specific pull in your glutes as you lift the pedals up forcefully, add more resistance.
Standing Climb: 5-6 minutes
Little Star - Cascada
Find a song that changes, with a strong beat you can follow. I like this song because there's no obvious pattern. It's just a big rolling hill - sometimes steeper, sometimes more subtle. On a real hill outside, we'd want to keep the pace faster to build more momentum on a steeper climb -- on a Spinner, when we go faster, we need a little bit more resistance (as there'd be provided by the real hill... even though outside, we'd actually shift DOWN instead of shifting UP). So when you pick up your pace to match the music, if you start to rock, add a little bit more resistance. Keep up the continuous flow of your pedal strokes... which, by the way, are changing now. No more forward/wipe/up... it's all UP / UP / UP. Use the glutes, keep the knees straight.
Well done. First hill done!
___________
HILL #2
Active recovery (seated climb): 4 minutes
Anybody Else - Matt White
Get more comfortable - take some water, chill out a bit, but try to settle into a HR that is only 5 beats below 80%. When you get there, start progressively loading to support more resistance at that 80% - 5 beats intensity.
Now we're going to repeat what we did before:
Seated Climb - 6 minutes
This Time (UltraTrance 2008 remix) -- insert your favorite 1-2 minute steady song... I used something I mixed up myself
Never Again - Oleander
Faster pace... hold it steady. Pull out those pedal stroke drills. Focus on the synchrony of breathing -- fluid breaths, fluid pedal strokes. Feel the right muscle groups working at the right time.
When you feel it, hold your resistance and smoothly transition to a....
Run - 4 minutes
First Time - Lifehouse
Close your eyes. I friggin' love this song -- use one you love. Really, find a perfect song -- you need something right now that you're going to look forward to, that's going to inspire you to move and breathe and feel good. Use something you can connect with. 3x accelerations at the chorus, smooth pedal strokes, smooth breathing. Maintain 80%.
Be mindful of how you're starting to feel more comfortable at the same 80%. Remember how 80% used to feel awful? It almost... doesn't. You're almost... happy. Yeah, you're actually kinda happy. How'd that happen? Science. Oooh...
Your call -- maintain the run in Hand Position 2, or come on out to a standing climb in HP 3.
*Standing Climb - 6 minutes
Hearts on Fire - Survivor - Rocky IV Soundtrack
Reason - Ian van Dahl
Just follow the beat of your 6 minutes' worth of music -- faster, slower, no matter. Whatever happens, keep that heart rate at 80% (+/- 5 beats, if you have to).
It is my strong recommendation to have your last song be a steady beat that you can let "think" for you. A beat that all you have to do is lock into, and have that dictate your work.
Then, just like that, second-to-last hill (the big one...) is over.
____
HILL #3
Active recovery - 4 minutes
One More Time (techno remix)
By now, you've got the hang of this. Recover at 5 beats below 80%. Progressively load back, maintaining that same 80% - 5 beats. Progressively load back to 80%.
I like the irony of the "one more time." When I smirk to myself over my own bad jokes, I tend to keep pedaling when I'd otherwise stop. Do what works for you.
Your call... hold the seated climb, or come up to a...
Run - 3 minutes
Sunrise - Milk Inc.
For nostalgia's sake, what do I always say when I play this song (yes, I literally never play this song without saying this one specific thing...): Remind yourself why you're climbing this hill and what you needed to get out of it. Devote the next 3 minutes to it.
Faster when you feel it. Slower when you feel it. But maintain 80%
If you're so inclined, transition out to a...
Standing Climb - whenever the music strikes you... just maintain 80%
What Do You Want From Me - Cascada
Here's your "AWESOME! Just be AWESOME!" climb. MUST end with a power song, or you might be tempted to give up. Put your favorite song right here. Accelerate at the chorus (this one has two choruses... yours might have more), maintain 80%.
Aaaaand you're done!
Cool-Down
Broken Wings - Mr. Mister
(insert your favorite "thoughtful," guiltily-emo alterna-chill rock) -- gently bring your heart rate down, then streeeeeeeeeeeeetch until you feel like you can't possibly feel more amazing.
Congratulations: just by completing this training session, you have improved your cardiovascular efficiency and boosted your metabolism. Awesome.
BTW - as an aside, one of my medical school classmates who has become a regular at my classes up here, has taken up a FANTASTIC routine. In the middle of something totally non-fitness related (i.e., studying at a coffee shop, riding in the backseat of my car...), she'll bust out with:
"Hey, Melissa... guess what I'm doing?"
"What...?"
"BURNING FAT."
'Nough said ;-)
*UPDATE* Psychological Effects of Heart Rate Monitor Use Study
12/21/2010: Preliminary results were reported at Indoor Cycle Instructor in October 2010. Manuscript in preparation. Once published, results will be made available on this site and at ICI.
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2 comments:
Good Info Thanks for input!
Excellent piece. Will use this my next class right here in the Netherlands! Thank you fot sharing.
My class loves the climbing pyramids.
Warm up, 1min seated Climb -4 standing, 2 seated -3 standing, 3seated-2standing, 4 seated-1 standing. Recover 2 min, then turn it around with 4 seated -1 standing etc. Ending with 1 seated and 4 min standing. Keeping the active parts at 80% and recover 70-75.
Andre B
3 Star JGSI
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