Chapter 98 Exercise, Conditioning, and Performance Training
Fitness as a Lifestyle
Specificity
Strength, power, muscular endurance, balance, and cardiovascular fitness require different body systems. Each develops through different exercise. Stressing one part, such as arms or legs, or one system, such as strength or flexibility, does little to develop other parts or systems.9 Running, for example, makes cardiovascular, metabolic, and structural changes specific to running but not necessarily to hanging from rock faces. Trained runners may exhaust themselves during long swims, and paddlers during climbs, even though all may have high aerobic capacity. Another example is a weightlifting practice of lifting at lower than normal speed. This does not train the more rapid joint angle movement needed in common wilderness, daily life, and rescue situations.13 Slow lifting may build strength, just as with any other weightlifting, but not the power that depends on speed, or the injury-prevention capability that comes from training rapid stabilization. To get off the ridge before weather hits, and be fast and safe when it is most needed, one needs to train for it.
Strength, Muscular Endurance, AND Power
Ability for strength, endurance, and power tasks depends on individual level of fitness, workload, type of work, exercise efficiency, and leverage, and on whether the work is external, such as carrying weights,53 or internal, such as carrying oneself,175 which varies with bodyweight. On ascents, a heavy person may work harder and closer to his or her maximum than a lighter person of similar fitness or even of lesser fitness, depending on the workload. Internal work like hiking and climbing may favor the smaller, lighter person. For external work like portage, rescue, and hauling gear, a larger person of high muscular fitness may have an advantage.
Different activities require different ratios of strength to muscle contraction speed. A higher strength component compared with speed of contraction (e.g., portage and rock-face scrambling) is strength-dominated power.9 Kicking with fins, swimming, running, jumping, and deploying safety equipment primarily employ speed-dominated power.125 Many situations, like navigating rapids, require both strength and speed in constantly changing proportions.
Abdominal Muscles and the Core
It is a common assumption that a strong core supports the back and body for activity. However, abdominal strength or endurance does not automatically support the body. Support entails a voluntary and specific change in vertebral and pelvic angles to reduce pain-producing positioning and loading.20 Hyperlordosis is too much inward curve to the lower spine. It is not a condition, but a bad posture. Tightening or strengthening abdominal muscles does not change unfavorable spine angle or pain. Preventing the overly large arch to move to neutral spine stops the cause and the pain. Maintaining neutral spine employs abdominal muscles, but strengthening abdominal muscles does not automatically produce neutral spine. Slightly built people who reduce a hyperlordotic lower spine to neutral spine will reduce painful angulation of the lumbar spine, and thus tolerate a heavy pack without strain, whereas someone with a strongly built core who stands with increased lordotic arch (hyperlordosis) imposes much load on vertebral facets106 and discs23 from the weight of the upper body on the unfavorable vertebral angle. The person who uses core muscles to prevent injurious spinal angle will reduce back pain at that time, without exercise or medical treatments.21 To feel change from hyperlordosis to neutral spine, try the following:
Use abdominal muscles functionally in this way to reduce a hyperlordotic spine during all activity, particularly when lifting overhead and carrying loads (Figure 98-1). This technique reduces loading and pain from functional poor posture21 as well as increased vertebral sheer of spondylolisthesis.24 See Conditioning, later, for functional retraining for core muscles.
Flexibility
Flexibility training may reduce the incidence of activity-based injury.131 One proposed mechanism is the increase of muscle length before reaching a tearing point,137 probably from change in the viscoelastic properties of muscle–tendon units.177 Another is reduced tendon organ activation.119 However, the number of injuries that occur seems to dispel the hope of stretching as preventive.150 The disparity seems to lie in how stretching is commonly accomplished, and in movement patterns used during exercise and daily life.
Tight, rounded anterior chest and shoulders contribute to neck pain, upper back pain, and shoulder pain.70 Tight anterior hip muscles, common in people who sit for extended periods, change the normal angle of hips and low back, inhibiting normal standing, walking, and running, and adding a large share of low back pain.45 Tight hip muscles, calf muscles, and Achilles tendon contribute to walking duck-footed, or toe-out.151 The resulting change in gait and stance may wear on ankles, knees,79 hips, and big toe,151 and contribute to bunion formation.142 Tight feet add to plantar fasciitis.161 Tight hamstrings are prone to pulls and may contribute to low back pain.39 See Conditioning, later, for functional stretches to remedy these problems.
Conditioning
This section covers specific functional exercises for health during wilderness travel.
Strength, Endurance, Power for Wilderness Preparedness
Upper Body
Push-Ups
Pull-Ups
Lower Body
Lunges
Squats
Avoid squatting on the balls of the toes. Such acute knee angle while under bodyweight is tough on the knees. Some meniscal injuries of professional baseball catchers come from long-term squatting on toes.8 To sit in a full squat to rest, or for toileting, keep heels on the floor, a customary sitting posture in much of the world. Squatting with heels down is a functional Achilles tendon stretch.
Abdominal and Core Muscle Conditioning
Strengthening core muscles is commonly thought to solve back pain by correcting muscle weakness. On scrutiny, core strengthening has not been found to reduce pain69 or effect any greater relief than aerobic exercise or nonstrength programs.1,56,100 Exercising abdominal and torso muscles does not alter the poor mechanics that are the source of much pain.115 Using abdominal and core muscles to reposition the spine to reduce excess lordosis is how the abdominal muscles unload the facets and support the back.20 Using abdominal muscles, without tightening, to prevent hyperlordosis when standing, running, and lifting overhead gives functional abdominal exercise during all daily activity.
Crunches, and other common flexion-based exercises, may increase strength, but not functional strength for standing and lifting in the upright position of real activity.20 Holding neutral spine against a stationary or moving load is the key to learning how to use abdominal and core muscles for back pain and posture control. For effective abdominal muscle strengthening specific to daily life and trail ergonomics, try the following:
Hands and Wrists
Feet and Ankles
Feet and ankles need exercise, often overlooked in fitness routines. Tight, weak feet and ankles are more likely to cramp, hurt, strain, and develop plantar fasciitis102,182 and deformed toes. When the big toe joint does not extend normally when walking (hallux rigidus, or stiffness in the first metatarsophalangeal joint), it alters gait and posture, reduces needed plantar stretch, and promotes hallux valgus (big toe bent away from midline) and bunion. Altered gait may affect hip and low back dynamics. Weak, unused toes easily deform and curl. Toes must be straight and strong for balance and healthy gait. Weak, overly stretched ankles without good proprioceptive sense training are prone to recurrent sprains. Feet are easy to condition, because they routinely bear bodyweight, giving built-in conditioning opportunities.
Power and Plyometrics
Plyometrics are exercises designed to train muscles for quick powerful moves.18 The muscle is first quickly stretched under load (contracted eccentrically), then immediately, forcefully contracted concentrically—for example, push-ups with a clap between each pair, and rapidly jumping over a line of boxes with quick deceleration crouches between each pair. Plyometric exercises stress muscles and associated attachments more than do other exercises.54 Learning and maintaining healthy joint positioning and good shock absorption are the keys to safety in plyometric training. Here are some fun training examples:
Stretching for Wilderness Preparedness
Anterior Shoulder and Chest
Hip and Thigh
Hamstrings
Achilles Tendon and Foot
Flexibility-Enhancing Techniques
Several methods augment stretching gains. Stretch regularly. Be warmed before stretching.57,174 Warming up means raising body temperature, because elasticity increases with temperature. Active warming is accomplished more quickly and effectively with a few push-ups and lunges than with light jogging. Do not be afraid of exercise without air conditioning. Within limits, warmer environments help. Passive warming in a hot-tub or shower, or locally applied heat, can help prepare for movement, although direct activity should also be part of warm-up.
Remember that functional movement is training in the manner useful to real life. Many stretches are static and nonmoving. However, muscle lengths needed on the trail and during exercise are achieved while moving, such as when navigating large boulders, or performing a high brace in kayaking. Incorporate stretches as needed for movement, rather than solely practicing static stretches. A good example is using good bending ergonomics of the lunge and squat for daily reaching and bending (see Lower Body, earlier). With healthful positioning throughout the movement, good bending dynamically stretches the anterior hip, quadriceps, calf and Achilles tendon, and plantar surface of the foot.