Food: Key #9 to Summiting Kilimanjaro

KilimanjaroI have the misfortune of being extremely food-friendly.

I love to eat just about anything. I can’t eat gluten, and soy and I don’t do well either, but I assure you if I could eat them, I would.

4,000-9,000 calories per day

Turns out, my love of food suited me quite well on Kilimanjaro. I have no idea how many calories I did burn per day, but estimates range from 4,000-9,000 per day burned on the climb. All I know was that it was pretty awesome, being able to eat as much food as I wanted and not have to worry about it. That will never, ever happen again in my life!

Food intolerances

I was pretty worried about the food before I got there. Being gluten-free can be a huge pain in the butt in the States sometimes, and I knew they like to serve plenty of carbs on Kilimanjaro for energy. I had visions of these plates of pasta being served to the rest of my group, and me trying to subsist on my Perfect Foods Bars. Those bars are like crack to me, but trying to subsist on them could prove to be a different story.

Fortunately, Tusker Trails was amazing. They ensured that everything I ate was gluten-free.

I had brought all sorts of digestive aids and supplements just in case, but by the fourth day I said to myself, “OK, they aren’t going to poison me” and stopped taking them.  [Read more...]

Summiting Kilimanjaro: 10 Keys to Success

A week ago I returned from climbing Kilimanjaro — one of the seven summits and the world’s tallest freestanding mountain (19,340 feet). Of the 20,000+ people who attempt to climb it each year, less than 40% make it to the summit. I was one of the lucky ones who make it to the summit, but I also believe that luck favors the prepared, and believe that it was my extensive preparation that led not only to my success, but also to the relative ease with which I made it up the mountain. I did not have any symptoms of altitude sickness during the entire climb, which is virtually unheard of, wasn’t sore afterwards, and felt fantastic the entire 9 days on the mountain.

Since I returned, I’ve been asked repeatedly what I think it was that made me as successful as I was. It turns out that the keys to Kilimanjaro are the same as the keys to everything else — focus on the basics and trust it will all work out.

  1. Preparation: In the months leading up to the climb I regularly spent time testing out my gear. Socks, shoes, shirts, pants, undergarments, hats, food, and supplements all went up and down various mountains in the Pacific Northwest. I took notes as to what worked and what didn’t. What worked stayed in, what didn’t got replaced. Click here for more on preparation
  2. Attitude: Climbing Kilimanjaro is as much mental as anything else. I heard climbers from other tour groups complaining about everything from their tents to their guides to their food. It’s 9 days in a tent, you’re following someone else’s schedule, you are going to be both stupid hot and freezing cold, not to mention insane amounts of dust, dirt, and wind. You will be convinced you’ll never be clean again, and you start fantasizing about the shower at the end. I quickly realized I could either whine about it, and make myself and my campmates miserable, or I could roll with, laugh it off, and chalk it all up to part of the experience. I chose the latter.  Click here for more on attitude
  3. Trust Your Guides: I went with Tusker Trails, widely considered to be THE gold standard for climbing Kilimanjaro. Their guides are top-notch. Since they do this week in and week out, I knew my best chance for success was to trust them when it came to food, drink, pace, and virtually everything else. They have experience doing this, and I do not. The best of the best have a great coach, and that was how I thought of my guides, Francis and Shabani. Click here for more on the importance of having a coach
  4. Breathing: Altitude sickness is what turns back most climbers, so I started my research and training on that almost a year earlier. First I had to optimize my breathing patterns at sea level (where I live) and then work on teaching my body to be OK being in oxygen debt (the air at the summit has about half of the oxygen in it than it does at sea level). I worked on both of those extensively before I left, and then really focused on breathing throughout the entire climb.  Click here for more on breathing
  5. Endurance: The total climb was approximately 60 very hilly miles over the course of 9 days. The longest day was the summit day, which was about 13 miles — with low oxygen levels. For that many miles over that many days, it’s all about just having a body that can hold up. Click here for more on endurance
  6. Balance: There are lots of rocks and plenty of scrambling to be done, so having good balance skills becomes important. It’s no single rock that will get you (OK, there were two moments where the thought crossed my mind, “if I miss my footing here I’m going to die”), but it becomes the aggregate of the 60 miles that is rough on the body.  Click here for more on balance
  7. Eyes/Vision: Having good depth perception and being a good judge of spatial relationships is really important. If your eyes tell your brain that the rock you are about to step on is 12” down but in reality it’s 14” down, you’ll still likely land on it, but it’s going to be hard on the body. Over 60 miles, that is going to lead to mis-steps, falls, and likely injury. Visual training can correct those discrepancies.  Click here for more on eyes and vision
  8. Strength: I’m naturally really strong, so strength training is not something I typically put time in to — and didn’t for this trip, either. But, there is considerable scrambling up and down large rocks, so you need the body strength to be comfortable pulling yourself up as well as taking HUGE steps up or down with one leg or the other.  Click here for more on strength
  9. Food: Food, food, and more food here is the key. Our appetite levels were monitored throughout, and we were constantly being encouraged to eat so we’d have enough energy for the push to the summit on day 7. Our camp cook prepared gluten-free meals for me throughout, and we ate large quantities of fresh, whole foods during our climb. Click here for more on food
  10. Sleep: Tent sleeping in near-freezing temps leaves a lot to be desired. But, lack of sleep leads to slow reaction times and poor decision-making — not really your friend on a mountain. I made a point of making sure I could have at least 9 hours each night. Turns out I never needed that much sleep, but everyone who knows me knows how cranky I get when I don’t sleep enough, so waking well-rested was critical. Click here for more on sleep


Over the next couple of weeks I’m going to dive in to each of these topics and talk more about what exactly I did to be successful. If you have questions about the trip or my preparation, please leave them in the comments below, and I will get them all answered.

Food Revolution

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Are you taking part in the food revolution?

I’m talking about Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution show on ABC.

In case you haven’t heard of it, here is the short version: Jamie Oliver, British celebrity chef, is taking the obesity problem in the US on head-on. After a successful run of his Food Revolution model in the UK, he came to Huntington, West Virginia, deemed the unhealthiest place in the US, to see if he can change people’s eating habits. The show is a reality show about that experience.

I’ve heard mixed reviews of the show outside the health and fitness industry, but no matter what you think of Jamie (I happen to have already been a huge fan), I give him HUGE props for taking on this initiative. His entire agenda is about getting people to eat whole foods again — it’s really that simple.

Did You Know?

  • The milk kids drink in school has as much added sugar in it as a can of soda?
  • There is now basically a double-wide casket because we’ve gotten so heavy. This casket can’t go in a hearse, needs to be lifted with a forklift, and requires a double plot at the cemetery. And, you can’t simply cremate the bodies because that causes it’s own set of problems.
  • We are raising the first generation of kids that has a shorter lifespan than their parents!
  • The US incurs $150 billion per year in health care costs directly related to our food choices?

Jamie won the 2010 TED Award for this project, and you can see his 18-minute talk on the topic here. He has some truly shocking, frightening, and disgusting visuals and statistics around the school food supply, so if you are up for being outraged and more than a little annoyed at the system, I suggest you watch it.

(In case you were thinking I was exaggerating about the statistics, he opens his talk with, “Sadly, in the 18 minutes it takes me to do this talk, four Americans will be dead from the food they eat.”)

Yes, 8 of the top 10 killers in the US, and other first-world countries, are lifestyle related. Which means that some simple — yes, simple — changes to what we eat can reverse this and lead to a longer, happier, and more productive life.

I think I’m lucky in that you, my readers, are already well-educated and doing the best they can for their families, so this month I’d like you to turn your focus outward and…

Join the Revolution

  • Watch the show — at least one episode; it’s on at 8pm Fridays on ABC. Yes, I can virtually guarantee this will be the only time I ask my clients to watch TV. No TV? You can stream it from ABC.com or watch it on Hulu.com.
  • Sign the petition. [link]
  • If you are a parent with school-aged children — or even if you are not — go to your local school and see what they are eating. Jamie has provided sample school menus and advice for how to work with your school cafeterias.
  • If you know your own eating could use some improving (and honestly, couldn’t we all), then Jamie has some stupid simple recipes up on the ABC web site. I watched him make this amazing-looking ginger beef stir fry thing all the way through last Friday’s episode — I ended up having to make it for myself the next night!

I’m grateful to Jamie raising the level of dialogue about food and obesity in this country. I believe that everyone wants to do right by their families, but not everyone has been blessed with the knowledge they need to do so.

Thank you for joining the revolution!

National Nutrition Month

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This month I’m hoping you to encourage you to step back and re-evaluate the relationship you and your loved ones have with food and mealtime.

What is Sustenance?

For many people, the word Sustenance simply means food. But, the definition of Sustenance is MUCH more broad:

1 a : means of support, maintenance, or subsistence : living b : food, provisions; also : nourishment
2 a : the act of sustaining : the state of being sustained b : a supplying or being supplied with the necessaries of life
3 : something that gives support, endurance, or strength

March is National Nutrition Month, and I frequently write about food, nutrition, and it’s overall impact on our lives and well-being, so I pulled some of my favorite posts to review. I know I was reminded of a lot of what I already knew about SUSTENANCE by going back through my posts, and I hope you enjoy reading them as much as I enjoyed putting this together for you.

Children and Nutrition

Food Allergies & Sensitivities

Grocery Shopping

Diet vs Exercise

Productivity & Creativity

Eating Habits for Weight Loss

I have a lot more on this topic that I didn’t list out, and I’ll be writing a lot more about nutrition yet this month. Be sure to check my blog regularly for more!

Childhood diet and future health

Still on my nutrition kick….

Knowing just how bad my diet was in my childhood, this article definitely caught my eye.

A University of Calgary study of rats found that different diets fed to the rats as youth impacted how their bodies processed food as mature mice.

“There’s a growing body of work that indicates a relationship between our health as adults and our early diet, and even our mother’s diet. This research shows for the first time that our early childhood diet may have a huge impact on our health as adults.”

This is interesting to me for a couple of reasons.

  • I grew up in a rural middle-class household where frozen foods and carbs were our primary staples with little fresh produce. My parents did the best they could, but it was the reality of our situation.
  • I guess I’ve taken the SAID principle pretty literally, and assumed that a clean diet today can hide the sins of old. Turns out that that may not be the case. I do recognize that eating clean now is better than poor eating in terms of overall longevity, so I’m not saying there is no point. Perhaps I just need to take a more holistic approach and realize that we really are a summation of EVERYTHING in the past, and while good reps will ultimately outnumber bad reps, the bad reps still count for something.

I don’t have any children of my own, but this post makes me doubly-glad to see that my brother and sister-in-law are raising my niece eating lots of fresh produce and veggies.

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