Endurance: Key #5 to Summiting Kilimanjaro

Tough times never last, but tough people do. -Dr. Robert Schuller

Roundtrip up Kilimanjaro and back down on the route I took is about 60 miles over 9 days. That is an average of just over 6 miles a day, which frankly isn’t that far. I know lots of people where 6 miles is their daily run.

Kilimanjaro is a very doable mountain for people in reasonable shape. No question about it. I outlined what I considered to be my 10 Keys to Success in a post a few weeks ago, but honestly most of it comes down to preparation and common sense.

Having said that, I do consider Endurance to be one of my keys. There are three different aspects of Endurance I think are important.

Injury Prevention & Rehab

A rolled ankle, back pain, knee problems, or some other injury can be the difference between making the summit or not. One of my climbing partners had a bad right knee. And while he wasn’t limping at the beginning and no single day was a dealbreaker for him, the aggregate mileage and constant climbing up and down as we wound our way around the mountain on the way up meant that he didn’t even attempt the summit.

I do a lot of movement practice — working on making sure my body is strong and safe in unusual positions. When most people get hurt, it isn’t doing anything special. It’s doing the everyday stuff that goes horribly wrong. Missing a step, catching something that is falling just out of reach, or slipping on a wet floor. Our bodies end up stretched, twisted, or turned in a position it’s not used to, and tendons, muscles, and ligaments get pulled in directions they are used to being pulled in at speeds they aren’t used to moving. If you are interested in getting started, I highly recommend taking a look at Z-Health’s R-Phase product or Neural Warm Up 1.

Since I’m not terribly keen on being hurt, I have a movement template that practice moving in so my body is more accustomed to being in those odd positions. So, when I do miss a step it’s not a big deal.

While climbing I rolled my ankle a couple of times, fell a few times, and started having shoulder problems from my pack at one point. In each case I used my training as a Z-Health Master Practitioner to quickly nip the pain in the bud before they actually became problems and hindered my progress. Being really resilient against injury and being able to immediately address the two or three things that did come up was really cool!

Attitude

I said this in my post about attitude, but I’m going to repeat it here — attitude is key. A bad attitude makes you more likely to get hurt and more likely to really wallow in those mishaps you may have along the way. A bad attitude also makes you really not fun to be around. Just sayin’.

Muscle Recovery

I talked about this a bit in my post about preparation, but it is also worth mentioning again. The mileage accumulates pretty quickly without any rest days for recovery. So, I attacked that twofold:

First, I had muscle recovery drinks and amino acids to aid in muscle repair and rebuilding.  Turns out I really like Accelerade. :-)

Second, during my training I specifically put some of my runs the night before my long hikes so that my body could begin the adaptation process of hiking on tired legs.


Endurance gets looked at quite differently based upon the event. In the case of Kilimanjaro, it becomes a matter of making sure you can keep your body injury-free for 9 consecutive days.

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.

Why Keep a Training Log

Training LogDo you keep a training log? If not, why not?

I have been keeping a training log on and off for probably 10 years – electronically for the past four. So, I have four years of data, notes, successes and frustrations all documented for review. I’m reminded of times when I was really rocking my training and other times when I struggled. And, I can usually relate those times to highs and lows in the rest of my life as well.

I’ve started seriously gearing up to pass the RKC snatch test in Copenhagen next month, and realized, “I’ve done this twice before, why I don’t I just see what I did then?”

Granted, the test isn’t exactly the same as it was the last two times through, but how I respond to training really isn’t that different. It’s now 100 reps compressed in to 5 minutes, which turns it in to a cardiovascular challenge for me. Strength is easy for me, cardiovascular, not so much. So, in to the logs I go. Where do my notes indicate I got my largest cardiovascular gains? Yep, those are the programs I’m pulling back out of the hat.

I think I’m inherently a scientist, so I’m constantly measuring, changing a single variable to test for results, re-measuring. Tracking results is the only way I know to objectively determine progress. You can keep your training log in whatever tool you wish – a paper notebook, Word document, or online tracking tool. I’m currently tracking my progress in Evernote, but you need to determine what you are actually going to use, and do that.

Not sure how to get started?

You might be interested in my articles about training progressions, joining a rec league, the importance of training with intent, and goal setting.

Or, give me a call or send me an email and we’ll set up a custom program for you!

‘Keep slim friends’ to stay trim

I really need to stop using the article headlines as my post subjects, because it ends up being a spoiler for what I’m going to talk about. But, I digress…

We model the behaviors of those around us.

This subject line comes from an article posted Friday on the BBC. I really like this article for a lot of different reasons, not the least of which being that I’m still mentally processing the latest Z-Health 9S Course: Sustenance & Spirit. The article is really common sense – we hang out with our friends because we like them and we are like them. Or, we want to be like them.

Growing up, my Mom always wanted me to have as friends the “good kids”, so was not happy when my first boyfriend was on probation for stealing a car at the time we met. She intuitively understood that my behavior was going to match that as of who I was spending time with in order to be accepted by them. Ironically, I later found out that the reason my then-boyfriend started dating me (a straight-A student) was that he wanted to be more like me.

Behavior extends well beyond hanging out at the mall and doing your homework (or not) and in to eating and exercise behaviors. If you spend you time with friends who get their lunch out of the vending machine, you are going to get your lunch out of the vending machine. As an adult, if you work some place where the culture is to eat lunch out every day, do you start forgoing that turkey sandwich that you brought to grab something with your co-workers? If happy hour is the ritual, do you eventually find yourself giving in instead of hitting the gym after work?

Are the people you surround yourself with emulating the behaviors you wish to have? If not, how are you going to change that to be the person you want to be?

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