I am
obsessed with two things right now, getting my Sea Skills and rock
climbing. We have had so much rain that I actually have not climbed
outside for a couple of weeks – except for sessions on my home
wall. Hopefully that will change. I tidied up a couple of new
bouldering areas on Monday and so I am looking forward to spending a
few hours there. The hot weather is coming, however, and it will be
time to pick cool, cloudy days for climbing. Sweating buckets and
greasing off holds in high humidity with the sun beating down is not
conducive to “sending the proj.”
The
other obsession is Sea Skills which is why I am out paddling in bad
weather and spending a lot of time surfing the kayak. And rolling,
lots of rolling and surfing, my two weak areas. Today, in between
catching waves, I probably did about 30 rolls, so I started thinking
why not have a December challenge. Every day I have to roll once on
each side for the day of the month. That is, two rolls (one each
side) on the first, right through to 31 rolls on each side on
December 31. Doug is not into it, but he said he would eat two
blackberries (our brambles are loaded with fruit) for each day of the
month. Doug's challenge sounds significantly less character building
than mine.
“A
destination and route provided to your RP (responsible person).
Stick with it.” This
is the advice provided on Backcountry Skiing Canada. I thought that advice was stupid when I read it
over a decade a go (an acquaintance of mine runs the site) and my
thought has not changed to this day. I certainly agree with Benjamin
Franklin that “if
you fail to plan, you are planning to fail,”
but, in uncontrolled outdoor environments conditions are not
necessarily what you anticipated when forging your plan from the
comfort of your home. Snow and avalanche conditions may be wildly
different than anticipated and even the other members of your group,
who looked strong and fit on paper, may not turn out to be quite as
you expected. So plans should always be amenable to change.
Knowing
when to change plans can be difficult. Seth Godin has written an
entire book
about this. When I first started climbing, I changed plans a lot. I
backed off leads and mountains, generally because I was scared.
Being a bit scared is normal, and keeps us alive in potentially
dangerous situations, but there are times, much more often than we
think, when the plan ahead of us is challenging but we are equal to
it. That is when we should stick to the plan.
The
other time we should stick to plan is when training. Like anyone who
wants to succeed, I have a training plan which I lay out a week in
advance (I am currently experimenting with a ten day training plan).
Anyone who trains hard or mixes training with performance (almost all
performance based athletes like rock climbers) knows that there are
days when you get up and feel stiff, sore and a bit weary. It can be
tempting, particularly before the first black coffee of the morning,
to think about changing your training plan. Resist the urge. If you
have a reasonable level of experience and knowledge writing training
plans, you should have confidence that over-reaching
is an essential part of improving performance; some days you will
train with a bit – or even a lot - of residual fatigue.
PC: NBlacklock
Sunday
was another blustery, grey day on the coast; but, I had planned a
surf training session with the same group who paddled on the day before. It's fair to say we were all a bit weary,
gear was still wet from the previous day, and a few showers were
rolling over. Off we went, however, and, once we got warmed up, it
was a great day out on the water. We hit three different surf
locations and ended up catching some good waves and getting some
solid training done.
PC. NBlacklock
Monday
(yesterday) my training was a bit different, tidy up one of the local
trails, and clean up a couple of bouldering areas. Does not sound
like much, but by the time I carried a heavy pack of gear in, and
worked away for six hours straight hauling heavy things around, that
too felt like a solid session. And, as a rock climber, every day is
core day, so there is always that.
Like
most other things in life, succeeding in training (which translates
directly to performance) is separating the thinking from the doing.
Put a decent amount of thought into planning your training and then
stop thinking, just do.
The
youth in my life fall into the trap of always rethinking things.
When it comes time to train, they start waffling and making excuses.
The easy way to stop this is exactly what I have outlined above.
Plan your training and train your plan. Rethinking the plan as you
put on your shoes to head out the door because you feel tired or
there is a good show on Netflix is a colossal waste of energy. There
IS a time for everything, and if you have a solid training
plan, put your head down, stop thinking and get on with it.
Yesterday
when I was training (ah, the irreplaceable beauty of a home gym and
climbing wall) I had the new Salomon movie “Long Shorts”playing in the background. Long Shorts is about Courtenay Dauwalter
and François D'Haene 2021 racing season where they both ran the
European UTMB and Hardock in the USA. Dauwalter drops out of
Hardwater part way as she is vomiting and unable to keep food down.
Spoiler alert, Dauwalter goes on to win UTMB for the second
consecutive year.
But,
back to the point of the story, the shit “food” that ultrarunners
stuff in during these long endurance events is really shocking.
Chips, and lollies, pizza's and pastries. In all honesty, I feel
kind of nauseated just thinking about chowing down on what the
runners eat and I am currently sitting in an office chair inside a
dry and warm house not hucking a lung out on a mountain top in the
middle of the night. I really am curious if there are any
ultra-runners who have run long races eating actual food – nuts,
fruit, potatoes, cheese, etc. Surely to Dog the stomach issues could
not be any worse then they are when eating handfuls of junk food
every few hours or sucking back sugary gels every 15 minutes. Not to
mention that most of those “foods” are highly irritating to the
gut and must exacerbate the shits that so many runners get.
If I
was an ultra-runner that is the experiment I would do. I imagine
that even if an athlete eating real food won every race it would not
be enough to convince the other runners to stop eating toxic sludge.
But
anyway, this morning, in pouring rain, three of us convened at
Guerilla Bay to paddle north to Sunshine Bay. The average wave
height on the Batemans Bay wave buoy (off North Head) was just over
three metres with a maximum wave height of between six and seven
metres. Off-shore there was a 30 knot southerly wind blowing (near
gale), but inshore, the wind was only about 13 knots with a westerly
component. The seas were messy, big waves rearing up and two
opposing swells colliding. I was hoping two things, one, we would
make it to Sunshine Bay without any incidents, and two – much more
immediate – that we could get off the beach before some well
meaning but panicky citizen arrived to call the authorities.
Usually,
I try to avoid doing things that will cause rescue parties to say
“What the puck were you doing?” but the only way to get
comfortable paddling in bad conditions is to paddle in bad conditions
so sometimes you have to head out to sea even when you are not
completely sure of the outcome.
I
immediately took three or four breaking waves on the chin leaving the
beach and thought: “Good to get that out of the way early!”
Heading out of Guerilla Bay even Nick looked a bit confronted and
admitted that conditions were bigger than he expected. Nevertheless,
after confirming that we were all good to go, turning around is
usually (but not always) an option, we started heading out to sea.
With big conditions and lots of reefs and bommies along the coast to
the north, we knew we had to keep well off-shore to avoid getting
cleaned up in the bigger waves.
Photo credit: Nick B.
The
Pace was feeling pretty tippy starting out but I was determined not
to be the fearful one that held the whole trip up so with my climbing
mantra “You can do this” running through my head I followed along
behind Nick, focusing on putting in good paddle strokes and bracing
when appropriate.
I've
been on trips like this before. You are kind of on edge, fairly
confident you can do the thing (whatever it is) but not 100% sure.
But, a person cannot stay in a haze of adrenaline for a long time as
it is too exhausting and makes you feel too unwell. Despite the
people who say nonsensical things like “I am relying on the
adrenaline to get me through.” Coincidentally, something Dauwalter
said in Long Shorts, adrenaline as anyone who has had a flush
of it knows, is a pretty unpleasant neurotransmitter to operate
under. Adrenaline makes you shaky and jittery, your heart pounds and
rational thought evaporates. Rock climbers know the flush of
adrenaline when an indispensable piece of gear rattles out of the
crack below them as they approach the crux. Adrenaline is the
harbinger of Elvis Legs which marks a precipitous decline in
performance.
So, we
all settled into paddling north. The big issue we had getting to
Sunshine Bay was the mess of reefs and bommies between Black Rock and
Mosquito Bay. A couple of years ago, four of us had come through
that section to the west of Black Rock but while we had a big swell,
the weather had been clear with little wind and a much cleaner break.
Today, we had a northerly swell hitting a southerly swell, heavy
rain obscuring visibility and lumpy waves all around with some big
buggers coming through periodically. No-one felt confident
navigating through a mess of breaking reefs so instead we paddled
east around Black Rock. The east side of Black Rock is messy on a
calm day so it was big today with waves of four metres to five metres
rearing up and threatening to break.
Once
we passed Black Rock and could paddle closer in to shore, the rest of
the paddle felt easy. It's funny how a two metre swell and one metre
sea can feel pretty manageable after you've paddled through much
bigger conditions. Nick was even catching waves, but the waves were
all moving quite fast and you had to paddle hard to get on them.
Coming into Sunshine Bay Nick caught a bigger wave than he was
expecting but managed to turn and pivot off the back of it before he
pitch poled into a reef in front.
We
landed at Sunshine Bay, it was still raining, but we were feeling
good. My friend, Les, who lives right on the beach had seen us
coming in and got dressed up in his rain gear to walk over and say
“What the heck were you doing out there? Wasn't it really rough?”
“It was pretty punchy,” I replied, “But fun, in a strange kind
of way.”
Postscript:
I thought I had recorded a bunch of video with our action cam
mounted on my head, but... the SD card was buggered and I got
nothing.
I went
to Climb Fit in Kirrawee when I was in Sydney over the weekend. It has to
be over a decade since I went to a climbing gym. Sydney and
surrounding suburbs actually have really good (if short) outdoor rock
climbing and bouldering areas so usually when I go up to visit my Mum
I pack just two pieces of training gear – running shoes and my
bouldering pad with climbing shoes. That way, I keep life and
transit between the south coast and Sydney as uncomplicated as
possible while still maintaining my training schedule.
But,
it was raining, as it was the last time I was in Sydney so I did not
get on my project at Jannali and instead used a “Gladdy” Discover
coupon at Climb Fit in Kirrawee. I had a blast, apart from being the
old lady in the parking lot who needed the young lady to help them
back out of a too tight parking spot, it was super fun.
Climbing
gyms sure have changed a lot since the old days. In the 1980's, if
you were a member of the local section of the Alpine Club you could
climb at the University of Calgary climbing wall for free on
Wednesday nights between 9 and 11 pm. As I got up every day at 5 am,
starting to climb at 9 pm was a hard road to walk, and I only went
infrequently. Frugal as ever, paying to climb when there was a free
alternative was simply not an option. In the summer months, when the
days are long in North America, we would often drive out to Wasootch,
one of the few quickly accessible climbing training areas in the
Rockies at that time, and climb out there in the evenings. It was
whole lot more pleasant than the UofC wall which stank of foetid rock
shoes.
The
UofC climbing gym was dank, dark and smelly. The walls were plywood
except for the slab wall which was cement. All the holds were
rudimentary, bolted on pieces of wood or river stones stuck in
cement. There were no marked routes, no bouldering cave, no lead
routes. In fact, to climb there you had to bring your own rope and
climb up a ladder, walk along a ledge at the top of the wall and set
your own top-ropes.
Climb Fit at Kirrawee is another world
altogether, so many routes, a big bouldering area with spongy thick
pads at the base, a Kilter wall (which came first the Kilter wall or the Moon board?), four auto belays, lead routes, dozens and dozens of
top-rope routes, an infra-red sauna, gym, change rooms, combination
lockers, and the building is light and airy. A bit sweaty when you
are working hard, but a far cry from the basement of the UofC
kinesiology building.
I
thought the bouldering routes would have V grades ,and the climbing
routes Ewbank grades but instead both climbing and bouldering routes
simply start at one and go up. There are probably pros and cons to
that. Gym climbing is notoriously not very much like climbing
outdoors. I have climbed with dozens of climbers who can onsight in
the 20's in the gym but are stymied on a 16 outdoors because “where
are the holds?” On the other hand, it is hard to gauge how hard
you are climbing with no reference point to what I, at least, still
think of as an outdoor sport.
Maybe,
however, that is the point. Gym climbing is a sport unto its own and
no longer simply somewhere climbers go to train when the weather is
inclement or they can't get out to the crag. Certainly, at least
from my sampling of Climb Fit, the routes are about as unlike as
climbing in Australia as you can get. Here on the east coast, most
climbing is on sandstone, and the predominant hold is the crimp,
often a down-sloping crimp, but a crimp nonetheless. Strangely,
despite spending three hours at Climb Fit, mostly climbing, hardly
resting, I did not encounter a single crimp that feels anything like
the type of climbing common around NSW. Contrast this to my home
wall where I have a lot of small crimpy holds and a few homemade
jugs. Most of my outdoor climbing is on small crimps so I train
small crimps.
Climb
Fit was great and without a prior engagement I would have stayed
longer. However, as the person who tries to always see the other
side, I wondered about turning an outdoor sport which involves all
kinds of other skills and abilities – walking to the crag or the
mountain, placing gear, evaluating the safety of the climb, setting
belays, being in nature, to mention only a few – into another form
of living like a zoo animal. Talking with my young relatives at
lunch the day before, all of whom had been to a climbing gym at least
once, they did not seem to even realise that climbing is an outdoor
sport – or at least climbing was an outdoor sport. I have
some misgivings with sanitising the experience, removing most of the
challenges and discomforts and turning what for outdoor climbers is
akin to a spiritual experience into training like a hamster on a
wheel.
My
nephew, who was dabbling in outdoor climbing, no longer climbs outdoors because he says (I
have no idea of the veracity of this statement or whether it is
merely a handy excuse for a lack of motivation) he “cannot afford
to get hurt.” I, however, feel a bit like Messner in The Alpinist, that the possibility of getting hurt is part of the
adventure, and some of the appeal of outdoor sports – skiing,
climbing, kayaking – is being skilled enough to manage the risk and
NOT get hurt. Of course, anyone who has done any sport climbing
knows that almost all modern sport climbs are bolted such that
getting hurt is actually highly improbable. The risk to your health
of smoking, drinking and existing on junk food (all of which my
nephew does) is much greater than clipping bolts around the Sydney
crags.
I
guess my overwhelming impression of the new modern climbing gym (if
Climb Fit is an representative sample) is that the gym could be a
great place to train, but could just as easily become a place where
you escape from actual performance and spend a whole bunch of time
faffing around the edges and not actually addressing the issues that
would increase your own performance.
Some
of this is human nature, it's easy to get sucked in to hanging with
friends at the gym, half trying a couple of boulder problems or
routes and spending the rest of the time talking yourself up; but the
other half is it's actually super fun to swing around, cutting feet
on overhanging routes with big jugs feeling jacked, but if most of
your climbing is techy slabs requiring delicate footwork and precise
moves, getting to feel hero strong is not going to help much.
I like
this article by Will Gadd on “helmet fires.” Written back in
2011, it's an oldie but a goodie. I frequently have helmet fires,
mostly, however, in social situations. When the helmet fire ignites,
the mouth runs off. Socially awkward does not really describe me.
“I came in like a wrecking ball” to quote Miley Cyrus is way more
appropriate than the tepid phrase “socially awkward.”
While
I am happy to discuss issues in depth, I abhor small talk. Mindless
chitter chatter, that essential social lubricant, seems to me like so
much wasted time and energy. Because I have goals, and I can't spare
the energy or the time to chat about the latest reality TV show or
the next useless gizmo you plan to buy when I have training to do,
plans to make, places to go.
I have
a pathological inability to lie. If you ask me if this dress makes
you look fat, and the dress does, indeed make you look like an
oversized beach ball with limbs, I will absolutely say “yes.” I
do not care that you spent $400 on the outfit and are just off to
your only daughter's wedding, if the dress makes you look fat, it
makes you look fat.
I rarely agree with mainstream opinions and
have long since decided that the so-called “experts” lack any
credibility. I really don't care if you have ten PhD's or are the leading expert in your field if what you say makes no sense to
me, I will call bull-shit.
And, I
call bull-shit often. Excuses never got anyone anywhere so we should
all stop right now with making them. That way, at least one of my
annoying character traits won't be so prominent.
I
don't go to the cinema. I have trouble sitting still for the length
of a movie, and most movies are crap anyway, but I was stoked to find
out that The Alpinist, the story of the extraordinarily talented Marc Andre LeClerc was screening in Sydney when I was up there for my
Mum's birthday.
Sender Films, makers of Valley Uprising and The Dawn Wall, had a tough time
making a movie about LeClerc who frequently disappeared to complete
audacious solo climbs without informing the film crew. In his short
but extremely full career Marc Andre completed a series of stunning
first ascents of striking technical difficulty including solo
climbing the Stanley Headwall, the Emperor Face on Mount Robson, and
Torre Egger (solo in winter).
I
think the sheer audacity of some of LeClerc's climbs might be lost on
people with no alpine climbing experience, after all, he makes
climbing technically difficult routes, like the Stanley Headwall,
look easy and describes some of his most impressive solo climbs as
having a “casual fun adventure, and cruise around.”
But,
you don't have to be a climber to appreciate LeClerc's drive and
determination, his ability to step out beyond the bounds of what
society deems normal, to live with very few possessions yet many
lifetimes worth of experiences, to pursue his passions without regard
for financial success or recognition, and to love life so deeply that
he was willing to let it go.
Everyone
who walks into the heart of the Budawangs knows that time quickly
becomes an irrelevance. A few kilometres might take an hour or a day
and it is imperative that the journey becomes the experience, else
you risk being disappointed by long hours of struggle broken by only
the briefest of high points.
With
only a short break in a rainy spring, we planned two days to walk
into Hidden Valley and climb Mount Sturgiss. Just, but not quite,
long enough, and if I could walk back in time I would take one more
day for this trip.
Sassafras,
which is merely a cluster of small holdings, is quickly passed as you
travel between Nowra and Braidwood with no sign that to the south,
the vast wilderness of the Budawang lies hidden in folds of the
country. There is no real information on the NSW NPWS website and
even the guidebook says nothing much about how to find the old
Endrick River Fire Trail. However, the access road (which passes
through private property) is exactly where shown on the topographic
map, about 4 km east of Gretas Road (access to the Ettrema Tops fire
trail). And, there is a sign on the gate diagramming access to the
Endrick River fire trail but the gate seems to be always open and the
sign hidden from view.
Many
people cycle the Endrick River fire trail, at least to the junction
with the Folly Point trail or down to the Vines, but we opted to
walk. The starting elevation is about 700 metres and the junction
with the Styles Valley trail is about 700 metres so the fire trail is
pretty flat with only a few undulations. Again, if I could walk back
in time I might also ride my mountain bike in, but that can be pretty
awkward with an overnight pack. In any event, I enjoy walking and,
as all the scrub is burnt, the walk is fairly scenic. We detoured to
the top of Bhundoo Hill on the way in, an extra 10 metres of
elevation gain and had a distant view of Point Perpendicular with the
lighthouse shining bright white. The view also encompasses the Clyde
River Gorge and the Tianjara Plateau to the east.
Just
south of Newhaven Gap, the track passes close to the western
escarpment of the Clyde River gorge and there are tantalising views
of the escarpment cliffs and the Clyde River 400 metres below. As
the trail descends gently down Strang Gully the scenery becomes
typical Budawangs, grassy plains, short pagoda cliffs, creeks running
clear over sandstone slabs and wildflowers everywhere. Suddenly the
trail descends slightly to the Vines, a deep rainforest pocket, once
the place of a sawmill, now a dappled mix of sun filtering through
tall trees, moss covered ground and tree ferns.
A
cairn marks the foot-pad that descends southeast through the valley
defined by Quilty and Sturgiss Mountains. This is where the real
Budawangs experience starts, clambering over and under fallen trees,
pushing through thick acacia and other fire regrowth, travel slows,
time becomes meaningless.
Once
past the Quilty turn-off, also marked by a small cairn, the trail
descends to parallel the head of Kilpatrick Creek for a couple of
kilometers. There is an old road bed which is likely the only thing
that has kept this route navigable by walkers, but the road bed is
gradually falling away or being overgrown by dense regrowth. In one
place we had to push through tall thickets of Incense Plants
(Calomeria amarnthoides) which had grown in an explosion of size and density
making us think of the John Wyndham classic, Day Of The Triffids.
After
the track gains about 30 metres of elevation and continues south on a
700 metre plateau it is very easy to lose any sign of human passage
altogether. In late 2021 the only thing we noted was some faint
evidence of passage through robust and springy acacia regrowth that
had disappeared by the next day. Acacia is like that, wiry and
tenacious. We followed the track well enough until we crossed the
head of Kirkpatrick Creek and then we lost it completely. We did,
however, find a small clearing of low grass perfect for a campsite
and within thrashing distance of water down a small creek.
After
setting up camp and brewing some tea, Doug and I both set off on
different reconnaissance trips. I headed off on an ESE bearing
hoping to find, if not the Hidden Valley track, at least an easy
bushwack route – no on both counts. Doug arduously retraced our
steps, or tried to, hoping to locate the track we had previously lost
which would take us back out the next day. He had some moderate
success but only modest as by the time we came to follow the track
out the next day we had again lost it entirely. He did, however,
stumble upon the tall tree fern with HV carved in the trunk that
marks the Hidden Valley-Styles Creek junction; the old campsite at
this spot now shrunk to only accommodate one tent and surrounded by
vigorous regrowth.
Thanks
to an amazingly comfortable tent site, I slept so well that I bounded
out of bed around 5.30 am the next morning; but, then again, I am one
of those people who almost always bounds out of bed early anyway.
After jugs of coffee, we started by trying to follow the foot pad
that Doug had found the previous night to the tree fern marker but
lost it within minutes and then spent the next 10 to 15 minutes
trying to find the tree fern in the vain hope that a distinctive
track would materialise to lead us up to Hidden Valley.
We did
find the tree fern again; I looked up from our latest compass bearing
to see it perfectly in-line with the direction of travel arrow on the
compass and we did find a bit of a pad that descended perhaps 10
metres to a dry creekbed where we tried, poorly it turns out, to mark
the faint pad we had just followed. Fortuitously, walking uphill
from the flats, the vegetation thinned and became quite manageable,
and on a vague shoulder on the ridge we found a faint foot pad that
led north past short cliffs, seeps and a camping cave to the pass
that grants access to Hidden Valley.
Hidden
Valley is a magical place. A small enclave, perhaps a kilometre in
length surrounded by the escarpment of the sprawling Sturgiss
Mountain. Impossibly green along the valley bottom where a swampy
stream runs, fringed by eucalypts, and framed all around by terraced
cliffs. We had some information that the “trail” was on the west
side of the valley although there was scant evidence of anything,
travel was relatively easy, however and we were soon near the height
of land and looking east across the valley to a distinct cave, likely
Dark Brothers Cave (marked incorrectly on the topographic map).
The
information I had gleaned from the guidebook and various other trip
reports indicated that the scramble route up Sturgiss Mountain was
100 metres or so north of Dark Brothers Cave and we initially looked
that way. Doug, however, had studied the satellite imagery and
thought the likely route was to the south, so we made the classic
mistake of turning back too soon and spent a deal of time thrashing
along the cliff line to the south. When no scramble route was found,
we again went north, and, tangled in undergrowth and overgrowth we
found a lone cairn, which with more scratching through the bush led
upwards to a series of ledges and eventually a rusty chain hanging
down a seepy chimney section. Another thrutch up this and more ledge
traversing and climbing and we popped out on top of the large plateau
that makes up Sturgiss Mountain.
And
that is when we really wished we had an extra day as the plateau of
Sturgiss Mountain revealed the most amazing views of the Budawangs
and it would have been ideal to have the time to walk right to the
south end of the plateau. As it was, we had to be content with
scrambling up to a high point with a big cairn and a sizeable dead
eucalypt and, despite the somewhat grizzly, grey weather, amazing
views in all directions.
The
rest, of course, is the denouement, but includes its own adventures.
After a too short stay on the plateau, we descended back to camp in
less than half the time, but, could not find the track past the tree
fern so endured the obligatory acacia thrash to camp. After some
lunch and tea, we packed up and with dispiriting rapidity lost the
track we had followed from Kilpatrick Creek and expended too much
time, energy and clothing (ripped) pushing through entangled
regrowth. Near the point of despair that we would ever find the
trail again, I stumbled out onto the track just where it descends
down into Kilpatrick Creek. After that sojourn, the overgrown track
felt like a highway.
At
Camping Rock Creek we sat in the sun by a small cascade on the creek
among wildflowers and reflected on another Budawang trip. “Did you
enjoy it?” Doug asked, and, strangely enough, despite the
frustration of watching as trails in the Budawangs deteriorate to the
point of complete annihilation, I realised that Budawang time is a
good time. “Yes,” I said quietly, “I really did.”
Dave
Macleod's new, long video – does anyone call these vlogs anymore?
- about keto diets for climbing came out a few days ago. I don't
think it is much of a stretch to say that, among performance oriented
rock climbers (climbing grade irrelevant), this was a highly
anticipated video. The
video is four hours long and while training I watched it all (not in
one session, four hours would be a mammoth and likely fairly useless
gym session). Me, the person with the attention span of a gnat was
fully engaged by a four hour video which is mostly Macleod talking
with the odd climbing shot spliced in!
If
you are interested in sports performance and your head won't explode
if you have to confront ideas that challenge the status quo of sports
nutrition, I recommend watching the entire four hours. People without a background in exercise physiology and nutritional
science, might find the video a bit challenging. Around
hour three I realised that Macleod was throwing around terms like
mitochondrial density, which I understand, but which might be
unfamiliar to many athletes. If “polarized training” makes you
say “what?” you might need to take notes and look things up
afterwards. There is no shame in that; one of the greatest free
gifts of life is the ability to learn something new.
Well,
I wrote that a surf capsize was coming right along and so it was. If
you are going to capsize in surf, the only way to do it is by
pitch-poling the kayak down a wave and flipping pointy end over
pointy end. This is much more spectacular for random observers on
the beach and you finish keel up, head down and ready to roll.
Today
we finally got a day without rain so I dashed out bouldering. Broke
a few holds, fell on my butt a few times, and generally got a decent
session in before it started raining again. I've almost forgotten
what our latest project looks like... maybe next week.
On the
subject of weeks, last week when I was in Sydney, one of the youth
commented on my vegetarian phase. I think of this period as a dark
and low place in my history. It lasted two or three years from when
I was maybe 25 or 26 to about 28 years old. Remaining a vegetarian -
or even more hellish vegan - requires that you either lose your mind
or get used to functioning at a low level of capacity. As I was
happy with neither, I quit being a vegetarian, started eating meat
and immediately trained harder, recovered better and improved my
performance. I kept my brain functioning as well. Anthropologists and evolutionary biologists now think that a diet of meat is what
led humans to develop such large and energy expensive brains. Think
about that next time you consider giving up animal protein.
It
always cracks me up that my sister in law (SIL) tells the story of me
talking about being vegetarian while eating a ham sandwich. Now I
don't actually remember the event, but I have heard the story so many
times that it has become part of my personal lore, and, to give my
SIL due credit, the story has a ring of truth. But, what really
tickles me about this story is that it happened 30 years ago.
Yes, as I said just last week
“It was 30 years ago!”
Emphasis very much intended.
In
a twist of irony that is impossible to invent, I have been on a whole
food diet – no sugar, no grains, no industrial seed oils – for at
least five times as long as I was vegetarian and no one ever mentions
that. I will let the reader ponder why that might possibly be.
This
is a bit of a stream of consciousness post because it has been so
long since I published anything on the blog. I have had ideas –
most notably the concept that, to paraphrase Steve Bechtel, “being
average gives average results.” Bechtel fans will recognise this
as a bastardisation of “random training produces random results.”
But that is a topic worthy, at least in my mind, of fleshing out a
bit more completely than this post has room for.
It is
not that I have been doing too little to have anything to write
about, more that I have been doing too much and have not had
sufficient spare time to sit down and pen a long essay. Crazily, at
almost 60, I still have the psych of a 26 year old when it comes to
rock climbing so I have been exploring new bouldering areas and last
Monday we ticked off another new climbing project and started the
next one. That was also the day I looked down while I was belaying
Doug and saw a one metre long snake on the rope bag about 4
centimetres from my bare foot. I am pretty sure humans have “snake
recognition” wired into our evolutionary genes because I leapt up
and back in under a second. Doug, who was working a hard sequence at
the time, kept his cool remarkably well; reason number 76 for using a
Gri-Gri or similar device to belay when your buddy is projecting.
Paddling
is back on too. We've done a couple of surf days, during which I
have surprised myself by NOT capsizing. I am almost starting to
think I am improving but that might just be hubris. I'm sure another
surf capsize is coming right along. I went out yesterday to do some
surfing at one of our local beaches and within not very long broke a
foot pedal which left me with a tedious paddle back home with no foot
pegs to brace on and no rudder. It turns out that without foot pegs,
you lose all torque (drive) and you end up “arm paddling.” It
was tiring, inefficient and ineffective and gave me a good deal of
insight into the speed and fatigue level of many of the people I
paddle with who “arm paddle.”
Talking
about broken gear, I finally got to Sydney last week to see my Mum
who, thanks to Covid restrictions I have not seen since June. While
there I managed to replace my worn out approach shoes and pick up a
couple of other climbing items not available locally. “Not
available locally” actually covers a lot of ground down here.
I am a
shop assistants dream – I knew exactly what I wanted before I went
in the store, so, apart from fetching the shoes from the back, I
served myself and was in and out in a short time. There was an older
guy there trying on every climbing helmet in the store for a
canyoning trip he was going on. It was one of those situations where
I thought, “yeah, you'll do this once, maybe twice.” Those sorts
of things aren't hard to guess because the reality is most people do
things a few times and then quit. I would love to have a single
Bitcoin for the number of people I know who started rock climbing and
gave it up within a year. I'd be as rich as Elon Musk, on the
proviso that I could actually use Bitcoin for anything.
There
was a bouldering route I really wanted to try in Jannali while I was
in Sydney. I had been on it a few years ago but felt stronger and
thought I might do way better, but the rain moved in on the afternoon
I had set aside for bouldering and so I drove home instead.
Before
heading up to Sydney I was getting pretty fatigued from another heavy
training cycle combined with a lot of climbing and too many sprint
kayak days. Sydney is always a good time to reset and take a deload
week. I find being in the city, staying at other people's houses,
living in a food desert, stressful enough without layering on heavy
training. The noise, congestion, pollution are all a bit much when
you are happiest deep in the bush.
But,
the day after we got back, we were off paddling with Sprint A Lot
(aka Splash A Lot or Speed A Lot) on a 25 kilometre paddle day.
Sure, that does not sound like much but it was 12 or so kilometres
into a 14 knot wind and building sea and then a serious sprint
session to catch runners on the way back. Even Sprint A Lot was
tired at the end. It was a super fun day out, with “interesting
conditions” and we had a close encounter with a calf and mother
Humpback Whale; but, when we pulled into the beach at the end I
thought “so much for the deload week.”
One of
my young relatives (by marriage) has signed up for another 70.3 (aka
Half Ironman) with some mates. I asked if they were “competitive.”
A reasonable question as for many people just finishing a race is
the goal not placing in any sort of time category. Apparently, the
youth are all competitive but as we were chatting about that I
thought that we all assume that a concept such as “competitive”
has a fixed definition. However, like most words, this is fallacy.
The classic example of this is, of course, moderation.
What
is competitive? To me, competitive means you will do lots of
difficult and uncomfortable things to achieve your goal. More than
just run, bike, swim training, I mean things like giving up alcohol
and packaged food, eating more protein, cooking all your own meals,
strength training, getting to bed early, correcting movement
abnormalities, missing parties and social events to get your training
in and on the list goes. Some of these are “add-ins” and some
are “take aways.” Both are of equal difficulty and without a
plan to succeed (that focuses on habit change), failure is more
likely than success. As Dan John likes to point out, the root origin of passion is “to suffer.” If you are passionate
about being competitive you will have to do things you don't want to
do and stop doing things you do want to do.
As a
fairly useless athlete, I've never really had the cojones to be
competitive. Goal oriented absolutely, often to the exclusion of
almost anything else, but not competitive. Strangely enough some of
the people I know who are competitive perform strikingly worse than
the people who aren't because although they want to compete, they
don't seem to want to lose at competition and failure is the ultimate
teacher.
Winston
Churchill said “Success is stumbling from failure to failure with
no loss of enthusiasm” which brings me full circle back to being
stoked about every climbing session even though I have been pursuing
the sport for decades.
Find what you love and let it kill you.Charles Bukowski