What’s up MTB’ers!?! Coach Adam here!

 

Happy New Year! 

Wait. What??? 

 

Forget what it says on the calendar.

November 1 is New Years Day for mountain bike athletes! 

 

Why?

Well, it takes about 8 weeks of preparation in the coming Foundation Phase to prepare the body for what is coming in January and ultimately as we move into the spring.

 

We are rolling into November and in BC, we have shifted gears from long, warm autumn days with hero dirt to seeing more rain at lower elevations. We’ve already had some significant snowfalls up high and the skiers out there are frothing to hit the mountains for some snow sliding. 

Everywhere in the Northern hemisphere, daylight is becoming more scarce and with the shorter days, it’s likely for many that we are moving indoors for more of our training.

 

It can be tempting to put the bike away right now, but you’ve got big goals for next year, so let’s make the most of this month!

 

The Foundation Phase

 

If you made good use of October, you should feel like you have accumulated a good foundation of aerobic work and have introduced and adapted to some resistance training in the past several weeks.

 

Structure This Month

 

First of all, if you are still racing cyclocross, you might be smack in the middle of that part of the season. Your weeks might be focused on a lot of short punchy efforts with sprint work, short intervals, skill work and variably paced VO2 max sessions like 30/30’s or something similar. 

 

Try to ride your mountain bike at least a couple of times a week to maintain your MTB specific technical skills.

 

But for those of us who aren’t racing ‘cross, we fall primarily into two camps:

 

Those who can ride outside through the winter.

And those who can’t.

 

If You Ride Through Winter

 

If you live somewhere where you are lucky (or brave enough) to fall into the first camp, keep things rolling with 3-4 rides per week (even if some of those are indoors), but really use what good weather you have to focus on skill development, a bit of aerobic intensity, and endurance work.

 

A lot of this work on the bike can be unstructured as we shift to more structure and more frequency in the gym doing resistance training.

 

As your overall training volume may decrease slightly, the proportion of gym-time and other cross training rises.

 

If You Don’t Ride (Outside) Through Winter

 

In stormy weather, cold weather, or places where it snows, most people will opt to find alternate activities. An indoor cycling class, crossfit, trainer workouts, running, and hiking can be great options. Once the snow flies, skiing and snowshoeing can be a great option.

 

When introducing new activities, remember that your motor might be firing on all cylinders, but your transmission might need some work.

 

By this, I mean that you’ve developed a huge aerobic engine. This will help you to perform any of these cross training activities, but your muscles might not be tuned to manage the sport specific, weight bearing loads and eccentric contractions necessary for running, hiking DOWN steep terrain (especially with a pack), or heavier strength work.

 

Whatever cross training sports you choose to pursue, start slow and progress gradually.

 

The Importance of Strength Training

 

At the risk of sounding like a broken record I’m going to cover this again in case you missed it in last month’s video and blog.

 

As bike racers, many of us would prefer to “just ride” all the time. But strength work is important for injury prevention, mobility and stability, core strength, managing forces and efficiency on the bike, and finally, pedalling power.

 

Particularly for masters athletes, we face the reality of muscle loss, or sarcopenia, as we age. Females also have a higher risk of osteoporosis. Resistance training can help prevent both of those.

 

If you are just beginning your resistance training routine, start slowly with a few sessions that are focused around quality movement and adaptation. When you begin to add weight, focus on proper technique with very manageable loads.

 

Focus on basic movements: Squat, hinge, lunge, push, pull, rotate.

 

We aren’t power lifters. We are bike riders who want to improve our riding. Remember this when you’re in the gym.

 

Also, keep in mind that for everyone else in the gym, that IS their exercise or training. For you, it’s preparing you for your training. Different goals. Different focus.

 

So what could your week look like?

 

There are a lot of different ways to bake a cake, and the actual structure of your week likely depends on your work schedule.

 

Ideally, you want to include these components:

  • 2 intensity workouts (1 “hard” one, 1 “medium” one)
  • 2 endurance sessions (these don’t need to be all day, mega rides that empty the tank)
  • 2 resistance training (strength) workouts

 

Your November MTB Training Outline:

 

Monday: Rest

Tuesday: Intensity – MTB ride with intensity or indoor/trainer ride

Wednesday: Resistance Training/Strength Work

Thursday: Aerobic Work – Tempo or Trail Ride outside, Trainer Session OR Cross Training

Friday: Resistance Training/Strength Work

Saturday: MTB adventure ride OR Indoor Trainer Session

Sunday: Endurance – Road, Gravel, Hiking, Trail Run or a longer (but easier) mtb ride.

 

The key is to build consistency through November and December with a solid FOUNDATION for what is to come.

 

If you found value in this content and you want more, my Club Shred program could be a great option for you!

 

With weekly group calls, a content bank of videos like this, and a group discussion forum, it’s a great resource for any mountain biker looking to increase their knowledge and performance.

 

 

Coach Adam Walker - MTB Coach on Vancouver IslandHappy Training!
Coach Adam

 

What’s up MTB’ers!?! Coach Adam here!

 

It’s October, and here in BC the weather is starting to change.

We just had our first significant rain in months and the trails are PRIME!

Let’s take advantage of this time of year!

 

Racing cross? Prepping for ski season? Just want to make the most of this time…?

October can look a bit different for everyone, but there are a few common themes.

 

Aerobic Base – More than JUST Zone 2!

We can do some shorter rides with intensity, long adventure rides, and even some structured workouts IF you are keen and ready (both physically and mentally).

 

Structure? In the fall???

Traditionally, fall can look like a lot of downtime. And if you just came off a very competitive season, that’s great. You need to rest and reset before beginning the work again.

But for many, late summer results in a lot of downtime – key races are done, it’s family vacations, time away, and riding for fun is more prominent than any structured training. When this happens, riders come into the fall ready to begin doing the work. 

 

Great!

 

But if left unchecked they’ll often be on fire by January and their form will be circling the drain by the time they arrive at their key events in spring like BC Bike Race or other big events like Crankworks or the TransBC enduro.

Controlled blocks focused on “performance qualities” can be scheduled in this fall foundation phase to build a reserve that we will revisit in spring as we approach the race season. 

 

What do I mean by this?

Let me add some context. We can’t expect one block of VO2 Max work at the beginning of the season to be sufficient. That would leave a lot of potential gains on the table. So we can perform a short block at some point in the fall… but we need to set the stage first. 

Threshold work and other aerobic capacity training sets us up to do the harder VO2 work by creating a base to support that intensity.

 

For the Cyclocross racer, you might be rolling into the full swing of CX season. If this is you, you’d certainly benefit from some structured intensity across the whole spectrum of energy systems.

CX racing demands a ballistic start, followed by repeated short bursts performed from a high-paced consistent effort at or above your anaerobic threshold.

The ability to sprint out of corners, maintain focus through technical sections, and follow attacks requires athletes to be able to access aerobic AND anaerobic systems, recover, and repeat. For you, rides right now can incorporate specific skill development and race specific efforts.

 

For the avid skier, this season is when the excitement of the coming winter begins to build. Seeing the first dustings of snow at altitude make us feel like kids at christmas, knowing big pow days or speedy days on the skate skis are on the horizon. 

Aerobic work will help us maximize the fun on the slopes. Improved aerobic conditioning will enable you to keep hammering laps when everyone else is running out of steam and heading to the lodge. If backcountry or nordic skiing is on the menu this winter, this time on the bike in the next couple of months until the snow really flies is money in the bank.

 

In all of these cases, this is when strength training also begins to take a more prominent role.

 

The Importance of Strength Training

As bike racers, many of us would prefer to “just ride” all the time. But strength work is important for injury prevention, mobility and stability, core strength, managing forces and efficiency on the bike, and finally, pedalling power.

Start slow with a few sessions that are focused around quality movement and adaptation. When you begin to add weight, focus on proper technique with very manageable loads.

 

Focus on basic movements: Squat, hinge, lunge, push, pull, rotate.

I often use this analogy: as mountain bikers, we are like a car that has a HUGE motor, but the transmission and chassis need some work. 

We aren’t power lifters. We are bike riders who want to improve our riding. Remember this when you’re in the gym.

Also, keep in mind that for everyone else in the gym, that IS their exercise or training. For you, it’s preparing you for your training. Different goals. Different focus.

 

So what could your week look like?

Here’s a good mtb training outline you can follow:

 

Monday: Rest

Tuesday: Intensity (Threshold)

Wednesday: Strength

Thursday: Tempo or Trail ride

Friday: Strength

Saturday: MTB adventure ride, skill dev, climbing

Sunday: Endurance – Road, Gravel, Hiking, Trail Run or a longer (but easier) mtb ride.

 

The key is to build consistency and move into November and December with a solid FOUNDATION for what is to come.

 

If you got value from this content and you want more, my Club Shred community could be a great option for you! With weekly group calls, a content bank of videos like this, and a group discussion forum, it’s a great resource for any mountain biker looking to increase their knowledge and performance.

 

 

Coach Adam Walker - MTB Coach on Vancouver IslandHappy Training!
Coach Adam