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Index
Title Page
Contents
Foreword: The Edge of the Map, by Mark Twight
Introduction: The Old Becomes New Again
Chapter 1: Training for the New Alpinism
First Steps, Missteps, by Steve House
Don’t Epic—Keep it Under Control, by Ueli Steck
Section 1: The Methodology and Physiology of Endurance Training
Chapter 2: The Methodology of Endurance Training
The Alpinist as Athlete
Getting Results, by Steve House
Transitions, by Zoe Hart
The Two Types of Training
A Brief Discussion of Physiology Basics
The Adaptation to a Training Stimulus
The Training Effect
The Guiding Principles: Continuity, Gradualness, and Modulation
Specificity
Preparation for Success
The Individuality of Training
Understanding the Language of Intensity
Training Cycles
Periodization
Fatigue and Recovery: How They Are Related
Forty Years of Climbing, by Christophe Moulin
Monitoring Your Training
Returning to Training after a Break
Overtraining
Deep Fatigue on Kunyang Chish East, by Steve House
Overtraining Can Lead to Overuse Injury
What Should You Feel?
TINSTAAFL: There Is No Such Thing As A Free Lunch, by Mark Twight
Chapter 3: The Physiology of Endurance Training
The Evolution of Endurance
The Aerobic Base
The North Face of the North Twin, by Steve House
Fuels for Energy
The Physiology of Endurance
Fitness, Fat, and Fuel, by Scott Johnston
Boosting Your Aerobic Power
More Pieces of the Aerobic Fitness Puzzle
Ultra-Training, by Krissy Moehl
Putting All the Pieces Together
Training for Alpine Climbing in the Former USSR, by Alexander Odintsov
The Base Is Crucial
Chapter 4: The Theory of Strength Training
Strength: Even for Endurance Athletes?
The Difference Between Power and Work, by Tony Yaniro
Strength on Mount Alberta, by Steve House
Chapter 5: The Methodology of Strength Training
What Is Strength?
What Is Strength Training?
Why Should Climbers Train Strength?
How Strength Training Works
Women and Strength
Lifting Weights
After Injury: The Long, Long Road Back, by Tony Yaniro
Strength Training Terms and Concepts
Core Strength
Periodization for Strength Training
The Value of Specific Strength Training, by Tony Yaniro
Section 2: Planning Your Training
Chapter 6: Assessing Your Fitness
Maximizing Your Fitness
Twelve Hundred Feet, by Caroline George
Judging Your Current Strengths
Setting Goals
The Quest to Climb Everest in a Day, by Chad Kellogg
Chapter 7: Transitioning into Training
Listen to Your Body
The Training Log
Training Plans: Steve’s Transition Period before Makalu 2009
Planning Your Transition Period
Strength Training During the Transition Period
Core Strength in the Transition Period
Bowls of Jell–O, Links of a Chain, by Scott Johnston
General Strength Training in the Transition Period
Chapter 8: Planning Your Base Period Training
The Importance of the Base
Training Is Teamwork, by Roger Schaeli
Fitting Strength Training into Your Base Period Plan
Max Strength Period
Conversion to Muscular Endurance Period
Building Your Own Base Period Endurance Plan
Marathon Pace, by Kelly Cordes
Chapter 9: Climb, Climb, Climb
Planning the Climbing-Specific Period
Training to Perform, by Will Gadd
Building Your Specific Period Plan
Chapter 10: Tapering
Taper Timing
Section 3: Tools for Training
Chapter 11: Nutrition: Eating with Purpose
Eating for Climbing Performance
The Components of Food
Key Nutritional Knowledge
Learning to Fuel, by Steve House
Eating While Training for Alpine Climbing
Three Sisters in a Day on Only M&M’s, by Scott Johnston
Post-Training Nutrition
Eating While Alpine Climbing
Hitting the Wall, by Vince Anderson
Hydration
A Few Case Studies in Eating While Alpine Climbing, by Steve House Vitamins, Minerals, and Supplements
Eat with Purpose
A Conversation with Peter Habeler, by Steve House
Chapter 12:Altitude: Climbing Higher, Faster
Altitude Physiology Basics
How to Acclimate: Two Strategies
High Altitude: Your First Time
My First 8,000er, by Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner
Acclimatizing: Tips and Tricks
Can You Pre-Acclimate at Your Low-Elevation Home?
Climb and Acclimatize, by Marko Prezelj
Preparing Your Body to Go High
The Khumbu Cough, by Steve House
Expedition Eating, by Steve Swenson
Hydration at High Altitude
Sleeping at Altitude
How Fast Do You De-Acclimate?
Altitude Illnesses and Their Causes
Alone with HAPE, by Steve House
Be Tough and Smart
The Art of Suffering, by Voytek Kurtyka
Chapter 13: _Mental Fitness: The Most Difficult 80 Percent
The Mental/Physical Balance
Your Ideal Mental State for Climbing?
Motivation
Eighty Percent, by Steve House
The Unbreakable Will, by Stephan Siegrist
Emotion
Prepare Yourself to Suffer, by Jean Troillet
Fear
Practicing Failing, by Scott Johnston
On Fear, by Danika Gilbert
Fulfillment
Concentration
Flow
Confidence
The Climb of the Future: 5.13c in 1978, by Tony Yaniro
Transcendence
The Necessity of Cycles, by Andreas Fransson
Non-Laziness and Practice
Section 4: Train, Practice, Climb
Chapter 14:Training by Climbing
Going Climbing Versus Training for Climbing
Your Best Days Climbing
Planning a Year’s Climbing as Training
Planning the Individual Periods
Cold and Hungry, by Scott Semple
A Base Period of Climbing
Mileage on the Real Thing, by Colin Haley
Take a Road Trip
Climb!
Recuperate and Regenerate
Les Droites, by Barry Blanchard
Two Attempts on the Southeast Face of Kyzyl-Asker, by Ines Papert
Chapter 15: The Art of Self-Knowledge
Glossary
Appendix: Helpful Nutrition Tables
Recommended Reading
References
Acknowledgments
Copyright
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