Ski Conditioning is Serious Stuff


People walking about town with ski boots in tow are
probably on the way to a ski conditioning class.
Avid skiers know that preseason “sport specific”
conditioning is vital for injury prevention, endurance,
flexibility and quick reflexes, not to mention avoiding
looking like a total fool on opening day.
And that big day is only five weeks away.
Obviously, the earlier one starts conditioning for
skiing the better. “Ten weeks is better than five weeks,”
says Eileen Hinchliffe, an aerobics instructor and pro-
gram director for Colorado Mountain College, “but five
weeks is better that nothing. Once a week - forget it!”
The biggest cause of injury during skiing is muscles
pushed further than they should be, says Hinchliffe, who
notes that the most likely time for injury is at the end of a
day of skiing after fatigue has set in.
Hinchliffe teaches a lunch hour aerobics class that is
gearing towards ski season, with emphasis on cardio-
vascular workouts and leg strengthening exercises.
“People like to feel good and secure when they get
out there the first time,” says Marisa Post of the Aspen
Athletic Club.

Emphasis of the athletic club’s conditioning classes
is on high impact aerobics, leg work, flexibility and mobility.
Other popular ski conditioning activities include ice
skating, roller blading and bicycling.
For the ultimate in ski conditioning, many people are
turning to one-on-one training with a personal instructor.
These sessions, though expensive, offer personally
tailored and paced exercises designed to make skiers
feel as though their last run was yesterday.
The payoff comes, according to Ultimate Results
personal trainer Conan Angelo, that first day of skiing.
“You discover it when you slip your boots on and think,
“Boy, I didn’t lose anything.”
JEAN-ROBERT BARBETTE
He and fellow trainer Jean-Robert Barbette demon-
strate some of the many awkward positions skiers find
themselves in, and point out the muslces that come into
play during these moments.
The more typical day-to-day physical pursuits of
bicycling, swimming and such don’t necessarily tap into
these muscles and tendons.
Barbette easily falls into a “plie”, a ballet movement
in which the legs are bent into a perpendicular position
with back straight and feet pointing out to the sides.
Only dancers would routinely find themselves in this
position, and people taking ski conditioning classes.
“Skiing is a dance, when you get good enough,” says
Angelo.
Jean-Robert , a Belguim man who used to race with the
junior French ski team and later became the indoor
trainer for the team, explains the intensive one-hour
session at Ultimate results.
People are encouraged to come in 10 to 15 minutes
early to warm up on the stationary bike. In class, they
start out on a small trampoline with its sides tilted slight-
ly up. For 10 or 15 minutes they jump softly, side to side,
mimicking the familiar skiing motion. “It’s a nice warm-
up” says the trainer.
JEAN-ROBERT BARBETE
During this exercise, he shows how people typically
take one huge breath and hold it during these move-
ments. But that is incorrect. He emphasizes proper
breathing and how to catch the maximum amount of
oxygen at the best opportunity.
Next he moves to a bench and from a standing posit-
ion on the floor, jumps up softly onto it, into a standing
position. This could be expanded to jumping up, pausing,
and jumping softly down again to the front.
Other machines in the gym use small repeitious
movements to work the front tibial muslces along the shins
(“This is where the first fatigue you have is,” says
Jean-Robert) the quads, the hamstrings in the back of the
legs, the forearms, and the triceps.
Stomach exercises, called “crunches”, are empha-
sized to help prevent back injuries.
Jean-Robert takes his clients through a slow warmup,
an “explosive workout” and a slow cool-down,
all lasting about an hour, sometimes longer.
Light weights (two to three pounds) are sometimes
strapped on the legs for a better workout, and later, ski
boots may even be added to simulate the real thing.
Jean-Robert has just begun offering a group class, of no
more than five at a time, for the ski conditioning. Geared
to working locals, the class is only $15/hr and held in the
evenings. There are still openings.
Aspenites take their skiing very seriously, indeed.

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Jean Robert Gym Corp. All rights reserved.