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You are here: Home / Archives for Weekend Warrior

Adventure Racing 101

September 6, 2011 By Jillian

Imagine biking through the woods to find a checkpoint marked on your topographic map.  Your partner is using the compass to find West while you’re busy scouting the terrain for the creek marked on the map.  100 yards ahead you spot it, a small white and orange kite propped against a tree.

rope net

Adventure racing can best be described as a competitive scavenger hunt for adults. Split into multiple disciplines, the race involves locating checkpoints marked out on the course.  You may be required to obtain some of the check points on bike, others on foot, still other by boat or better yet rappelling.  There may be certain challenges you have to complete along the way, possibly logic games, an obstacle course or even a rock wall or fireman’s carry.   Your equipment generally includes a compass, food and water.  Beyond that it’s your own wit and skill to guide you to the checkpoints.   And it’s fun.  Ridiculous, I haven’t had so much fun since I was 12 riding my bike to the lake fun.

IMG_3598_jpg

Adventure racing as a sport is growing at an incredible rate.  More cyclists, triathletes and runners enter the sport each year, looking for a new challenge. Adventure racing takes skill and endurance.  The short sprint distance races may range anywhere from 4-6 hours while longer races may last many days and cover expansive territory.  Adventure racing camps will teach you the basic skills if you’re looking to do a longer race, but for those of us who are more of the “weekend warrior” type, here’s what you need to know.  We’ll cover choosing gear in an upcoming post.

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The Teams

Teams are usually 2-4 people depending on the company that is putting on the adventure race.  They’ll likely have several divisions, mens, coed and possibly womens.  Choose your partner(s) wisely, you’ll want people that not only have skills to supplement your weaknesses, but also people you can work with and trust.  Nothing takes the fun out of something faster than having the wrong teammates.

The Events

You can almost guarantee that every adventure race is going to at least have an orienteering and mountain bike component.  Orienteering is the on-foot section of the course (here’s where you get to run around the woods with a map and compass).  Generally you should be prepared to cross terrain without a path, with only your compass and topographic map to guide you.  The mountain bike section will likely be limited to trails, but we’ve been at some races where we’ve had to hike our bikes up and over the hill, so read your map carefully.  Frequently there is also a paddling section, usually canoeing or kayaking.  This section usually isn’t that technical, but it will save you a lot of aggravation on the water if you paddle a few times with your teammates before the actual event.

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The Skills

  1. Orienteering. You should be comfortable using a compass before the event and comfortable reading a topographic map.  Neither is difficult to use, but you’d be surprised how many people have difficulty with a compass once they’re lost.    Make sure everyone on your team understands how to use a topographic map and understands the legend.
  2. Mountain Biking. You should be comfortable riding a mountain bike and have the endurance to complete the biking portion.  Sprint races will often give you an estimate on the distance for the mountain bike section- make sure you can complete it.
  3. Endurance. This is probably the most important skill you need to have. And yes, endurance is a skill – you have to understand how to pace yourself and how to maintain your energy levels.  Even a four hour race requires pacing and endurance, so if you’ve never completed endurance event before, think about what you’ve used in the past to get you through a long run or ride.

We’ll get more into the endurance and gear aspects of Adventure Racing in the next few weeks. Check out the US Adventure Racing Association for more information on the sport and check out events in your area!

Filed Under: Headline, Hike, Running, Trek Tagged With: athletics, endurance, sports

Ultimate Frisbee Basics

August 23, 2011 By Danny

One of the things I miss most from our pre-trip life is that I used to play Ultimate Frisbee just about every day.

I was part of a group who met on the National Mall each day at lunch to play a quick game for an hour. No doubt thousands of tourists (and quite a few local journalists) took our picture (the game has continued for about 20 years) but it’s also a fun and fast paced game that kept us all extremely happy and fit at the same time. We played Ultimate a lot in our past life, in fact our USPS (ultimate society of professional slackers) team won the championship a few times. (Look closely, there are some other travel bloggers in that photo!)

Slackers!

Many people laugh and say “that’s not a real sport” (before returning to watch golf or NASCAR on the television) despite acknowledging the fact that this sport take just as much effort and energy as the more popular soccer or basketball. Today marks the first day of the Ultimate Frisbee Beach World Championships in Italy and although I highly doubt I’ll be able to catch any of that event, I do want to share this game with all of you.

The most wonderful thing about this game is that it involves very little actual skill to get started. If you can dodge a… no wrong sport.

We carried a frisbee around the globe with us.  We were always ready for a game if and whenever we could find enough people (4 people to a team is a good minimum). As you progress and get better you’ll begin to pickup some of the finer parts of strategy and technique but for now we’ll just assume you can throw and catch a frisbee.

Ultimate Frisbee Basics

Pick a plot of land and mark it off as you would a football field or a rugby pitch. Once you have two teams each choose a side and ‘throw off’ just as you would kick off in either of those other sports. When a team has the disc/frisbee that team will attempt to throw it to eachother as they move down the field toward their goal. The one catch is that while holding the disk, you cannot run/walk…you must stay stationary with a pivot foot just like a basketball player who has stopped dribbling would do.

 Now to make things a touch more complex…
When you have the disc and you want to throw it to your teammates it is up to the other team to stop you from doing so. If they interrupt your pass the disc is theirs and it’s time for them to try and score on you. When you’re defending you’ll need to not only cover the receivers but also cut off the throwing lanes.  Skilled players will begin to watch angles on the field and will demand that their teammates keep moving in order to keep the angles, and opportunities, changing. Then it comes time for different types of throws, most people know how to throw a frisbee but how many know how to throw it forehand or over the head? Throwing the disc different ways affects how it cuts through, its spin and ultimately its trajectory.  Basic physics here, but I think you’re getting a sense that it’s not just a game.

What I love most about this game is its utter simplicity. No pads or nets or hoops or uprights. The only game I know that is as simple to learn and play is soccer….and as any good soccer player will tell you, once you know the game it’s anything but simple. The same thing is true of Ultimate.

I do miss playing my daily game on the National Mall but I have luckily come across a new local game starting up not too far from our new home. I intend to make it just as often as I can….even if that means an extra 10 miles on my bicycle!

Filed Under: Headline, Weekend Warrior Tagged With: athletics, sports

I love le tour

July 12, 2011 By Danny

The most grueling endurance event I know of, the Tour de France simply has no equal.  Lasting nearly the whole monht of July, the Tour requires the best out of every cyclist almost every day for a whole month, over mountains, across fields and time trials.  If you don’t know how the Tour works, better read last year’s post before going on.

2010 Tour De France in Brussels

Before telling out about this year’s race, first another brief primer.  Every day, every rider sets out and tries to do the best they can.  Most race in a pack, with racers from all teams clumped together, because being together reduces drag and makes pedaling easier.  When a handful of riders break ahead the idea is to stick together and share the time ‘at the front’ doing the hard work. There is a racer who gets to the finish-line first and every day the winning racer is crowned that stage’s winner.  In addition to an individual stage winner, there is also the yellow jersey which goes to the rider with the best overall time.  Sometimes that jersey hardly changes hands, sometimes it changes nearly every day.

When you ride that close, you’re bound to bump elbows.

This year a TV car caused a crash when it tried to avoid a tree.  At one point in stage 7 (we’ve had 9 so far) there was a crash that involved some 80 riders.  Last year’s winner and this years race favorite has crashed at least four times this year.  He now sits over 4 minutes out of first place.  But crashes alone aren’t why I follow the Tour, I follow it because it is the best television I’ve ever seen.

Every day these men set out to ride a bike as hard and as fast as they can, around 5 hours each day, for over three weeks straight.  They work as team to ‘share’ the work and support their lead riders while chasing and forcing their adversaries to work harder.

2010 Tour De France in Brussels

Ever since Team Garmin was created I’ve been rooting for them.  The reason:  they take drug testing very seriously and go far beyond what is required of them to prove they are clean.  In the second stage, the team time trial, Garmin won its first ever stage.  They also propelled one of their riders into the overall first place spot, which he managed to keep for the week.  Thor (yes, the Thunder God) lost that lead over this past weekend but he isn’t out yet.  Will he be able to rebound or won’t he? It’ll take two full weeks of riding to find that out.

2010 Tour De France in Brussels

Right now though, none of the riders expected to win are leading.  The ‘expected’ rider doing the best is in 5th and is over 2 minutes out of first.  Last year’s race was decided by well under 60 seconds.   In the meantime, one rider is on a pace to set the record for most individual stage wins EVER.  He has 17 so far, and needs 22 to set that record.

2010 Tour De France in Brussels

Competition, drama, teams, what isn’t there to love?

Filed Under: Cycle, Headline, Weekend Warrior Tagged With: cycling, events, tourdefrance

Nature Deficit Disorder

June 14, 2011 By Jillian

Is it possible that not spending enough time outside shortens your lifespan?  According to author and journalist, Richard Louv, yes.  In 2005, he coined the term for his book, Last Child in the Woods in which he argued that modern children spend so much time indoors that the lack of nature results in a wide variety of behavior problems and is partially responsible for their decreasing lifespan.

Even if you aren’t a person that enjoys the outdoors, ponder the question for a moment.  Can being inside all the time shorten your lifespan?  I know as we traveled around the world a few days in a vibrant and chaotic major city always made us yearn for someplace more peaceful and quiet.  Was it our brains reacting to nature or just a personal preference?

Blyde River Canyon, South Africa

There’s plenty of research out there to suggest that children benefit developmentally from outdoor learning experiences and it’s not a far stretch to connect being outdoors with lower risk for childhood obesity and possibly ADD- the squirrels just don’t run away that fast.   Another author, Edward Wilson coined the term, biophilia hypothesis, or the instinctive bond humans have with nature.  He states that we are the product of biological evolution, that our preferences are the product of evolution- we have plants in our home because they help us survive (we can eat them).

I have friends that declare themselves indoor people and I think they’d be happy to be afflicted with nature deficit disorder.  Their declaration never bothered me; I just assumed nature was a personal preference.  Sure, I feel a personal connection to nature, but that doesn’t mean you have to have one, or so I thought until I heard about these theories.

Cricket area in Mumbai

Is there such thing as nature deficit disorder?  Is the biophilia hypothesis true, or even provable? Louv’s term has never been accepted by medical manuals, and yet it makes sense to me.  I believe that my connection to nature helps me lead a healthier and more active life.  Then again, I am the product of two outdoor nuts whose idea of vacation involved camping in the woods.  Is my connection more than just a product of my environment though? Is it a deeper human connection to the Earth?  I’m not so sure.

Hiking in the Cordellia Blanca Range in Peru

What are your thoughts? You, our readers, are an incredibly diverse bunch of people from all over the world, so let me ask you- do you believe there is such a thing as nature deficit disorder?  What about biophilia hypothesis? Do you feel a connection to nature? Do you seek out green space?

Filed Under: Headline, Weekend Warrior Tagged With: activities, nature, outdoors

Tips for helping out a newbie

June 9, 2011 By Jillian

No matter what your sport, hobby or activity is, it’s almost certainly better with a friend.  Besides having someone to pass the time with, it’s nice to be able to share the memories and do something together. Helping someone start up an activity or continue to grow with an activity can be difficult and frustrating if you’ve been doing it a while.  I know when we were on the road and new travelers would ask us about getting around or saving money I would have to take a second before I answered and remind myself that not that long ago I too was a newbie, trying to find my way.

Stuck in a drytop

My cousins, sister and I are thinking about doing a half marathon together in September.  While my sister has run long distance events before, I never have and neither have my cousins.  So although we’ve all been running for a long time, we’re essentially newbies at long distance training.  We need all the hlep we can get!

Here are some tips, from a newbie, for helping newbies out no matter the activity:

1. Start small. Let me build my confidence by starting with something that’s relatively easy.  Let my skills and confidence grow together.

2. Encouragement. Even if I am horrible at kayaking/running/chess/whatever the activity may be, encourage me to keep going.  If my spirits go down I’ll stop doing it, I promise you.Ziplining in Hawaii

3. Don’t scare me with gear. Yea I might think the latest bike is cool, but you’re using words like full-suspension and derailleur and I’m not quite sure what that is yet.

4. Explain things. Start by explaining what I need to know to get started, don’t give me too much information, but enough that I can get going on my own.  If you’re sharing tips for long term travel, give me some places I can go to find my own information – then I can come back and ask you questions.

5. Support me. Some days might be tough.  I’m training for this half marathon now and I can guarantee you I’ll be doing some serious complaining when my long runs are 7-8 miles.  So support me, don’t just blindly encourage me.  Listen to me, problem solve with me and share your experiences.

Have you ever helped someone start a new activity?  How did it go?  Have any tips to share with us?

Filed Under: Headline, Weekend Warrior

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