Author Archive | Adam Terko

Mountain Camp 2022

Mountain Camp 2022 has concluded. After spending a few years in VT due to the pandemic, we finally returned to North Conway and many of the iconic workouts and places that have made this camp legendary.
This year I referenced a passage from the book “Do Hard Things” by Steve Magness which I have been reading, and which has been making the rounds in endurance sport circles lately. The specific concept I was thinking about was “raising the floor” and I shared the following with the team after camp:
Lower the bar. Raise the floor. (page 78)
 
When trying to improve, most of us go for the lift-the-ceiling approach, judging ourselves by our best performance ever. In track, we would define ourselves by our personal best for an event. To get better meant running faster than we ever had before. Brian Barraza, a professional runner, sees performance in a different light. “My goal is to raise the floor. Being confident that whenever I step out on the track, I’m going to be able to run a certain time.” Instead of going all in for a massive breakthrough, Barraza sets a minimum expectation. “When you raise the floor, it allows for those days when everything is clicking to exceed expectations. It’s not that we’re lowering our ceiling or playing it safe; it’s that we’ve developed the confidence to know that X performance is repeatable. That as long as we do what’s in our control, we can achieve a certain standard, no matter the circumstances.” 
Brian Zuleger, a sports psychologist out of Adams State University, taught me an exercise to reframe expectations. Instead of aiming for our best performance, something that we can only accomplish rarely, shoot for improving your best average.
So how does that apply to MNC and this camp?
Each year we always do a big hike/run at Mountain Camp and the Presi Traverse has for many years been our “white whale” metaphorically. In 2016 it was a long slog to the top of Washington and down. A few years later we attempted just a half-traverse and couldn’t manage it without half the group bailing and half the group breaking ahead and hitchhiking down. This year we only had bailouts due to injury, and even that bailout group ended up covering 18 miles and I have zero doubt that everyone in the group would have made it if unscathed. You could say the “floor” for this group was raised to about 6,288 feet or so.
Each year we also do the Kanc rollerski. The first year I think everyone started about 6-8 miles closer to the summit than this year. We used to take that “Bear Notch” road which comes out near where that fresh new pavement was, and turn left to work our way back down to determine a starting point. One year it was a contentious decision to have some of the group start lower than the rest of the group. Now, we drive from the opposite direction to come in at the very bottom so that we can get as much distance as possible. And EVERYONE started from the absolute farthest point this year.
On the whole, this group’s hunger for training is pretty insane. The sheer amount of training that club athletes can now put into a week legitimately blows my mind. But this team’s support for one another will be what carries this them further than grinding through hard work alone. Maybe they don’t even think of them in the moment, but certain actions really show me this team is on another level than most out there…
  • Hanging back with a teammate who isn’t feeling great or had an injury
  • Choosing as a team (not by any coach directive) to elect someone with a controlled pace to lead the train when everyone is tired in order to go the right pace
  • Impromptu huddle for warmth atop a mountain
  • Staying up late to make a birthday banner on your own volition, not because you were told to
  • Asking the coaches how they are doing in a workout

Here is to the return of the NH version of Mountain Camp, and many more fun experiences!

You can check out the Flickr Album of the camp here…and stay tuned for a vlog from some of the skiers!

 

Expanded nutrition resources

At the recent Regional Elite Group camp for NENSA athletes, there was a great presentation and workshop with nutritionist Megan Chacosky. Megan was kind enough to share a wealth of resources and links with campers and coaches, and with her permission I have added those materials to our Nutrition Resources page (which can be found on the “Resources” dropdown menu off the MNC homepage, as well as below).

Nutrition Resources | Mansfield Nordic Club

Ava is Athlete of the Year!

Congrats to Ava Thurston who is the Burlington Free Press “Athlete of the Year” for the second year in a row! Hattie Barker was an honorable mention, too. Awesome work by these two across their high school careers.

Both are on their way to the next steps in their career as Ava will be skiing for Dartmouth, and Hattie for UNH, in the upcoming season.

You can check out a scanned version of the article below (thanks to Heidi Hill)!

AvaBFPAthleteofYear2022

Ava and Hattie finishing 1st and 3rd at Junior Nationals in the 5km Freestyle!

Intensity Week is NO JOKE

One of the big goals this season is to really treat each type of week (Intensity, Medium, Volume, Recovery) like it is designed to be…last year we got to the end of the summer and had a few cases of overtraining, which was honestly new to me. This group was motivated like no other, and that was actually getting a little dangerous.

A way to avoid burnout and overtraining is to vary the type of stimulus and amount of training. This season we’ve needed to be even more thoughtful about how this is done, since several NENSA camps and programs came out later than usual…meaning all of a sudden weeks are out of alignment with the MNC training plan. I’m really grateful for a communicative and pragmatic group that’s willing to make adjustments: for example, REG camp was a lot of intensity, so with 6 MNC skiers attending that camp (and needing recovery after) it meant a good amount of athletes sat out the uphill run test this past Wednesday and have rescheduled it.

For those that attended Bolton on Wednesday, it was a day of many PR efforts and even a few stellar first-time attempts! We were even joined by UVM skier Libby Tuttle for the day. Always cool to have older and experienced skiers giving our tests and sessions a go and getting to say hello to the crew.

One of the pro teams in Norway, Team Elon Vests, likes to make posts of skier videos with epic, inspiring, often silly and over-the-top quotes…so I wrote them down on some pieces of paper, and while I went to the top with my pencil and paper to record times,Sara read them to the team before starting the race. If you need some inspiration, some of our favorites are:

  • WE DO NOT STOP WHEN WE ARE TIRED, WE STOP WHEN WE ARE DONE
  • THE SHORTCUT IS A LIE
  • THERE ARE TWO WAYS TO DO THINGS: THE RIGHT WAY, AND AGAIN
  • UP BEFORE THE ENEMY
  • WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH, YOU DON’T RISE TO THE OCCASION, YOU SINK TO THE LEVEL OF YOUR TRAINING

So silly quotes, aside, the group really did things the “right way” and showed that the hard work of the summer is paying off big-time.

With some resting from training camp and other giving it their all, everyone got back to the same page right on Saturday, when the group had some L3 classic intervals at Road 101. And when I say the group, I mean the GROUP. I don’t know if we’ve ever had this many skiers attend a weekend session that wasn’t a race…I made a quick video of the start of our first interval below just to illustrate. With a workout this big, I reminded everyone that a key element would be just the logistics of dealing with the van shuttle from the top of the hill, and staying on task. Props to Rick who spent the whole workout just driving up and down in the van shuttling skiers back to the start. Meanwhile I tired my legs out biking back and forth up the hill to capture video.

Of course, with Mountain Camps now beginning this week, everyone is bound to get out of sync again. But it’s ok, as the hard work is being done regardless. I’m very excited by how well the team has been communicating and thinking about their training both in the big-picture sense and in relation to individual small goals.

Social media & sharing icons powered by UltimatelySocial