High-altitude training is important for proper fitness and to avoid health risks like high-altitude pulmonary edema.
You’ve signed the dotted line and in a few short months you’re strapping on your boots and heading “into thin air.” Whether it is climbing Mt. Everest or Mt. Evans, you’re going to need to improve your high-altitude fitness, the question is, how?
Let’s start by clearing up one of the more common misunderstandings when it comes to high-altitude training. There is no process by which one can naturally acclimatize, or adjust to high altitudes, that doesn’t involve physically being at altitude.
In other words, unless you spend the days leading up to your trip living in the high mountains, and then take a helicopter directly to your objective, there is nothing you can do to physiologically prepare for the climb. It is a natural process; you can’t rush it or take short-cuts (unless you buy a high-altitude chamber, which in my opinion totally misses the point). Oh and another thing, whether or not your body is actually capable of adjusting to high-altitude is mostly genetic. Sorry, it’s not for everybody. Blame it on Dad.
(One more thing- whatever you do, don’t be the guy or girl who wears one of those oxygen deprivation masks while on the stair stepper. Just don’t.)
Here are some practical tips on how to train for high-altitude:
Go long.
Unless your objective involves intense technical climbing or speed ascents, your best bet is to spend the bulk of your high-altitude training logging miles on your feet. Slow and long is the name of the game. However, a little speed hiking in your local mountains when you can won’t hurt either. The advantages of long trail runs are two-fold; you build endurance and mental toughness while improving your high-altitude fitness.
Intensity makes the difference.
While at altitude you are reduced to a walking lung. To prepare, add at least two high-intensity workouts a week to build your lung capacity. Stay light with the weight and move fast!
Breathe.
Learn how to control your breathing while under intense physical distress and practice techniques such as pressure breathing. Believe it or not, some of the best high-altitude mountaineers are yogis.
Get your mind right.
Mental training as it relates to high-altitude training goes far beyond the “teach yourself how to suffer” mentality. You need to learn and understand what happens to your body at altitude so you can truly understand the difference between discomfort and danger. It’s a fine line.
System checks.
While training, get in the routine of periodically asking yourself “what does my body need right now?” Understanding what your body is telling you is crucial to success at altitude. It can help you avoid life-threatening conditions like high-altitude pulmonary edema.