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Naturtraining Winter Camp 2011 Review

January 9th, 2011 Simon Voggeneder 2 comments
Wintercamp III Crew

Wintercamp III Crew

It’s starting to become a tradition that a certain circle of fitness enthusiasts meets up in the rural outskirts of the Hausruckviertel midwinter. Almost exactly one year after the Naturtraining Winter Camp 2010, Dominik Feischl yet again invites his inner circle of training comrades to gather for an exciting day of training body and mind.

Training amongst friends was the motto of the 2001 Winter Camp. Dominik told us beforehand that there would be relatively little talking and mostly training throughout the next few hours. I arrived at the gym in Ottnang am Hausruck, where the first part of the training session would take place, with a rather problematic precondition: In the morning of the day before, I had to vomit and was struck ill by nausea and headache. With only one day of recovery and practically no food consumed the last 36 hours, I was unsure whether or not I would be able to participate. Eleven other participants would arrive alongside me – including three locals. As Dominik only invited people who have already attended numerous of his prior seminars, I knew everyone: Harald and Mathias from Graz, Thomas from Regensburg (Germany), Gregor and Alex from CrossFit Munich, Peter from Linz, Patrick from Braunau and Janis from Kreuzlingen (Switzerland). The stage was set for an intense day of training.

The training session was split in three parts, like last winter:

Part One: Warm-Up, Climbing and Hand walking at the Gym in Ottnang

Dominik kicked things off with a short joint mobility session – an element he most probably includes in every workout since his face-to-face meet-up with strength & conditioning coach Steve Maxwell. We worked our body from the top of our head down to our toes – in order to avoid injuries before they can occur out of thin air. Karl “Farmer Karl” Humer led us through a dynamic warm up on inverted long benches (“Langbank”, a common piece of gym equipment, a bench with a narrow plank on its flipside), where we threw medicine balls at each other, did partner balance exercises and did jumps – which tremendously worked our ankles and coordination.

Langbank

Langbank

We started off with the most power-oriented part of the day where we split into two groups of six and did the following exercises, one person at a time:

  • Timed rope climbing intervals
  • Rope climbing on two ropes (maximum height)
  • ABC pull up style pulls on the rope (static holds in different angles)
  • Box jumps on a gym mat staple (up to 1.20 m)
  • Hand walking on vertical ladders
  • Static hold for maximum time on vertical ladders
  • Pull-ups on a difficult implement (a ~10 cm diameter pipe)

For most of us, our pulling power was already wasted at this point. We finished things off in the gym with two circuit-training-style workouts. Number one was a circuit of six stations (done in pairs), 30” work, 15” rest, two rounds:

  1. Knee raises on the wall bars
  2. Elevated feet push-ups with hands on small softballs
  3. Forward lunges
  4. Static holds on the rope
  5. Elephant walk on a gym mat
  6. Jump squats

Number two was a Parkour-inspired circuit involving the following obstacles:

  1. Hand walking on the vertical ladder
  2. Rolling over a gym mat
  3. Climbing along the wall bars
  4. Hand walking across the parallel bars
  5. Leapfrogging over the vaulting horse
  6. Balancing along the long benches
  7. Vaulting over the vaulting box

Part Two: Outdoor training at the Naturtraining centre in Thomasroith

After the training in the indoor gym, we transferred to the outdoor Naturtraining centre in Thomasroith – well-known to be the venue of seminars prior. There we got into a short but intense workout program, again split into two groups of six. We did the following challenges:

  • Tyre flips (145 kg tyre) and tyre farmer walks (75 kg tyre) around the field (approx. 400m) as a team
  • Maximum time static holds on bar
  • Sprints with weighted belt
  • Sprints with another person holding you back
  • Sprints while carrying a boulder
  • Sprints while carrying another person
  • Hill sprints up and down a snowy slope
  • Climbing ‘around’ our training partners
  • Hand-walking across a pipe and bars

These challenges all had a competitive character as the teams competed against each other – in a friendly, uplifting way. It drove us to give our best, despite circumstances – which certainly encompasses me and my physical condition on that day.

Part Three: An outdoor hike up to the Pettenfirst

Lastly, we did an outdoor hike up the Pettenfirst, which is around 700 m high which means it is the highest elevation around the Naturtraining centre. Unlike last year, we omitted the training implements while going up the hill – for most of the participants, the body was already exhausted to a certain point so that a regenerative walk came in handy. Still, the pace was stiff for something called active regeneration. Here I first came to notice the ramifications of not having eaten properly for more than one day: My energy levels plummeted dramatically while approaching the summit and I struggled to barely keep up with the pack, with my mind wandering off more and more into a blank state. I was happy to have reached the finishing point after a steep and icy decent – a warm shower and a wholesome dinner thereafter.

After training, we spent more than two hours conversing about training methodologies, our own experiences, how we approach body and mind development and related topics. Like always, I was able to get the most of the day out of this lengthy conversation – I got to know other perspectives and insights new to me, which included:

  • Janis pointed out – again – that the weakness of most people lies with their core stability
  • Likewise, he emphasized the importance of learning movement patterns over everything else
  • Practice what you preach – There seem to be a lot of foul eggs out there in the fitness information industry
  • Unless an exercise really feels good it most probably is not done the right way
  • The value of baseline cardiovascular endurance is underrated these days
  • Pull-ups and push-ups are all about how you work your shoulders
  • Strength and training are lifelong journeys – not a quick fix for a year or two

Like last year, I have to ask myself the ever-important question of what I have learned this day. Lessons include:

  • When the variety of the exercises undergone improves, there is a better chance to get to know your own strengths and weaknesses (for me, strengths discovered are grip strength and vertical jumps, weaknesses core stability)
  • Keeping the right mind-set highly amplifies the possible output. Harald and Mathias practiced going to a happy place in moments of extreme intensity and fatigue. I tried it as well (under guidance of Harald) and it worked wonders for my momentary performance. Coaching key: Keep your face muscles relaxed.
  • The competitive edge: Once you enter a surrounding which endorses competition, performance tends to go up unless negative stress makes it go otherwise. Competition amongst friends almost always proves to improve performance without elevating stress levels. This is the value of a good group of training comrades – which I enjoy in the rare occasions Dominik’s seminars offer
  • The dark side of the competitive edge: It’s tremendously hard to go back on your performance when your physical state calls out for doing it. I should have limited myself a tad more than I have during the hours of working out, keeping in mind that I still was convalescent.
  • Still, I was impressed how much I could achieve – the sickness just overcome did not hinder me to operate almost at my peak level of performance. The moment I decided I could do it, there was little holding me back (physically).
  • You have to plan in recovery time after such a session – I have rarely felt so devastated physically like today, the day following the seminar. The body is unwilling to really move and yearning for an ample amount of calories to be ingested. Surely, this stands in direct correlation with the body still recouping from sickness
  • On a side note: Write better lists for taking things with me. It was pretty problematic not to have two pairs of socks with me, given my circumstances.

To summarize things, the third Naturtraining Winter Camp has truly lived up to its reputation as being an institution for training enthusiasts. The community spirit has yet to be matched and I have and will always look forward to events like it in the future. Kudos to Dominik and Karl for setting up this tremendous training program – we will see each other again in spring 2011, when the successor of the Gorilla Camp will take place.

Stay strong!
Simon

P.S.: As always, Dominik has a highlight video to offer. Take the time and enjoy it!

P.P.S.: Three pictures I have taken during the first part of the session.

Naturtraining Seminar in Obermühlau

April 21st, 2010 Simon Voggeneder 4 comments
The Naturtraining Crew

The Naturtraining Crew


Back row: Martin, Thomas, Simon, Gregor, Janis, Vinz, Jo, Alex, Lukas
Front row: Karl, Harald, Peter, Dominik, Christian

April 17, 2010. Dominik Feischl once again calls out for all his “Naturtraining-Warriors” to assemble at a seminar, this time taking place in Obermühlau, near Thomasroith at the residence of his mentor and training partner Karl Humer, best known for his rafter pull-up.

The so far largest gathering of this kind was formed by twelve athletes (Dominik and Karl not counted) who travelled long distance (two athletes from Vorarlberg, one Swiss athlete) to show up. On a sunny spring day, the perfect stage was set for an perfectly enjoyable day packed with intense training.

The seminar was split up into four parts, which we tackled after a warm-up run (including hill sprint and quadropod action) through the beautiful Hausruck spring landscape:

  1. Dominik’s Tactical Strength Challenge
  2. Climbing with Karl Humer
  3. Toying around with tyres
  4. Pressing Power and Climbing Challenge

1. Dominik’s Tactical Strength Challenge

Prior to the seminar, Dominik sent out various e-mails, containing the set-up of the Tactical Strength Challenge. Pavel Tsatsouline, inventor of the Tactical Strength Challenge advised him to adapt the set-up of his exercises to the circumstances of the event – with opened the door for a set-up completely different from the original deadlift – pull-up – snatch configuration. We matched our strength and strength endurance skills in the following disciplines:

  1. Rope climbing (for distance)
  2. Clean & Press a ~38 kg stone (for repetitions)
  3. Parcours climbing (for time under tension)
  4. Farmer’s Walk with a ~80 kg tyre (for time under tension)

Rope climbing had to be done without using the feet, pressing the stone way allowed any way we could do so, the parcours climbing demanded crossing the parcours at least once (touching a log at the far end of the parcours) and the Farmer’s Walk required constant movement.

Every single participant showed tremendous performance throughout the disciplines. The fighter spirits were high and the respective winners of the disciplines performed remarkably. Christian won the overall contest, placing first in both the Farmer’s Walk (66 seconds) and parcours climbing (~2’23” time under tension) even after dropping back with a mere 7 repetitions of the clean & press. Thomas, Harald and Lukas were very strong with the clean and press (38, 38 and 50 repetitions).

Side note: If he had competed, Dominik would have won the overall event. He outclassed all of us in the disciplines he tried (Farmer’s walk and Rope Climbing).

2. Climbing with Karl Humer

After such a ‘warm up’, things started to get hard when Karl pushed us along his newly extended parcours. Climbing horizontal ladders in various ways and reaching along logs was probably the hardest part of the whole seminar. Karl has installed six lanes that offer various challenges – including what they call the Trojan Horse, a construction featuring bars in different thickness and a stiff ascent as a finisher.

3. Toying around with tyres

After a short break our legs had to work as well. With an already sore upper body, dragging and carrying around tractor tyres was a welcome change of setting, as it mainly focuses on lower body work. We supplemented the tyre work with decent hill sprints, combined with a quadropod descent.

4. Pressing Power and Climbing Challenge

Coming back to the parcours, Karl made us do push-ups in all variations – then supplemented with dips. Following this push-up madness, Karl took out his garden hose and watered the Trojan Horse – making it more difficult to cross, which we had to do. Climbing the diagonal support poles was another difficult task. Lastly, we worked our abs with leg raises – followed by blocking, if you can. One of the last highlights of the training seminar was hanging on the Trojan Horse with tucked feet and karl throwing punches at our abs for a straight fifteen seconds. This sure was a torture that everyone felt for some time after the seminar.

For dessert, we faced another challenge: How fast can you go through the longest lane of the parcours (horizontal ladder + woodstick climbing, Trojan Horse (minus ascent) and support hold walk along the parallel bars)? Peter won this one with a breathtaking time of 17 seconds. Do I have to mention that speed is his skill?

[---]

To commence the event, we went to a nearby inn together and did what we had to do after such a exhaustive day: Eat freely of whatever feels good to our bodies.

Every seminar poses to me the question of “What did I learn?” My answers for this time:

  • Janis made me aware of a dysbalance in my balance, stance and power that I have noticed but mostly ignored throughout the last years.
  • The core is the weakest part of the body for most athletes. This problem is particularly striking while climbing. A weak core leads to a lack of stability which in course leads to an inefficient technique
  • Companionship is by far the most important factor in a training group. People have to fit together well in order to achieve more than they would be able to do individually. I am looking forward to work on this one with my CrassFit comrades in future :)
  • Every athlete has a very different profile of strengths and weaknesses so that every one has the chance to shine in a specific discipline as well as the chance to learn a tremendous lot in others
  • Attitude is of utmost importance – your attitude not only partially decides whether or not you will succeed in all challenges
  • Harald mentioned that one can only teach things that one has learned three steps down the way. There is no way one can teach the things one has learned just yet
  • Kettlebell technique seems to be an issue for most people. Working with kettlebells sure is easy to learn and hard to master
  • Dominik and Janis both confirmed from their experiences that most Americans do not care too much about the quality of their nutrition – even strength coaches
  • Most of the participants have a reasonable attitude towards nutrition that relies heavily on their experience of what is good for them – experience seems to trump science

Furthermore, I have to congratulate all of my comrades. Some I knew from former seminars, some were new to me. Likewise they shared an utmost uplifting spirit. Some of my observations:

  • Janis has a good eye for posture problems in other people. He had just returned from a Underground Strength Coach certification prior to the seminar and I am convinced he will make a greatly positive impact on the people he works with in future
  • Thomas has made so much progress that it is hard to believe that he was barely able to perform a pull-up last Winter. He handled the climbing challenges with an ease and grace that is stunning. Hats off!
  • Harald has impressed me with his ability to focus. To me, he is prototypical for the calm warrior – I have great respect for him
  • Gregor has a most uplifting spirit he carries along with him. On most pictures I see him smiling while he performs at his best. He is one of the athletes I would consider indestructible under normal circumstances
  • Peter is a tremendously quick athlete – as expected from a former short distance runner. No wonder he managed to win the speed climbing challenge. His ability to push himself farther is remarkable – it’s like he is unable to experience unbearable pain

Once again, this seminar has proven to be extremely enjoyable while being just as exhaustive. What can be better than a day with like-minded people – training hard, chatting about things that matter to you and have a great time? Few things come to my mind.

I am looking forward to see you at the next seminar held by Dominik. Make sure you don’t miss out if you’re around.

Train on and stay strong,
Simon

P.S.: It’s now Wednesday and I’m still feeling a wee soreness in my forearms, shoulders and back. The sheer training density on this day caused deep muscle fatigue, I guess.

CrassFit Workout of the Day 2009/10/08

October 9th, 2009 Simon Voggeneder 1 comment

Yesterday we assembled once more for a heavy CrassFit workout – with one thing to surprise us positively – Dominik found the time to join us again. He is a great motivator and I really feel that he is the true core of our group – the workouts overflow with intensity and motivation whenever he joins us.

After I wrote about the least crass of CrassFit, as Peter put it, I knew that it would become harder this time – but little did I know about how hard it really became.

We did the following workout:

Pre-Fatigue

Three rounds of

Ladder one up to four repetitions of the following complex

  • Swing
  • High Pull
  • Clean
  • Military Press or Push Press
  • Squat

using either the 16 kg or the 24 kg kettlebell.

Paired with rope pull-ups for the same repetitions.

Metabolic Conditioning

3 rounds of
Hill Sprint
10 Burpees
Jog to start of hill

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Initially, we planned for five rounds of the metabolic conditioning but cut it down to three, due to the sheer fatigue we experienced after the strength part, which really was the main part of our workout.

I brought a 24 kg competition kettlebell with me – a weight most of us weren’t used to. As for me, I have never (push) pressed it more than three times – only Dominik is used more than this. We struggled in our fight against gravity – and prevailed. Rainer used the 16 kg kettlebell and did a great job – it is high time he purchases his first one for private use :)

Handling a weight you have never handled before is a tremendous challenge that forces your body to progress in strength. We got together in pairs and paused in the time our partner did the kettlebell complex – a pause that we were in dire need of. As I neared the last repetitions, a stiff feeling in my forearms was the most urgent problem apart from the fatigue in my legs – especially when you do push presses, your legs are working all the time.

We talked a lot about the transfer from kettlebell training to other feats of strength and share the experience that kettlebells are a tremendous help to become a monster in regards of strength, velocity and full body stability. Just focus on the basic movements (swings, (deadlift) high pull, clean, press, snatch and squat – supplemented with the get-up) and master them.

After the strength workout, I had a hard time finishing the metabolic conditioning work. Already after round 1 I was barely able to jog my way down to the foot of the hill. If I have ever been close to vomiting during a workout, it was yesterday – a degree of intensity I have never experienced so far.

This is, what gets you further. Incorporate as much intensity into your workouts as you can possibly sustain and grow stronger than you have ever been!

Wasted but happy after roughly an hour of kettlebell madness

Wasted but happy after roughly an hour of kettlebell madness

Train on and stay strong!
Simon