Thursday 26 February 2015

A Simple but Effective Way to Train Your Balance and Footwork





I remember when I did my first SUP race at the Cold Stroke Classic in January 2011 I felt pretty good paddling on the right but felt uncomfortable on the left and really unconfident moving around on my board.  The best racer I met that day was Chris Hill, from nearby Topsail Beach, who took a lot of time to talk to me about SUP and some of the tricks that he’d learned.  Not only was this my first experience with the cool stoke of SUP where people help each other out and share their experience, it was also an opportunity for me to learn some useful things I still use today.

Chris told me that a good way to work on my balance and ability to move around on my board was to lay a 2x4 on the ground and then cross step back and forth on it, just like you do on your board when you are moving forward or back surfing, downwinding or doing turns.  I got home and starting doing it and sure enough it helped.

If you cross step up and down a 2x4 you’re training your balance a little, but what you are really training is your agility and coordination so that your feet know what they are doing when you try to cross step on an actual board.  People unfamiliar with that motion generally have the balance to do it, but what they don’t have is the coordination.  Their feet get tangled and that’s what causes the problems with balance.  If you lay a 2x4 on the ground and start cross stepping back and forth you’ll find your coordination improves really quickly and it will definitely carry over to your board.

balance training cushion
If you want to train your balance effectively you’ll have to take this simple drill to another level.  What I did was place my six-foot 2x4 on top of two balance training cushions.   These cushions are about 14 inches in diameter and about 2 ½ inches thick.  They’re partially inflated so that they are a little squishy, which makes them unstable if you stand on them.  One side is smooth and the other is covered with little knobs.  I place my cushions knobby side down and lay the 2x4 on top between the two cushions.  Then I cross step back and forth on the 2x4.

On these balance cushions the 2x4 is pretty unstable, tilting from side to side very easily.  You’ll find balancing on the 2x4 quite difficult and cross stepping back and forth very hard.  As you can see in the video, now you are truly working on your balance as well as your agility and coordination. 



I’ve made this a daily part of my gym routine each winter and it’s had a big impact on my balance and ability to move with precision and confidence on my board.  Each spring when I return to the water I have better balance on my board then I had the previous fall, and that is without paddling regularly for at least 3 months in the winter.  Additionally I’ve found the muscles in my lower leg (calves and tibialis anterior) have much better endurance despite doing little to target those muscles specifically. 

While the best way to develop the balance and footwork you need on your board is by doing balance and footwork drills on your board, I’ve found walking on the wobbly 2x4 incredibly effective because it trains the proprioceptors in your feet and lower legs.  Proprioceptors are sensory receptors in skeletal muscle, tendons and joints that detect changes in body position and forces exerted on the body by integrating information they collect about joint angles, muscle tension, muscle length etc.  As you’re moving on the 2x4 and it wobbles, the proprioceptors detect that wobble by the minute changes in muscle tension it creates.  Sensory neurons take this information to the brain which determines an appropriate response, which is then carried to your muscles via motor neurons.  When the muscles receive the message from the brain they make the adjustments required to maintain balance.  The more finely tuned this system is the better balance you have and the more naturally and effortlessly you make the necessary adjustments required.

I find walking on the wobbly 2x4 much harder than moving around on my board.  Because it really challenges my balance, if done repeatedly it really fine tunes the proprioception required to maintain that balance.  Though balancing on my board is an entirely different skill, the neuromuscular pathway required to maintain balance is the same and the work I’ve done on the wobbly 2x4 to train it bears almost immediate benefits when I get on my board.

Once you’ve become proficient at walking up and down the 2x4 on the cushions, carefully and at slow speed, try to speed it up.  You can add difficulty by keeping your hands on your hips.  Lately I’ve actually started to hold a ten-pound medicine ball with my arms stretched out in front of me.  I generally do cycles (back and forth) of 10 to 20 reps in both regular and goofy stance, and usually do three to four sets.  It usually takes between five and ten minutes at the end of my gym workout.

This simple exercise has made a big difference in my balance and confidence in moving around on my board.  Try it; especially if like me you are frozen off the water for part of the year.  I bet it will make a big difference for you as well.

Saturday 21 February 2015

Performing the Exit Correctly to Maintain Speed Between Strokes


I've done a lot of writing recently about what the latest National Team accelerometer/GPS technology can tell us about the SUP stroke.  I think I can safely draw the conclusion that one of the most important factors to paddling fast on a SUP board is one's ability to maintain speed between strokes.

Of course there has been some discussion about whether or not pulling with a negative blade angle past your feet slows you down.  I think I demonstrated that it doesn't by looking at some acceleration and velocity curves generated by this technology.  The theory is that pulling with a negative blade angle past your feet causes a drastic pitch change in your board (i.e. the back of the board drops), which results in a loss of speed.  In fact it is true that change in pitch is one of the factors that can cause your board to slow down excessively. However, if you're paddling properly the potential for a loss of speed is far outweighed by added acceleration you can get at the end of the stroke.


You should note that it is as much of a mistake to intentionally pull past your feet as it is to exit artificially early such that it prevents you from loading your blade effectively.  I honestly don
t believe determining an arbitrary point to exit is the way to go.  Instead, the stroke you choose should be based on what feels good to you and what appears to work best for you in terms of a) generating speed (accelerating), b) maintaining speed (not decelerating) and c) what is sustainable for the distance you are racing.  You've got a wide range of approaches to paddling you can experiment with in determining what works best for you.Whether you choose a lighter geared stroke and exit earlier or a heavier geared, longer stroke and exit later I believe your success at keeping the board running between strokes is going to depend on how you move your body at the exit.

There are two factors that determine the rate of deceleration between strokes, the drag in the water and the change in momentum in the whole
system of you, your paddle and your board.  Drag is affected by pitch, which we have discussed.  Extreme changes in pitch can slow your board down.  Small changes in pitch resulting from extra acceleration gained at the end of the stroke will most likely not.  Change in momentum is affected by the centre of mass of the paddler in relation to the centre of mass of the board.  Picture walking forward on your board with your paddle out of the water.  As you walk forward your board is actually moving slightly backwards.

Now consider what happens when you exit the water.  If you pull the paddle through too far past your feet and the blade reaches too negative an angle, it is likely that you
ll be really bent over at the waist when the paddle finally exits the water.  Then, once the blade exits youll be standing up straight and getting ready to move forward to the next stroke.  This motion of standing up with the blade out of the water is going to move your board backwards, just like walking along your board will as described above.  You can try it for yourself.  Stand bent over with your paddle out of the water on your stationary board in calm water.  Now stand up straight by bringing your hips forward underneath you and your head and shoulders up.  Quickly look behind you and note how your board is responding.  Youll see it has actually moved backwards slightly.

This backwards movement will occur when you
re paddling if you pull through way too far and stand up straight after your blade has exited the water.  Your board wont actually stop moving forward and begin to move backwards, but it will decelerate.  It will move forward at a slower rate as a result of this movement, meaning youll end up carrying less speed between strokes.

So how do you prevent pitch changes and momentum changes from slowing you down?   It all comes down to what you do at the exit.


We should all be familiar by now with the idea of pulling yourself to the paddle.  The fact of the matter is, if we execute our exit properly with can actually
push ourselves by the paddle as well.  The most important thing about the exit isnt where it occurs relative to our feet or any other reference point you can think of, but rather HOW it occurs.

When you are pulling your loaded paddle through the water your hips are helping with the pull and are moving backward with the paddle.  The most important thing about the exit is that the hips stop moving backward and begin to move forward before the blade has exited the water.  In fact this change of hip motion from backward to forward is what should initiate your exit.  It
s a subtle movement, and when done really well the hips are moving only slightly ahead of the paddle.  However that small, subtle movement is the difference between pushing off your still loaded blade at the exit to enhance your boards forward run, and causing it to decelerate due to the momentum changes discussed above.

Before I describe how to visualize performing the exit it is worth taking a look at some very good examples of a well-executed exit.  In each case you can actually see the board (or boat) accelerate off the back of the stroke.  This acceleration results from the paddler pushing himself past the supported paddle at the exit before popping it out of the water and allows the paddler to maintain speed much better between strokes.


In the first video we see David Cal of Spain winning the C1 1000m final in Athens in 2004.  I include this in this discussion of SUP paddling because he does such a great job of his exit that  it clearly illustrates what I have been describing here.  You
ll see his paddling side hip rotate back to initiate his pull and then both hips move back during the pull.  Youll very clearly see as the paddle passes vertical his hips start to move forward and that this motion initiates the exit of his blade from the water.  Youll also see how much his boat appears to accelerate off the back of his stroke, allowing him to maintain more speed between strokes.  Cals time of 3:46 in this race was a world best for ten years and was only surpassed at last years World Championships in Moscow.

 



The next video is of the 200m event at Lost Mills in 2013.  If you watch the whole video you
ll see lots of examples of some pretty good exits and a few of poor exits.  I invite you to try to identify well-executed ones and poorly executed ones.  From 0:46 to 0:56 seconds there is some great footage of Travis Grant, who though he is sprinting isnt moving so quickly that his hip motion is hard to discern.  You can see the same motion in his paddling at the exit as you see in David Cal.
 


 

The last video is of Danny Ching in the 200m event at Lost Mills in 2014.  Youve probably seen it before.  Danny covers the 200m in an incredible 47 seconds.  His stroke rate out of the start is a mind blowing 103 strokes/minute and he settles to a very high 89 by the first switch.  Yet I am sure you can see the same hip motion that you saw in Travis and, in a canoe, David Cal, especially when he is passing directly in front of the camera. 

 Click here for link to Danny Ching video
 
Youll note that both Travis and Danny load their paddles very well.  They arent just scratching the surface of the water.  Youll also note that both pull the paddle blade past their feet before it exits.  This fully loaded, high stroke rate paddling they are doing is incredibly hard.  Their power output is very high and you can see the way they both react at the finish that their efforts would not be sustainable much past the 200m they were racing.  However in longer races they are doing the same thing, just not as quickly and dynamically and probably not with quite as much load. 
 
So how do you perform an exit like that at a reasonable pace that you might use in your typical 5-mile SUP race?  To me, the key to a successful exit is to visualize your hips initiating the exit rather than your bottom hand.  When I pull through the water, my paddling side hip leads the stroke as I am loading my body weight on the blade.  When my blade reaches vertical Ive achieved my maximum load on the blade and begin to think of unloading the blade.  This unloading includes standing up straighter on my board.  Rather than think of the standing up coming from my low back muscles I like to instead think of trying to push myself into a stranding up position with top arm pressure directed down my paddle shaft.  This ensures that my blade stays loaded through the latter stages of the stroke and ensures when I start my exit that there will be enough pressure on the blade to allow me to push off the water with it as I exit.

As I am unloading I begin to think of my hips reloading forward for the next stroke.  Remember as we catch we want our paddling side hip rotated forward to allow both reach and an effective generation of force against the loaded blade once its secure in the water.  Since your hips have to get forward for the next stroke, visualize them reloading forward as you are finishing the stroke you are on with the blade still in the water.  As soon as theyve started to move forward you need to get the blade out.  You dont want it staying in the water after your hips have begun to move forward as youll just be dragging the paddle.  Get the push that the reloading forward against a buried blade provides and then get the blade out of the water.

Another way to visualize the exit is to imagine yourself paddling from one stroke into the next.  There should be a cycle of continuous movement in the stroke and the end of the stroke is no different than anywhere else in the stroke in that regard.  Get rid of any image of pulling a stroke and finishing it, then starting the next one like you see rowers do. 

In a previous blog post I included a number of useful drills for SUP paddling.  I recommend taking a look at the exit drill again to help you as you try to get the push off the back of the stroke that the exit provides.



 

Performing a really effective exit is not easy.  Lots of people get confused because they have to change the direction of their hip movement from backwards to forward while most of their body is still moving back.  It seems that asking part of your body to move one way while the rest of the body Is moving another is the confusing part and Ive seen paddlers get all twisted up so they look like pretzels while they try this or move their hips with such exaggerated motion they look like hula dancers.  Id suggest looking at the videos Ive included and reading the descriptions Ive provided a number of times so you have a good mental image of what you are trying to accomplish as you work on your exit.  Then Id recommend doing the exit drill.  Remember not to over do it.  Do it for five minutes or so and then paddle normally for 15 to 20 minutes before trying the exit drill again.

In time youll be able to do a well-executed exit and youll begin to see the benefits it brings in terms of helping you maintain speed between strokes.

 

Thursday 19 February 2015

Carry a Piece of Wet Sandpaper in Your Pocket




Since I’m back on the water this week after a couple of months of winter off, I thought it would be good to take the Tip of the Week out of the gym and onto the water.  I also thought it would be cool
to do this one as a sort of tribute to my childhood hero, John Wood, who lost his life just a little over two years ago.  You can read about John in a post I made in January 2013, John Wood (1950-2013).

John Wood
1976 Olympic Silver Medallist in C1

John was the first Canadian canoeist in a couple of generations to break onto the Olympic podium when he won his silver medal in the C1 500m at the 1976 Olympics in Montreal.  I had only just started paddling C1 so he immediately became my hero.  Later he became a good friend as well, and was always willing to provide sage advice as I was trying to win my own Olympic medal.

I remember one of the things he told me was to always have a piece of wet sandpaper in my boat.  He explained that you always want to make sure the shaft of your paddle isn’t slippery when you’re about to race, and that sometimes there’s stuff in the water like oil or gasoline that, if they get on the shaft of the paddle are going to make it hard to hold on to. 

I’ve had my bottom hand slip on the paddle at the catch in training, and since my catch is usually pretty heavily loaded suddenly the paddle that I expect to support my body weight isn’t there.  The result, predictably, is a face plant into the water.  If this happens in training it is embarrassing and inconvenient.  If it happens in a race it is a disaster.  Fortunately it never happened to me in a canoe race because I always had that little piece of wet sandpaper tucked under my kneeling block.  Before every race I’d just give the paddle shaft a quick sand and would be ready to go, confident that my hand wasn’t going to slip. 

It was only after John died that I heard a cool story about his 1976 silver medal-winning race.  A couple of minutes before the start he and the eight other finalists were circling nervously above the start line waiting for the call to the starting blocks.  John noticed one of the other competitors struggling with his grip on a very obviously slippery paddle.  Just before they got into the starting blocks, John offered him his piece of wet sandpaper which the competitor took with thanks, and used to get rid of whatever was making his paddle shaft slippery.  The race started and John had the race of his life, winning his silver and narrowly missing the gold.  When he looked across to see who had edged him at the finish he saw Alexander Rogov of the Soviet Union, the same paddler he had offered his wet sandpaper to.

In SUP paddling we’re just as likely to find the shaft of our paddle covered in something that makes it slippery as we are in canoe.  We’ve got it a little easier than Olympic canoeists because if we’re racing on the ocean the sand on the beach is never far away.  A handful of beach sand does a great job of taking anything off your paddle shaft that might make it slippery.  You can use it to get anything (like sunscreen for example) off your hands as well.  But since our board shorts all have pockets, why not slip in a small piece (say 3”x3”) of 200 to 400 grit wet sandpaper?  You’ll be covered if you don’t have time to get back to the beach to get some sand, and if you’re racing in a location with no beach sand you’ll be ready as well. 

Thursday 12 February 2015

Why You Want to Train Your Fitness



Whether you’re a SUP racer or just enjoy paddling SUP for exercise and fitness I strongly believe you should do some supplementary fitness work on land.

When I was on the National Canoe Team I used to think of my races like a Formula 1 automobile race.  In F1 you want a car with an incredibly powerful, high horsepower engine.  I equated that with being as strong and as powerful as I could be.  In F1 the cars also have to be fuel-efficient.  The longer they can go without having to pit stop the more chance they’ll have to win.  That seemed analogous to me needing to have great endurance.  Finally in F1, that powerful but efficient engine has to be connected to the wheels effectively and the car has to handle well.  I thought that seemed to be analogous to being able to move my boat well with good technique.The point of this trip down memory lane is that if you are competing in an event that is human propelled, you need to be fit (strong with great endurance) to succeed.  Sure, incredibly fit but unskilled athletes will lose to less fit but more skilled athletes.  But all other things being equal, fitness will play a very large role in determining who wins.  If you are seriously competing can you really afford to have shortcomings in the fitness required for your sport?

Stand up paddling is a unique sport that places a wide variety of fitness demands on athletes.  I summarized those in an October 2012 blog post called Training for SUP Part 2 – Essential Elements of Fitness.
If you’re serious about racing you need to address all of those elements.  You really can’t afford any weaknesses.

The great thing is that fitness is easy to improve.  Unlike technical skills like paddling technique, surfing, downwinding, etc. which are sometimes really difficult to grasp and can take perhaps a lifetime to learn to do at a high level, fitness is something that is easy to master as long as you are willing to put in a little old-fashioned hard work.  There’s no secret to developing fitness, just sweat.  You’ll need to hit the gym and do some running or maybe get out on the road on a bike, but really there is no excuse for a serious racer to be lacking in fitness.  If you’re someone who paddles SUP for leisure and exercise and have no intention to race, I like to make the case that you should consider doing things for your fitness off the board as well.

Consider that it’s easier to develop strength on land in the gym than it is on the board.  You don’t need to build a lot of muscle, but the strength you gain by spending just a little time in the gym will make the time you spend on the board more enjoyable.  Your muscles won’t fatigue as quickly, you won’t be as stiff after paddling and you’ll drastically reduce the chance of ever getting injured.  You’ll also find that leg and core strength will help your stability and make you feel a whole lot more confident on your board.


Consider also that it is a lot easier to raise your heart rate to an effective training zone by jogging, riding a bike, getting on an elliptical trainer or doing an aerobics class.  You’ll develop your aerobic fitness better on land than you ever will as a beginner on the water.  But as your paddling skills improve and you’re able to paddler harder, you’ll find that the increased level of aerobic fitness you got from dry-land training will open up a whole new world of SUP paddling and on-water fitness training for you.

 If you are a recreational SUP paddler who paddles for leisure and fitness, paddling should be part of your fitness program, not the cornerstone of it.  If you’re a serious SUP racer remember that the top athletes in every sport spend a considerable amount of time cross training to develop a strong foundation of fitness required for their sport.  Why should SUP be any different?

Thursday 5 February 2015

The Bench Pull





Welcome to the first instalment of the Tip of the Week. Each Friday I'll try to post something interesting and hopefully useful about SUP training, technique, race preparation, etc. Don't expect posts as long as what you've become accustomed to on my blog. I'll continue to make long, detailed posts when I can, but the purpose of the Tip of the Week is to get useful information or ideas to you quickly and regularly.  I may miss the odd week along the way while I'm traveling with the Canadian Canoe/Kayak Team but I'll do my best to get something to you every Friday.  So without any further introduction, let's look at week one's topic, the bench pull.

A few weeks ago Eric Carter posted on Facebook asking if people could help him come up with some more pulling exercises to do in the gym.  There were some good suggestions from people who posted, but the exercise I think is the most fundamental pulling exercise for anyone who paddles wasn't mentioned until I brought it up.  I'm talking about the bench pull. How important is this exercise to paddlers in sprint canoe and kayak?  Well, it forms the backbone of just about every canoe/kayak athlete's strength training program pretty well the world over.  In fact, many National Teams use bench pull as a performance indicator of how fast an athlete will likely be on the water.  It's by no means the only performance indicator, but the type of strength it builds, and demonstrates if you are testing, is critical to success in the sport.  In fact, it has been pretty well established that  to be a medalist at the World Championships or Olympics a paddler's combined max bench pull and max bench press, divided by body weight should be equal to three or greater.  That is (max bench pull + max bench press) / body weight = 3 or greater.

I like to make the case that although SUP paddlers are usually racing 5 miles or more instead of 200m, 500m or 1000m like sprint paddlers, strength is just as important.  The fact is that the boards we paddle, even the narrowest and lightest, are still poorly designed for moving through flat water.  It takes a lot of power to accelerate a SUP board at the high performance level, and a lot of power endurance to do it repeatedly for long races.  Power and power endurance are types of strength that can be really effectively developed on dry land in the gym, so really every serious SUP paddler should be doing some homework in the gym.   Even in the ocean, where SUP boards are really designed to perform, power is useful.  A good part of down winding is accelerating to catch waves.  The more you can dig in and move your board when it matters then, all things being equal, the more rides you are going to catch.  And that takes power.


So let's take a look at the exercise.  I've included video of one of the athletes I coach performing explosive reps in a workout designed to develop power.  It's a great exercise for developing the pulling strength essential in a sport like ours where you are pulling yourself by a paddle.  Unlike bent over rowing or rowing with the T-bar, your back is fully supported and so the exercise is much safer for pulling heavy weight.  Likewise, chin ups and lat pul, while safe and effective, train strength in a overhead pulling motion which is less specific to the paddling motion.




     

If you train out of a rowing or canoe club their weight room will almost certainly have a bench pull set up you can use.  If not you can make your own.


Note the set up in the video.  A tall bench that allows the athlete to lie face down on the bench and fully extend their arms with the barbell in their hands not touching the ground.  The set up we have at the canoe club is a purpose built bench pull bench with stands for the barbell so the athlete can reach the weight, but you needn't have something as high tech.  For most of my competitive sprint racing career we did this exercise on jury rigged benches of some type: a wooden plank laid across saw horses, a regular weight bench stacked on aerobics steps, etc. The important thing to consider when you are making your homemade bench is that it can safely take the combined load of both the heaviest athlete using it AND the heaviest weight that will be lifted.  I'd even add on another 50 lbs. on top of that just to provide a suitable margin of safety.


With the weights that world class sprint athletes are tossing around you need a pretty solidly designed, purpose built bench.  But for the weights many of you might use you should be easily able to throw together something that works and meets the safety standard I mentioned.


To perform the exercise simply lie on the bench on your stomach, grab the barbell and pull up.  To get a full range of motion pull up until the bar hits the bench and then lower the bar until your arms are fully extended.  Strict form means you keep your chest, chin and legs in contact with the bench, however when you start performing the exercise explosively for power you'll probably find your head and shoulders will lift off the bench like you see in the video.  I would strongly suggest you do a few cycles (see my blog post on periodized training) with strict form and moderate weight before you start doing heavy or explosive reps in order to avoid injury.


You can perform the bench pull at various speeds of contraction to develop different types of pulling strength.  Slow reps (2-3 seconds up, 4-6 seconds down) are great for maximizing the muscles' time under tension and hypertrophy (increase in muscle size). Moderate speed reps (1 second up, 1-2 seconds down) for 10-15 reps is good for developing basic strength.  High reps of 20 to 30 or more done at 1 second up, 1 second down are good for developing strength endurance in your pulling muscles.  Low reps with very heavy weight can be used to develop max pulling strength.  Explosive reps like you see in the video develop power, and if you use a lighter weight and do more reps with little rest between sets, power endurance.


You'll find a few cycles of training this exercise will leave you feeling stronger on your paddle AND make holding the paddle when you're tired feel easier.  I believe it is the easiest and safest weight training exercise to develop pulling strength in the direction you pull while paddling.


Try incorporating bench pull into your strength program and see what you think!