Monday, December 24, 2007

End of Year Injury Report

Knee and shoulder injuries in July start cascade of attention to all areas needing repair.

After an injury free first half of the year, it started with a simple knee twist when my worn tires slipped off the slick rock mountain biking at Grafton. A quick recovery and then a tumble on a rock slide hiking on Big Slide Mountain shoving my elbow and arm up into the shoulder joint. This one did not get better on its own. Also, walking down that mountain in the slick rain without full use of my arms put added pressure on the knees. As a result, I started to get treatment for the shoulder.

As the shoulder responded, attention turned to the knees. All the time, biking and spinning and snowboarding were all possible because the treatments did not hamper the activities. Until I added some injuries to the list doing the activities.

First, practicing wheelies on the front yard, landing hard on my back and snapping my head and neck back. Then catching an edge on the snowboard and re-injuring a repaired right shoulder. And finally, shoveling snow of all things, taking my back out again.

The ART sessions with Kieth Donato go from one damaged body part to another and back again. Today back to the back. The net accumulative effect is a slowly repaired and better functioning body able to do the ridn I want to do.

It is easy to get discouraged, but if the overall net effect is to re-build and strengthen weak and incorrectly functioning joints -- it is positive. At the end of the year the shoulder is better than it was going into that hike in July. The knees have promise to also be better with new alignment of the soft tissues around them; and the back issues which go back to running days, are being addressed. The New Year should be one of continued progress for total health and performance.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

SSSS = Spining, Swimming, Snowboarding and Shoulder

Swimming and spinning provide indoor workouts while snow and cold weather continues. Snowboarding four Sundays in a row make this a great start to the winter season. Shoulder work at the chiropractor has paid off.

Heart rate workout
s with hill climbing and sprinting intervals are the big benefit of spinning class. Dan is good at getting in the hills; Andrea specializes in high cadence sitting and standing intervals. Both get the heart rate over 150 for extended periods of time. Finding the time to get in the classes has proven to be a challenge with travel out of town Tuesday through Friday the last few weeks. Saturday spins save the week.

Swimming can also be a heart rate workout if done as interval sets. But I have never been fond of getting that out of breath in the water. Instead, I use the swim as a long, low impact aerobic workout that is similar to getting the heart at 135 to 145 on the bike. I once tried to wear the heart rate monitor in the pool - it did not work out well as it always got pushed down to my waist by the water. Also, the cooling effect of the water results in your heart not beating as fast, even though you get the same heart muscle effect. I get into a rhythm of 18 to 20 strokes per pool length (spl, 25 meter pool) and go for 30 to 60 minutes without stopping. The result is a good aerobic workout and improved joint flexibility as the back, legs and arms all stretch out without any pounding.

The shoulder has made great progress with the ART sessions from Dr. Kieth Donato. The swimming works the shoulder in a good way and the weight training exercises and calisthenics he has given me to do all have resulted in vastly improved range of motion and strength. The right shoulder is still very much restricted compared to the left, but it has improved and hopefully will continue to get better with the work yet to do.

Now we are moving to the knees. If I rated the pain associated with the shoulder work at 6 to 7, the knee work is pushing it to 9. We a
re working IT Band and hamstrings and little muscles around the knee joint. It is too early to tell, but I can say that things are moving in the right direction so far.

Sunday is snowboard day. At least it has been for the la
st four weeks in a row. Killington has had about 40 inches of snow in the last 7 days! The temperature has rarely gone above freezing in over five weeks, so snow making has gone full tilt. This week was the first week on the natural snow -- and it was great. You could really dig the edges in and get the carved turns that makes snowboarding so much fun. I started out on the double diamonds of Cascade and Double Dipper, then hit East Fall. Getting these steep runs in early in the day when the legs are fresh and the snow is still deep is best. After that I returned to Chute, my favorite cruiser run. Getting off at the top of the lift and then going non-stop all the way to the base, only slowing as you cross Great Northern twice, is a heart-pounding, leg burning blast.

Edges fully dug in! =====>

I have been getting to the mountain before 8, so first tracks are a bonus. By 11:00 my legs started to feel the effects of the Donato work, so I decided to take a trip over to see how Cruise Control and the other Skye Peak trails were. I should have stayed where I was. I got confused with the way the trails were arranged since the Skye Gondola was closed and at the top of Superstar I started to go one way, then looked around for another way, and before I knew it caught an edge and pitched over taking a full blow on my RIGHT SHOULDER!! Immediately I knew it reversed a lot of the work and progress we have made. Hopefully it will heel up and get back to where it was.