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Rest Step

Hope0925

Jane
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino Frances, May/June 2016, from SJPdP.
I leave for Spain tomorrow and have been following this forum daily for the past year. I just now remembered seeing a technique for walking uphill in a post many moons ago. I've tried to search it but am not having much luck. I think it was called the "rest step" but when I searched that I think they thought I meant "rest stop" because I got information on albergues! "Walking uphill" didn't work much better. Could someone kindly provide me with a link or just quickly review it for me? Thanks so much!

Jane
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
The rest stop is a god/send to reach the top without being out of breathe or straining.
It starts with your - let's say- left foot down hill. Straight legged . All your weight on that leg.
You should be able to freely lift your right foot up hill to place. Place but do not load bear.
Push off and up on your left leg until your body is up level and you are ready to transfer weight on to the right leg, straighten it having totally released weight off the now free left leg.

Utilizing the down leg to push up engages the rump and causal thigh muscles, giving a momentary complete break to the other leg. It is less wearing than pulling your weight up with quads.

Now if you breathe with each step: breathe out on push off, breathe in when swigging the other foot up. Tough steep climbs will mean one breathe for each step. You'll be oxygenating enough to not go over into anaerobic. So when you arrive, you will find you're breathing normally. If it is not so steep, or you are more fit, you might be able to take 2 or 3 steps for every breath
This might explain those in the forum who talk about being the tortoise who beat the hares
Nanc
 
The rest stop is a god/send to reach the top without being out of breathe or straining.
It starts with your - let's say- left foot down hill. Straight legged . All your weight on that leg.
You should be able to freely lift your right foot up hill to place. Place but do not load bear.
Push off and up on your left leg until your body is up level and you are ready to transfer weight on to the right leg, straighten it having totally released weight off the now free left leg.

Utilizing the down leg to push up engages the rump and causal thigh muscles, giving a momentary complete break to the other leg. It is less wearing than pulling your weight up with quads.

Now if you breathe with each step: breathe out on push off, breathe in when swigging the other foot up. Tough steep climbs will mean one breathe for each step. You'll be oxygenating enough to not go over into anaerobic. So when you arrive, you will find you're breathing normally. If it is not so steep, or you are more fit, you might be able to take 2 or 3 steps for every breath
This might explain those in the forum who talk about being the tortoise who beat the hares
Nanc
Thanks so much. Knowing the actual mechanics is very helpful.
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.

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