It’s fun looking back at all the different strategies and situations that have been used and what the outcomes were. During my 20s all summers were spent on a fire crew so we were paid to work out specifically for working in the mountains and the consistency made hunting a piece of cake, but I’ve always felt my 30’s were just as good if not better.
On the fire crew we were staffed 7 days a week so to simplify workouts we ran 5 miles on odd days and lifted on evens. We had some specialized mechanical weight set ups for fire line digging muscles, and normal basic muscle stuff. Calf raises were essential, or that’s the first muscle to have issues. Same for lunges. Once in a while we’d throw on our overnight internal frame packs and head up a nearby hill for an afternoon.
Outside of a fire crew, life was different, but the ability to hike more was as good if not better than a summer firefighting. The best shape was the summer spent in Colorado - two old graduate students started organizing a 14er hike every weekend for the hiking club, and on Wednesday evening I took a group up a nearby 5 mile loop with a lot of gain that was essentially a great cardio going up and great high speed decent - 2 hours total. 20 year olds are always going as fast as they can and usually only bring absolute minimum gear, so it was all we could do to keep up. The 14ers were generally picked to be 4 to 6 hours of fast hiking with a lot of vertical gain. Longs Peak was a bit more, so it was saved for the end of the summer. We’d feel spent and hungover for 2 or 3 days, then have the easy Wednesday evening hike, a few days off, then another 14er. With no other gym work, by the fall I was lean, fast, and going to my normal hunting area felt easier than ever. Since that summer I’m back to hiking slower and placing feet more carefully going down, but if someone enjoys speed it does payoff with great cardio and tough tendons and muscles.