Pilates for Hiking

Snow soaked ground, warm sunshine, and a high mountain breeze weaving the Ponderosa and Douglas Fir, carry me along a trail that glistens like a river. I am moving, breathing, and alive.

Going by foot allows us to slow down, to be present, to connect with our world and ourselves. Whether your thoughts are quiet or active, one thing is constant… the quality of your stride creates a ripple throughout your entire body. Most people take about 2,000 steps for every mile they hike. The average hiker steps about 8,000 times per hour. The quality of your gait influences the wear and tear on your joints.

A good gait minimizes energy expenditure, reduces impact on your back and knees, and ensures a more comfortable outing. An optimal stride makes contact through the heel, rolls onto the ball of the foot, and presses off to propel you forward. In addition, standing up tall improves joint range of motion, takes pressure off your back, and improves your breathing. A strong core helps you to stay light and lifted over your feet. Boosting core strength also improves your balance and agility so the next time you cross a river, hop a boulder field, or traverse a snowy slope, you’ll have more confidence. Pilates can help you improve your gait by improving your posture, muscle balance, and core strength.

Here are three Pilates exercises that are sure to help you reduce your risk of injury as you hike terrain that slopes and changes with every step. You’ll spend more days light on your feet, and in your heart. For best results, practice these exercises 3-5 times per week.

1. One Leg Circles (Pilates for the Outdoor Athlete, page 136)
Purpose: Balances the muscles of the legs and hips, improves core strength and alignment.
Begin by lying on your back. Extend one leg along the floor and flex your foot as if pressing it against a wall. Press the back of your leg into the floor. Extend the other leg up toward the sky and point your toes. Engage your core by pulling your navel to your spine. INHALE, sweep your raised leg horizontally across the midline of your body, down an EXHALE up to the starting point. Keep your circle size within the borders of your mat. Although the exercise is called leg circles, imagine you are drawing ovals on the sky. 5 clockwise, 5 counterclockwise on each leg.

2. Shoulder Bridge with Kicks (Pilates for the Outdoor Athlete, page 152).
Purpose: Strengthens and stretches legs and back, and improves posture.
Lie on your back. Press your arms gently into the mat by your sides so that your chest is open and the front of your ribs recede into the mat. Bend your knees and bring your feet hip-width apart, toes pointing forward. Peel up your spine one vertebra at a time off the mat, beginning with your tailbone until you are resting on your shoulders with an open chest and an engaged core. Straighten and extend one leg and point your toes so your knees are touching. INHALE, kicking up to the sky. Avoid arching your back or letting your hips tilt or lower and lift. EXHALE, flex your foot, and extend the leg down, keeping it straight. Pretend your leg is a paintbrush and you are painting a straight line of your favorite color on the sky. After 5 -10 kicks, repeat with the opposite leg.

3. Leg Stretch with Band (Pilates for the Outdoor Athlete, page 214).
Purpose: This is a great after hike stretch for the Iliotibial-band, legs, and hips.
Begin lying on your back with your legs out straight. Bring one leg toward your chest and place a stretch band beneath the sole of your foot. Gently lengthen the leg upward, pressing through the heel. Keep your shoulders down and the back of your neck lengthened. From this position, gently pull your leg across the midline of your body until you feel a stretch along the outside of your leg and into the back of your hip. Hold the stretch band with the opposite hand. Switch legs.

Snowshoeing & Pilates Cross-training

To explore a pristine path through the wilderness, a path that has no tracks.

My cheeks sting as I trek a snow covered trail that sparkles like diamonds. Heart beating fast, breath setting the tempo for each step. Snow crunches like sugar beneath my snowshoes. Branches laden with snow, bow into archways. Like a child I explore familiar ground as if for the first time.

Snowshoeing invites us into the tranquility of winter while boosting our cardiovascular fitness. Over 6,000 years old, once used as a mode of transportation, today snowshoeing is an inexpensive, easy to learn, and multigenerational winter activity. If you are looking to shed a few pounds, snowshoeing burns as many calories as running, without the impact. Snowshoeing is excellent cross-training not only for hiking, but also for running and cycling. Snowshoeing builds strength and endurance in the lower body, and by adding poles, improves upper body strength in the arms, shoulders, and back.

To get the most out of your snowshoeing, you’ll want to stand up tall. Aligning your body, improves joint range of motion, takes pressure off your back, and improves your breathing. A strong core helps you to stay light and lifted over your feet. Boosting your core strength also improves your balance and agility so the next time you traverse a snowy slope, you’ll have more confidence. Pilates can help you strengthen and stabilize your core. In addition, Pilates can help you balance your muscles, thereby enhancing your gait and reducing risk of injury. Improving the strength and flexibility in your legs and hips takes pressure off your knees, improves range of motion, and also improves your endurance.

An effective snowshoeing cross-training routine focuses on boosting core strength, improving flexibility and muscle balance. Here are three Pilates exercises to help you get started. For my complete 15-minute Pilates for Snowshoeing Routine, please check out my book, Pilates for the Outdoor Athlete, available at pilatesfortheoutdoorathlete.com. Copies are also available at Evergreen Pilates.

Kneeling Side Kicks
Purpose: Strengthen the abductor and adductor muscles of the legs and hips.

Begin by kneeling with your legs together and your arms reaching out to the sides at shoulder height. Tip over until you are balancing over your right arm and leg. Extend your left leg out straight. Keep your hips square and abdominals scooped. INHALE to kick the leg forward like you’re kicking over a tabletop. Keep your supporting leg vertical and strong like a tree trunk.
EXHALE to sweep the leg straight back over the imaginary tabletop. Keep your leg parallel with the floor and level with your hip. For additional challenge, add kicking up and down and leg circles. Note: This exercise can be modified and performed standing. Hinge at the hips and use a countertop or table for balance. Switch sides.

Figure 4 Stretch with Ski Poles
Purpose: Stretch the hips extensors and back muscles.

Place the poles in front of you for support and balance, holding them with both hands.
Cross one ankle over the opposite knee.
Keep your spine tall and hinge it forward as you gently bend your standing knee.

Tailgate Stretches

Purpose: Stretch the hamstrings, quadriceps, hip extensors, and flexors.

Begin facing the tailgate or a counter top. Raise one leg, place your heel on top of the tailgate, leg out straight, and square your hips. The knee of your raised leg should point upward. INHALE, stand up tall, and EXHALE curl forward over your leg, scooping your belly to your back. Come back up. INHALE, bend the raised leg, and shift your weight forward keeping your chest close to your thigh. EXHALE, straighten your raised leg and stand tall.
Rotate on your standing leg until you are facing sideways and your raised leg is externally rotated. The kneecap should still face upward. INHALE and bring your outside arm up by your head. EXHALE and side bend toward your raised leg. Pretend that your back is against a wall and slide against it as you side bend. Keep your chest lifted and breathe.

Lauri Stricker is the author of Pilates for the Outdoor Athlete, and the owner of Evergreen Pilates. Copies are available at Evergreen Pilates and online at: www.pilatesfortheoutdoorathlete.com. For information on classes, please check out our website: www.evergreenpilates.com.

7 Pilates Tips for Snow Shoveling

With three feet of fresh powder in Evergreen and still falling, many of you have a shovel in hand. For those of you still inside cozy and warm, here are a few tips for protecting your back while shoveling. According to one study, the L5/SI region of the spine has been identified as the weakest link for snow shoveling. Snow is heavy and shoving is demanding and rigorous work. Pushing, lifting, and lunging use all of the major muscles of the lower and upper body. Core strength, good form, and moderation are the keys to protecting your back from injury. In addition to back injuries, heart attacks are common after a heavy snow storm. If you have reason for concern, please consult you doctor prior to shoveling. Following are seven Pilates tips for snow shoveling.

7 Pilates Snow Shoveling Tips

1. Warm up first. If you know Pilates Mat work, calisthenics, or have a personal stretch routine, do that first.

2. Use good form. When shoveling, squat with your legs apart, knees bent and back tilted, but not rounded. Pull your navel to your, engage your core, and lift
with you legs.

3. Square your body. To move snow, turn your feet in the direction you intend to place the snow. Turn your whole body as opposed to just twisting at the waist, and avoid throwing snow over your shoulder.

4. Be efficient. Work toward the areas where you are depositing snow so that you have less distance to travel.

5. Don’t Delay. Shovel as soon as possible. Fresh powder is lighter than packed snow. Wet snow can weigh upwards of 25 pounds per full shovel.

6. Be minimalistic. Use a small shovel, or if using a larger one, go for smaller and more frequent loads. Avoid stretching arms away from you.

7. Pace yourself. Take breaks, hydrate, stretch the muscles that feel tight, and keep breathing.

Happy Snow Day!

Ski Conditioning & Pilates

What does it take to be a powerful, smooth, energy-efficient skier? A skier with rhythm and flow, gliding seamlessly from one turn to the next? Just about any skier can become an energy-efficient gliding machine. To be smooth and yet powerful, to feel that your skis are an extension of your body, requires core-centered movement. Core-centered skiing means tapping into what Joseph Pilates referred to as the “powerhouse”. The powerhouse refers to the muscles of the torso: hips, abdominals, chest, back and shoulders. Pilates targets these muscles and can help you become a stronger, smoother, and more powerful skier.

Skiing requires proper alignment, lower-body fitness, core strength and a strong mind-body connection. Muscle imbalances in the legs, such as tight or weak hamstrings, coupled with overly powerful quadriceps, can leave the ankles, knees, hips and back vulnerable to injury. As a skier, you’ll appreciate the additional core strength gained from Pilates. Tapping into a strong core, you’ll improve your balance, agility and be more in control. By tightening your core, you’ll reduce impact on your back, hips and knees. As you improve your flexibility and core strength, your alignment will improve and so will your technique.

If your hips and core muscles are not strong, or if your muscles are inflexible, you will be challenged every turn on the slope. Moving from your center, balancing your muscles and improving your flexibility go a ling way to improving your technique, your endurance and will help you avoid injury. Over the past 70 years, the Pilates method of body conditioning has trained athletes to effectively strengthen and move from their core.

Pilates helps skiers to accomplish three things: prevent sport-specific injuries, improve performance and maintain longevity. It is designed to work your entire body uniformly each session. As you switch form one movement to the next, you’ll build flexibility, strength and stamina. Pilates strengthens and stretches all parts of your body, front to back, left to right and top to bottom.

An effective Pilates cross-training routine focuses on boosting core strength, improving flexibility and restoring muscle balance. Here are two Pilates exercise to help you get started. For a complete 15-minute Pilates for Skiing Cross training routine, please check out my book: Pilates for the Outdoor Athlete, available www.pilatesfortheoutdoorathlete.com. Copies are also available at Evergreen Pilates.

Side Bend: Sitting on one hip, extend your legs out from your torso with slightly bent knees. Place your top foot in front of your bottom foot. Reset your top arm on your leg and place your bottom arm slightly in front of your shoulder. INHALE, press up and make yourself straight as an arrow in a side plank. Your supporting arm should be under your shoulder. Look directly forward and keep your head inline with your spine. Pretend your body is between two panes of glass. EXHALE, lower yourself down so that you are a few inches off the ground. Avoid sinking into your shoulders or sitting down before you press back up. INHALE, raise back up and extend your top arm over your head and look down toward the floor. EXHALE down. Repeat on opposite side.

Roll Up: Begin lying on your back with your feet flexed and your arms overhead. Pull your navel to your spine. INHALE, raise your arms up toward the sky, and lift your head to look at your feet. Curl up, peeling your spine off the mat, as if rolling up a painting. Avoid using momentum to hoist yourself off the mat. Pretend you are under a very low sky and stay rounded throughout the exercise. Keep your heels connected to the floor as you roll up. EXHALE, and curl forward, reaching toward your feet, looking down at your knees. Hollow out your stomach as if there were something on your lap that you want to lift up and over. INHALE, and roll back down one vertebra at a time, as if you were making an imprint with your spine in sand. Keep your feet flexed and imprint your spine on the mat, ending with your arms overhead. EXHALE to complete.

Evergreen Pilates offers Ski Conditioning classes through the end of March. If you are new to Pilates, please call or email to schedule a complimentary introductory one-on-one lesson: 303-679-1664, lauri@nullevergreenpilates.com. For more information on Ski Conditioning with Pilates, please check out our webpage evergreenpilates.com .

Keeping your Studio Thriving!

If you are a studio owner or plan to be, you will wear many hats. In addition to being a teacher, you are a manager of resources and people. There are checks to write, hours spent updating your website, Facebook page, writing newsletters, proofing ads, recruiting and training teaches, scheduling and maintaining client accounts, making follow up calls, and writing thank you cards. For profit or not, all of these tasks require money, time, and energy.

Return on Investment

Being smart with your resources is one of the best ways to insure your studio’s longevity. Regardless of how many new clients you welcome to your studio, you can be sure of a few things, your overhead will remain constant. When considering how use your money, time, and energy, always ask questions: “How will this improve and grow my business? Will it keep my current clientele happy and satisfied, or will it bring new clients to the studio?” Here are a few things to consider before allocating your money, time and energy.

Budgeting your Resources

Cash flow is a dynamic variable that ebbs and flows with the tide of economic change and by itself determines your budget. Setting a budget is a good way safeguard your business’ cash flow. Positive cash flow makes maintaining and growing your business possible. Cash flow is the amount of money you have in the bank at any given time. Experts recommend a minimum of three months worth of cash to cover minimum operating expenses (rent and utilities, bank card processing, and payroll). If your monthly minimum is $5,000, you would need to maintain a cash flow of $15,000. Here are a few budgeting strategies to help you maintain a positive cash flow, and grow your business.

1. Forecast Revenues
Do you know what your gross revenue and payroll were for last year and the year before? How about your product sales, expenses – fixed and variable? Being able to anticipate, allows you to plan. You’ll know when you it’s best to make a large purchase and when it’s best to wait.

2. Plan for Taxes
Since we all must pay taxes, its best to build them into your budget. At the end of each month, save a certain percentage of gross revenue and place it into a separate account to be used to pay taxes quarterly.

3. Develop Systems of Efficiency
Consider using a software program to manage your business such as the Body Mind Software program. It allows clients to make purchases and reserve classes on-line, and you can manage your studio even when you are not there. When managing your studio create efficiency such as form letters for your newsletters, emails, and ad promotions. Constant Contact is a great program for web emails. Once you create something that really works, keep using it.

4. Trade for Services
We only have so many hours in the week to teach classes, manage, and grow our business. Always ask yourself how best you could be using your money, time and energy. Trade a client for cleaning, accounting, or personal services. Trading with hair stylists can have the added benefit of being a great source of referrals as they know countless people in your community.

5. Maintain your perceived value
Generally the client who can afford a class that costs $20 or more three times a week has a different budget than someone who spends to $99 per month for unlimited workouts. We are only as valuable to our clients as they are pleased with their last lesson. There are countless other exercise venues competing for our client’s time, energy, and dollar. Each time you teach a class or private, always remember that you need to resell your service and its value. If we take care of our clients, they will take care of us. Our clients are our greatest source of referral. Always place tremendous value on client contact and service.

Pilates for Skiers

The exhilaration of soaring down a mountainside over a blanket of sparkling white snow, surrounded by pristine evergreens and an endless blue sky inspires millions of people to ski every year. It’s no small reward for countless hours spent in the car, in lift lines, and on bristling cold lift rides to the top of the mountain.

In the Colorado Rockies, where I live, I have cross-trained skiers with Pilates from October to March for the past seven years. My sessions often start with snow reports, gear reviews, and tales of anticipated heli trips and back-country hut adventures. I’ve worked with all kinds of skiers, from strictly downhill resort skiers to purist tele-skiers (who make use of a style of cross country ski that leaves the heel free). Whether they prefer groomers, moguls, or powder, they all want to be in top form for skiing. Many of my skiing clients can only make time for Pilates workouts midweek because of their weekend skiing excursions. They might range in age, fitness level or ski preference, but they train with me religiously every winter for the same reasons: to get strong, stay injury free, and enjoy winter fun in the mountains. A client with a goal is a motivated client, and skiers are both. Pilates is an excellent way to keep skiers fit and coming back to your studio season after season.

Pilates and Fall Line Fitness
If you made a snow ball and let it roll down the side of a mountain, the path it rolls down is called the fall line. To ski the fall line with finesse and control requires flowing motion, rhythm, and precision. This agility on the slopes is what I call “Fall Line Fitness.” A strong core, muscle balance, and flexibility are essential elements of Fall Line Fitness. You do not have to be a ski instructor to make a direct impact on your client’s ski fitness. However, you do have to be an alignment specialist skilled at teaching high quality movement.

When I work with a skiing client, whether in a group setting or one-on-one, I never lose site of the fact that I am working with an athlete, with someone who wants a workout. Relating exercises back to skiing and keeping the intensity of the workout up are great ways to hold skiers’ interest. I also work to improve my skiers’ stamina and endurance along with their core strength, muscle balance, and flexibility. After all, Pilates can help increase a skier’s longevity for years to come. Below I’ve included three of my favorite apparatus exercises to help boost your client’s Fall Line Fitness. A complete ski conditioning Pilates mat routine is also available in my book, Pilates for the Outdoor Athlete.

Organizing Movement From the Center Out

Pilates helps a skier to organize his or her movement from the center out. The result is a stronger and more adaptable skier with improved body awareness and proprioception. By practicing Pilates, our client develops a strong core, improved balance, and agility. With the additional core strength, the skier can improve his or her edging and transfer a powerful line of energy into the skis. A strong core, coupled with improved alignment, will also reduce impact on a skier’s back, hips, and knees. As a result, our skier becomes energy efficient and reduces wear and tear on his or her joints. Once this has happened the possibilities for your client to become an infinitely stronger and skilled skier are endless.

Stacking Your Bones for Skiing
In all sports, good movement begins with optimal alignment. In skiing, good alignment helps a skier apply pressure through his feet to turn while maintaining a quiet torso, thereby improving balance, agility, and breathing. A stance that is too low, leaned back, or bent at the waist will thwart a skier’s efforts to ski well. Instead of gliding down the slope with control and ease, the skier works hard to avoid being taken for a ride by his or her skis. Not only is energy wasted in an overly low or leaned back stance, a poor stance places unnecessary wear and tear the back, hips and knees.

Good skiing alignment begins with what skiers refer to as a tall stance over the arch and ball of the foot. Make sure the torso is upright while the ankles, knees, hips, and shoulders are stacked over the center of your boards. Then slightly flex the knees, and make sure there’s even weight from right to left. The angle of the femur bone should be parallel with the slope of the ski run. The shoulders should be soft thereby allowing the jaw and neck to be at ease, and the arms should be bent with elbows wider than shoulders, and with the hands inside of the elbows.

Skiing in the Back Seat
A skier’s ability to flow with gravity along the fall line of a slope is influenced by his confidence, skill, and fitness. Skiing, like other saggital/forward plane movements such as walking and running, requires leading from the heart, not the hips. Fear and or lack of confidence can force a skier into a posture commonly referred to as “sitting in the back seat.” In this posture, the hips are well behind the heels and the pelvis tucked under. Instead of aligning his femur bones to the gradient of the slope, the skier looks as though he were reclining on a chair. Controlling one’s skis, absorbing vibration and maintaining agility in changing terrain is challenged in this stance. Sitting the backseat inhibits breathing, shortens the abdominals, and adds additional stress to the spine, hips and knees. Using Pilates we can help our clients to develop the core strength, flexibility, and alignment to maintain a tall, correctly aligned stance.

Chair Exercise: Stepping Up and Down
Up and down is a great way to develop lower body strength, core stability and balance. Using the magic circle helps with alignment and adds stability and support for the upper body. Typically one high and one low spring are used. For heavier clients, I use more resistance. Place the ball of the right foot parallel on the pedal and press it to the floor. Make sure that the heel is lifted and stand evenly across the ball of the foot with good ankle and knee alignment. With the left foot, step onto the Chair. The foot should be centered and parallel on the mat surface. As you step up and down, the left knee should still over the foot and not rock forward over the toes. The foot should be weighted evenly from inside to out and front to back with the heel anchored. Watch for bending at the waist. Instead, the torso should rise on a slight diagonal that is in line with the back leg while moving up and down. Challenge yourself to keep as much weight as possible over the back foot and leg. Staying over the pedal may require more spring resistance for support, but will result in engagement of the hamstrings and gluteal muscles.

Skiing and the Feet
Many ski challenges start at the foot. Feet influence a skier’s alignment and his or her ability to execute powerful movement. Edging and applying pressure to carve a turn and stay in control starts with the feet. Anyone familiar with Foot Corrector work knows that proper alignment influences how we use our feet, and that the way we use our feet affects the way we use our legs and hips. Each foot has 26 bones, the same number as the bones of our spine. Our feet and spines are both designed to absorb shock. While skiing, a skier’s feet absorb up to three times his body weight. For a skier who weighs 150 pounds, that’s 450 pounds of force being absorbed through the feet, knees, hips and back, run after run.

If our skier moves as though his skis were an extension of his feet, he garners unmatched control, grace and efficiency. Limited dorsiflexion at the ankle can cause the skier to press his shins forward into his boots and sacrifice control and form. We can help our client to use his feet more effectively by working on fundamental Pilates exercises such as Foot Corrector and Reformer foot work. “Heels” on the footbar is a great way to start. Get your skiers to feel their shins working, while their Achilles and calves lengthen. Other exercises that are helpful include the standing arm springs. With the feet parallel and together, have your skier pretend he’s wearing ski boots and lean in a plank position While out there, have him do exercises such as open-close or punching. You’ll be improving his dorsiflexion and a whole lot more.

Cadillac Exercise: Leaping
Your skiers will feel like they’ve just come off the 70 meter jump when they lean forward in their imaginary ski boots while partnering with the arm springs. Leaping is a dynamic movement that is useful for training skiers to develop a spring-like balance and agility to absorb the vibrations that accompany skiing over ice or crud. Adjust the arm springs so that they are at least shoulder height or higher. With arms close to your sides and feet parallel, bend down in a squatted position with the heels off the floor. Begin by straightening your legs, and simultaneously sliding your arms up by your ears and straight up. You should be leaning on a diagonal and end in a plank-like position. Then, circle the arms around to your sides as you bend your knees and begin again. Avoid arching the low back or shrugging arms up by ears. Draw the legs together and use the hips and core for stability and support.

Simulating Counter-Rotation and Pole Planting

Achieving Fall Line Fitness requires cross training of the body and the mind. To better understand the demands that skiing places on a skier’s body, consider the following exercise. Walk down a set of stairs. With your legs and hips, twist side to side. Position your arms as if you have poles. Add a little twist of your torso to the opposite direction of your knees and feet for counter-rotation.

In skiing, counter-rotation increases edge control for turning and creates a spring like momentum at the beginning of the next turn. Counter-rotation also helps a skier to face the fall line at the end of every turn. As you do this exercise, notice the muscles of your trunk working to stabilize and absorb shock as you descend. The hip extensors and flexors engage to execute and land each jump. Simultaneously, the deep six rotators work to stabilize the pelvis and to minimize lateral or side swaying movement of the hips as you descend in a forward plane

In addition, a skier uses his poles to pivot and to create a rhythm. Pole planting relies on the strength of the forearm flexors, triceps, and deltoids. Using a Magic Circle while doing Jump Board or Short Box exercises is a great way to target not only these muscles, and also train skiers in an arm position similar to skiing. Adding hand weights while doing exercises such as Skating or Side Splits on the Reformer strengthens the arms while increasing the overall intensity of the workout.

Reformer Excercise: Jumping Board, Moguls with Magic Circle
Your skiers will love this exercise as you invite them to put on their imaginary ski goggles and hit the bumps. By using the jump board and magic circle you can help skiers improve their stance, contact points, and organize movements from their center. Jump in a C-curl position, feet parallel on the jump board. With each jump, alternate rotating the knees and feet and landing on the board at two o’clock to ten o’clock each time. This is a great way to improve counter-rotation, strength and flexibility. The magic circle is positioned in front of the chest with elbows soft and wide. With each landing, the client rotates the torso and circle opposite of the legs.

Bringing the Body Back to Balance
Pilates is excellent cross-training for skiers to regain muscle balance and avoid sport specific injuries. Bringing the body back into balance requires stretching the muscles that are dominant in skiing and strengthening the less dominant muscles. Many Pilates exercises do both simultaneously.

Muscles to Stretch: Quadriceps, Hamstrings, Iliotibal Band, Calves, Quadratus Lumborum, Hip Abductors, Hip Flexors, Pectorals, Upper Trapezius, Latissmus Dorsi.

Muscles to Strengthen:
Medial Quadriceps, Tibialis Anterior, Abdominals, Hip Adductors, Hip Abductors, Hip Extensors, Rhomboids, Mid-Trapezius, Lower Trapezius.

Overuse Injuries From Skiing
Many skiers hang up their skis and poles and end their ski careers early as a result of an overuse injury. Overuse injuries are sport specific and often result from muscle imbalances caused by the demands of repetitive movement. Over training, poor alignment and stance, and failure to cross train often leads to overuse injuries. For a skier, overly developed quadriceps muscles, underdeveloped hamstrings, and inner and outer thighs can place stress the soft tissues around the knees. Likewise, a poor stance can create injury to a skier’s hips and back. Exacerbating the problem are structural misalignments such as leg-length discrepancy, legs that bow or knock-knees. Common overuse injuries include: Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) Injury, Chondromalacia, Medial Collateral Ligament (MCL) Injury, Meniscus Injuries, Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome (Runner’s Knee), Patella Tendonitis (Jumper’s Knee), Shin Splints, Iliotibal Band Syndrome and Sciatica.