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36 Posts authored by: ActiveAdmin

Goal Setting

Posted by ActiveAdmin Aug 8, 2007

Setting goals is one of the most effective ways to motivate an athlete. Goals provide a sense of direction while increasing effort and quality of performance. Teams and endurance athletes alike must choose goals carefully to follow a path towards success. Trish Oberhaus, our team sports specialist, has joined up with Toby Guillette, the endurance sports specialist, to provide a useful guide for setting S.M.A.R.T. goals in athletics.   

 

1.    Specific: These goals are most clearly defined by the five "W" questions: who, what, where, when, why? The answers to these questions will begin to bring your goals into focus.

 

2.    Measurable: By establishing a system for measuring progress toward each goal you set, you will increase motivation by experiencing a sense of achievement when reaching the smaller incremental goals along the way. To prevent ambiguity and vagueness, make sure to incorporate an assessable time frame allowing you to carry out those steps and feel successful.

 

3.    Attainable: Once goals are identified and specific increments are achieved, the larger goals that used to seem far away begin to grow closer as you grow as a person. It's truly amazing how one begins to figure out ways to make goals become reality. Previously overlooked opportunities manifest themselves and bring you closer to attaining your goals, all the while, new attitudes, abilities, skills and strategies develop to help you to reach them.

 

4.    Realistic: By truly believing that your goal can be accomplished, your target will be realistic. This is something that you and you alone must decide. Be sure to set each goal so it represents ample growth. By following these guidelines, higher goals often prove easier to reach than lower goals, because lower goals produce a lower level of motivational energy.

 

5.    Timely: Goals should be set with a starting point, ending point and fixed intervals along the way. This will perpetuate a sense of urgency for you to act as target dates approach. Goals without deadlines tend to fade in importance and fall in rank of priority where less commitment is established.

 

No matter what skill level, goals that follow this outline will facilitate the growth of the athlete. Experiencing incremental progress during the journey toward your dreams and desires provides a steady reward that has the power to maintain motivation--as long as you keep in mind what you want to accomplish and how you plan to get there.

801 Views 1 Comments Permalink Tags: motivation, goal-setting, goals

Welcome to the new and permanent home of the Active.com Action Sports blog. You can now subscribe to recent post and comment RSS feeds, easily interact with other readers, access other community features, and much more.

 

I may be fast at typing, but no, I did not create every post. I've migrated over all our existing posts, so it appears I posted up all the content up to this point in time. Please check the tags listed at the footer of each post to view correct attributions.

 

Please note the following changes:

 

New blog URL: http://community.active.com/blogs/actionsports

 

New RSS feed: http://community.active.com/blogs/actionsports/feeds/posts

624 Views 1 Comments Permalink Tags: sports, blog, active, action

Surfing 50 States

Posted by ActiveAdmin Jun 1, 2007

 

<span face="Arial" style=""></span>[http://active.typepad.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2007/06/01/surf50_3.jpg]With Memorial Day weekend behind us and schools dismissing their classrooms, summer is (unofficially) here. The season for  vacations and road trips is upon us, and I’ve got a few trips lined up that I’m looking forward to. However, none of my plans are nearly as cool as the trip two Australians, Jonathan Durrant and Stefan Hunt, just completed.

 

 

Durrant and Hunt traveled for seven months to complete their mission to surf in all 50 states. When told that they couldn’t possibly surf the inland states, they found &quot;waves&quot; in irrigation ditches, snow and even in a potato field. Raised in St. Louis, I was curious to see where they chose to surf in Missouri and was expecting to find they took on the Mississippi River. I think they did one better in checking off Missouri by surfing down the steps at the Arch.

 

 

Their rules were simple: to surf all 50 states, “surf” was defined as being on a surfboard with some sort of momentum, and to document and share the experience with as many people as possible.

 

 

To top it all off, they had an ice cream truck donated to them by a sponsor to help minimize their costs. However, during the 20,000 miles they traveled, it seems the truck ended up being more trouble than it was worth. It needed two engines, two alternators, one muffler, one repaired fuel tank, one battery, one ignition coil, two rewiring repairs and three tows.

 

 

Judging by their stories and pictures, it looks like it was worth it.

 

 

(Photo provided by Getty Images)

 

 

481 Views 0 Comments 0 References Permalink Tags: trish-oberhaus, surf, water

Speed Flying

Posted by ActiveAdmin May 18, 2007

 

There is an up-and-coming sport that combines skiing, parachuting, snow kiting and parasailing that allows you to descend mountains at speeds up to 70 miles an hour. That is intense.

 

 

Here’s a unique view of the new sport known as speed flying or speed riding. The video lets you vicariously experience the alternating skiing and soaring effect:

 

 

 

 

This sport gives a whole new meaning to the phrase “extreme sport.”

 

 

521 Views 0 Comments 0 References Permalink Tags: trish-oberhaus, snow

 

[http://active.typepad.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2007/05/10/skate.jpg]As an underground activity, skateboarding has always come along with stereotypes, many of them negative and misconstrued. But the rebellious, drug-taking-punk image of old is giving way to that of a skillful athlete with a daring edge. It's the skaters themselves making this change, and Richard Zuccarello is among those leading the way. His organization Skateboarders Against Drugs sends a positive message to the community while promoting the sport of skateboarding to kids.

 

 

The creation of Skateboarders Against Drugs was sparked in 2003 when an elementary school in Woodland Hills, Calif. asked professional skateboarder Zuccarello to help them with their anti-drug campaign.

 

 

Read more about Skateboarders Against Drugs.

 

 

462 Views 0 Comments 0 References Permalink Tags: trish-oberhaus, skate

How to Harness the Wind

Posted by ActiveAdmin May 4, 2007

 

[http://active.typepad.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2007/05/04/kiteboard.jpg]Combining paragliding, wakeboarding and windsurfing, kiteboarding (also known as kitesurfing) is still a debutante in the athletic world -- yet to celebrate its tenth birthday. But the high-adrenaline sport, in which you can perform tricks more than 20 feet above the water and travel at speeds of more than 30 knots, is steadily gaining disciples.

 

 

Despite its reputation as an extreme sport, kiteboarding is also about balance, technique and finesse. Perhaps that's why the ranks of women riders increase every year, along with female instructors and women-specific kiting camps.

 

 

Kiteboarding classes -- an absolute must to get started in the sport -- are available around the country. Follow these tips to help you soar across the water.

 

 

484 Views 0 Comments 0 References Permalink Tags: trish-oberhaus, water

Dear readers,

 

The weather is getting warmer and I'm looking for more reasons to get outside and enjoy being active.

 

My first love is team sports. However, I want to broaden my horizons and take up a new action sport. I want you to decide which one I pick up. I will post which sport got the most votes and updates on how I am progressing.

 

So, let's hear it. Should I be grinding at the skate park? Hitting the trail? patricia.oberhaus@active.com

589 Views 2 Comments Permalink Tags: trish-oberhaus

 

Lone Pine, Calif., is a quiet through town located along the southern section of U.S. Highway 395, the main north-south artery through the Owens Valley, connecting the Inland Empire to Reno, Nev. Whitney Portal road travels west from the center of town and climbs 13 miles and about 4,000 feet, terminating at a parking loop flanked by 1,000-foot granite walls and dotted with pungent pine trees. Here, trailheads originate which lead west into the John Muir Wilderness and to the summit of Mount Whitney, the highest point in the Lower 48 states.

 

 

During the summer months, throngs of weekend mountaineers trudge up the 11-mile trail to the coveted peak…if they are lucky enough to obtain a permit which often must be reserved months in advance. Winter on Mount Whitney is a different story. While winters in the Sierra Nevadas can be relatively calm and warm much of the time, storms can start on a whim and last for a week. And the swiftness with which storms move in and the severity with which they linger make for an unforgiving environment that can strike fear into the heart of even the most seasoned mountaineer.

 

 

Rather than the soft, 11-mile route which most folks take in the summer, winter ascents follow a shorter, steeper and far more direct route to the top. First climbed by John Muir, the mountaineer’s route is a strenuous third-class hike with areas of exposed ledges from which a fall means certain death. Hard-packed snow can make travel over rocky terrain slightly easier by creating a blanket upon which one can create tracks, but loose powdery snow will cause a would-be summiteer to sink to their waist with every step, severely slowing progress and increasing the chance of injury.

 

 

I attempted the mountaineer’s route three times over this past winter. My first two attempts were cut short by bad weather that moved in unexpectedly during the first night of camping. My third attempt was the charm. Two days of blue skies and warm daytime temps made it possible to hike in no more than my long johns and a T-shirt. The first day was a hike from the car (8,500 feet) to a relatively flat and wind-protected spot at 12,000 feet. The second day started before sunrise in order to take advantage of solid snow which allowed for the use of crampons rather than the snowshoes which keep oneself from sinking in looser snow. The final sections of the hike follow a 1,500-foot gully just to the north of the summit and then 500 feet of scrambling up boulders to the summit plateau. This last 500 feet is a “no-fall” zone, which means that a one wrong move will surely result in serious injury and possibly death. [http://active.typepad.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2007/04/19/witney64]

 

 

 

 

 

Standing atop the summit of the highest mountain in the contiguous United States is quite surreal. To the east lies the Owens River Valley and the White Mountains, which receive far less precipitation. The lack of snow and their soft contours belie their size. But there is no mistaking the grandeur of the entire Sierra Nevada range which dominates the views to the north, south and west. One could stand for days on the summit of Whitney and count the endless snow-capped peaks and subsequent valleys. Taking in the view from the summit, it is easy to forget your everyday life and the troubles which plague society. From the top of Mount Whitney, you can gain a better perspective of our own insignificance, and life’s myriad challenges pale in comparison to the struggle to gain the summit. For a moment I felt like I had achieved a great victory, but that moment was short lived, and soon I was facing a long descent back to the car, tired, sore and wanting nothing more to get back to the same society from which I’d fled into the mountains. [http://active.typepad.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2007/04/19/whitney98]

 

 

(Photos provided by Gil Weiss)

 

 

514 Views 0 Comments 0 References Permalink Tags: climbing, gil-weiss

 

[http://active.typepad.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2007/04/11/mtnbikesnow.jpg]A couple weeks ago Chicago had record high temperatures and I was overjoyed to be outside on my bike after a long winter of indoor training rides. Winter is back now in the Midwest and it is a rude awakening. It’s almost the middle of April and Major League baseball games have been canceled in both Cleveland and Chicago on account of snow. I’ll admit, it makes me not want to take my bike out anytime soon.

 

 

Until I read about the North Pole Bike Extreme, the first bike race at the North Pole. The race description on the site is as follows:

 

You will cycle a 26.2-mile marathon distance in extreme sub-zero temperatures on the high Arctic Ocean while negotiating small hillocks of ice and pressure ridges. You will struggle in this formidable challenge, constantly aware you are on territory where the polar bear is king. Forced to carry your bike in some sections, and with 6 to 12 feet of pack ice separating you from 12,000 feet of Arctic Ocean below, a steely nerve will be required to take part in North Pole Bike Extreme - the coolest bike race on the planet.

The Midwest weather doesn’t seem so bad anymore. Fewer excuses, more pedaling!

 

 

(Photo provided by Getty Images/Image Source)

 

 

428 Views 0 Comments 0 References Permalink Tags: trish-oberhaus, snow, bike

Surf Year-Round

Posted by ActiveAdmin Apr 10, 2007

 

[http://active.typepad.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2007/04/10/wetsuit.jpg]Whenever surfing comes up in conversation with non-surfing people, the matter of water temperature almost always surfaces. I've met several people who say, &quot;I don't surf here (in Nor Cal) because the water is too cold!&quot; Yes, the water temperature around Half Moon Bay, Calif. is typically in the 48 - 58 F range year-round, including in the dead of winter and summer. But, with new technology in wetsuits, this is no longer an excuse.

 

 

A wetsuit is a surfer's essential life-support system, especially for a starter who spends more time inside the water.

 

 

For more on new wetsuit technologies, accessories, and how to choose the right one for you - check out the full story here!

 

 

398 Views 0 Comments 0 References Permalink Tags: trish-oberhaus, water

Miss Motocross

Posted by ActiveAdmin Mar 30, 2007

 

[http://active.typepad.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2007/03/30/ashley.jpg]&quot;Hello, my name is Ashley Fiolek. I'm 16 years old, I am profoundly deaf, and I race motocross.&quot;

 

 

These are the first words in the biography section of ashleyfiolek.com. The bio goes on to summarize the accomplishments of her amateur career. It's a record that would be impressive for any racer but one that is especially notable because Ashley Fiolek is both improbably young and unable to hear.

 

 

Motocross is a loud sport, and racers depend on sound for cues. The buzz of the engine tells them when to shift. Sound also warns that another rider is approaching, indicating when it would be best to move out of the way. Fiolek knows when to shift by sensing vibrations, feeling the bike as it groans and memorizing every bump of the course.

 

 

After two years of dominating amateur races on her 85cc, Fiolek made her 125cc debut against the best women in the world in November, winning the women's supercross title. She also qualified for a boys' race at Loretta Lynn's last summer. Out of 42 riders—41 male—she finished 11th. She'll turn pro in August, midway through the six-event Hitachi WMA National Championship series, the pinnacle of women's pro motocross.

 

 

550 Views 0 Comments 0 References Permalink Tags: trish-oberhaus, moto

Whitewater Riverboarding

Posted by ActiveAdmin Mar 26, 2007

 

It is said that sometime in the late 70's, a group of Frenchmen navigated river rapids high up in the Alps with bags stuffed with lifejackets and polystyrene.  By 1981, this concept led way to the production of the first Riverboard which is now synonymous with Sledging or Hydrospeeding. Since its inception, this action packed activity has caught the attention of adrenaline junkies across the world and is now recognized as a professional sport in Europe with competitions organized every year.

 

 

The allure of white water Sledging is that operator’s intimate proximity to the river. The operator is equipped with a padded wetsuit, booties, life jacket, helmet and fins for kicking. The fins provide propulsion and steering as the operator’s chest rests on the plastic board while arms are neatly tucked inside for grip and control. No experience is necessary to learn all the skills from a competent instructor who will then guide a group down the river while negotiating the safest route through class IV rapids. As experienced as your guides claim to be, a serious degree of risk still exists when participating in such extreme activities. Be sure to thoroughly read liability waivers and be knowledgeable of your health coverage whenever traveling abroad and/or chasing your next adrenaline rush.

 

 

Check out this video which provides a closer look from a “Sledger’s” point of view:   

 

 

 

 

368 Views 0 Comments 0 References Permalink Tags: toby-guillette, water

 

[http://active.typepad.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2007/03/21/xgamechina.jpg]The city of Shanghai will host the KIA X Games Asia 2007 May 3-5 from KIC Jiang Wan Stadium, it was announced today by Rick Alessandri, senior vice president, general manager, ESPN Consumer Products and X Games Franchise Managing Director.

 

 

The event will mark the first time X Games Asia will be held in the People's Republic of China.

 

 

More than 200 of the world's top action sports athletes from more than 20 countries and five continents will compete in the three-day event and feature multiple disciplines, including Aggressive In-Line Skate, Skateboard, BMX Freestyle, Sport Climbing as well as a Moto X demonstration.

 

 

(Photo provided by Getty Images/Streeter Lecka)

 

 

527 Views 0 Comments 0 References Permalink Tags: trish-oberhaus, climbing, x-games, bmx, moto, skate

Stand up paddle surfing

Posted by ActiveAdmin Mar 15, 2007

 

[http://active.typepad.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2007/03/15/paddlesurf2.gif]Stand up paddle surfing is an aspect of surfing that has seen a recent resurgence. For those that are not familiar with the sport, it entails standing on a large longboard and propelling yourself with essentially a canoe paddle. Recently, it has been picked up as an alternative way to ride surf and as a means of staying in shape. The level of surfing on stand up paddle boards has sky rocketed in the last few years.

 

 

This type of surfing involves using a massive longboard — generally 12 feet long, 30 inches wide and 4-5 inches thick — with a canoe-style paddle that should be about six inches taller than you. You throw the board in the water, paddle out past the shorebreak with the paddle tucked under you, then pop to your feet with the paddle in your hand. With your feet parallel, you can then balance on the board and paddle around. Once you get the feel of it, the next goal is to propel yourself into waves.

 

 

Stand-up paddle surfers have found they can have fun even in small, mushy waves because the paddle and the massive boards add entirely new abilities and dimensions. It wouldn't be ideal for crowded conditions, because of the size of the board. But on a marginal day or during a swamped-out high tide, stand-up can make surfing possible and really fun.

 

 

399 Views 0 Comments 0 References Permalink Tags: trish-oberhaus, surf, water

Climbing coast to coast

Posted by ActiveAdmin Mar 14, 2007

!http://active.typepad.com/actionsports/images/2007/03/14/yosie.jpg![http://active.typepad.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2007/03/14/yosie.jpg]Whether you live amongst the smooth rock towers of New York City or the colossal rock walls scattered up and down the western united states, if you have caught the climbing bug, then you will find someplace to climb, period.  As a sport, rock climbing has managed to stay under the mainstream radar, but if you ask anyone who considers rock climbing "their sport" what its all about, then be prepared for a long and passionate rant filled with technical jargon and wide-eyed excitement.  From coast to coast, if there is a climbable surface, whether it be the boulders of New York City's central park, the crags of Tennessee's smoky mountains, the overhanging limestone caves of Iowa, or the granite big-walls of California's Yosemite National Park, people will climb!

Climbers in the Northeastern United States must endure wet conditions and climbing areas that are both small in scope and in the actual height of the climbs.  For climbers in the Western United States, it is quite the opposite.  Geology has blessed the western United States with more rock than can ever be climbed in a lifetime, and some of the most revered climbing destinations, although extremely popular with tourists, are often unknown as climbing spots by 95% of the people that visit.  Take for instance Yosemite National Park.  On a recent trip there with my father who has never rock climbed, we stood below a massive wall of vertical granite called "El Capitan" which overlooks the bustling valley floor.  As a 35 year resident of New York City, my father's idea of structural grandeur was dominated by the former World Trade Center buildings which rose 1,368 feet (417 meters) above the streets of New York.  We now craned our necks straight up in awe of El Capitan, which rises 3,593 feet (1095 meters) from the valley floor to the top, almost 3 times as high as the former World Trade Center!  Climbers from all over the world come to test their skills on this pillar of rock, which usually takes more than one day to climb, forcing climbers to sleep in tents which hang from the wall during the night.

Climbing will most likely remain a sport under the pop-culture radar because of its extreme nature and little potential to make big bucks doing it professionally.  But climb to the top of your first rock wall, whether it be in a climbing gym or an alpine spire, and you will feel a sensation that cannot be put into words.  Climbing, after all, is a verb which is applied to all forms achievement.  Many people ask me why I climb, and every time I tell them this; "If you have to ask, you'll never know."

431 Views 0 Comments 0 References Permalink Tags: climbing, gil-weiss
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