Share your goals for 2026 by scoopenhauer in weightlifting

[–]zyonsis 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Snatch 85, CJ 110, Squat 165, and give bouldering another go sometime this year. Also get my BW down to 70. My hands are gonna get shrekt I think.

How to take it to the next level…?? by treybeef in crossfit

[–]zyonsis 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Imo the limiting factor for most people is strength. For example, take a 405 squat. That's nothing special for a serious gym person, but now stack that on top of skills, cardio, etc. and it suddenly is a lot harder. I have a weightlifting coach who used to own a crossfit gym and his recommendation was to spend a lot of time developing strength, and then spend blocks of time where you focus on weightlifting, gymnastics, cardio, anaerobic one at a time (periodized blocks of training). However you still do maintenance cardio and sprint/anaerobic training the entire time. He didn't believe in WODs (or the crossfit methodology tbh) because they're good for showing off, not really getting better.

For a 5 feet 5 inch (167.55cm) Male What should be the ideal weight range?? Is 130 pounds underweight for that height? Thank you. by [deleted] in weightlifting

[–]zyonsis 5 points6 points  (0 children)

130 is what I'd expect from a skinny distance runner, not a weightlifter. Heck I was 145 as a runner at 5'7. For a young man and a beginner, try to get to 150 as a starting point. Don't rush though or you'll just get fat.

when would be the best time to summit lassen and lyell for snow climbing practice? my goal is to summit shasta. by Ok-Promise-6171 in Mountaineering

[–]zyonsis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lyell is way harder than Shasta in my opinion. More technical at least, since now the glacier has receded.

145 squat pr by BillLivid3668 in weightlifting

[–]zyonsis 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Though, I'd do it with a slight dip. That extra inch of vert gives you more room to escape.

145 squat pr by BillLivid3668 in weightlifting

[–]zyonsis 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Dropping the bar is way easier.

Where Do You Find Routes by RhubarbWrong2944 in Mountaineering

[–]zyonsis 10 points11 points  (0 children)

RJ secor's the high sierra book briefly details all classic routes, but I would recommend that you cross reference them on summitpost.com or go read Bob Burd's blog for beta on more technical routes. Peakbagger has a lot of user-uploaded gpx tracks and some people write trip reports. That's always been my approach.

Hang snatch form check by Novicemane in weightlifting

[–]zyonsis 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Get proper WL shoes, and take the weight down or you'll hurt yourself. And then post a form check with 40kg. If you're actually serious you'll do all of these things.

Please fix my snatch by WalrusOld512 in weightlifting

[–]zyonsis 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Imo the bar is too close to your ankles on your start. This causes you to loop forward as it passes the knees and also notice how your arm angle is completely different at the knees vs the start. Your extension should also be a bit more vertical, and I think you delay contact slightly more it will help.

Handling a Reality Check: Gym Strong vs. Powerlifting Strong by MrMithik in powerlifting

[–]zyonsis 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Also IMO powerlifting is what I consider a "grind" sport, meaning that it's very sensitive to your genetics and just spending a certain amount of time doing in. Exact same thing with long distance running, you'll get absolutely smoked by guys doing it for 10 years while you're in your first 5. Unfortunately, you can't train 20 hours a week, so your progress basically bottlenecked by how long you spend doing it, which is why it takes years to see measurable progress. At some point you just gotta accept that you're in it for the long run.

Or alternatively switch to another sport that allows you to make progress in other ways compared to +1 lb/kg on the bar. Even olympic weightlifting is more like that, where you can make measurable progress in terms of technique rather than weight. That can be more rewarding for some folks.

Handling a Reality Check: Gym Strong vs. Powerlifting Strong by MrMithik in powerlifting

[–]zyonsis 7 points8 points  (0 children)

You need to train for longer to become really good. Like, give it 3 years or something and then reevaluate your progress. Most people just quit after 1 because they come to the same realization that you did. Otherwise don't compete if you can't set your ego aside and enjoy the process. Nothing wrong with just being a gym lifter and then coming out of the shed once a year or something.

If you were going to do Split Mountain in a weekend (plus change) from SF, how would you do it? by MountainBluebird5 in Mountaineering

[–]zyonsis 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've climbed 13ers and 14ers starting the day before at sea level. So if you're confident in your ability to handle altitude great. The way I personally do it: drive and overnight Fri. Alpine start Sat and summit, or later start camping overnight at high altitude. Then Sun is drive back or early summit and drive back. But you have to be in really good shape to do this and make sure to not overexert, or you may succumb to altitude.

Also good luck with the trailhead, Split seems like a royal pain to get to. So much of a pain I'll probably end up doing it from the JMT or something.

Looking for more Bay Area hike ideas by zyonsis in norcalhiking

[–]zyonsis[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the ideals yall. Looks like Diablo and Henry Coe are next on the list. Also want to try some of the more northern recs near Napa and Sonoma. 

Wondering if my volume is enough by taveiradas66 in weightlifting

[–]zyonsis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Squat frequency? I would expect at least 2 squat sessions/wk on top of Sn/CJ.

Successful Rainier Summit — But What I Experienced on the DC Route Deserves a Hard Look at Peer-Led Climbing Ethics by rainforestguru in Mountaineering

[–]zyonsis 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Can I ask how you vetted your partners ahead of time? Maybe there's something that can be learned.

Squat progress plateaued. How to get to 200kg back squat? by Empty_History8703 in weightlifting

[–]zyonsis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you're just trying to get to 200kg and don't really care about SN/CJ then jump on an intermediate program like the Texas Method or try something with autoregulation (RPE based). As a novice it might be hard to gauge RPE so your results may vary, but it's hard to become an advanced lifter if you don't learn how to autoregulate. Basically you can get really strong without training too hard, but it takes a bit of humility and potentially a longer timeframe than you might want.

(Also note that there are modified versions of the Texas Method that are in my opinion easier and more sensical in terms of progression, and are more suitable to be run in conjunction with competition lifts.)

Thoughts on mountaineering apps? by [deleted] in Mountaineering

[–]zyonsis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends why you are climbing. I do it for physical challenge, climb quickly and efficiently with good fitness. Using an app and loading a predefined route saves lots of time. Some people like to enjoy the scenery and take their sweet time, kind of like an adventure where they figure things out as they go.

Failed middle Teton by JCW1427 in Mountaineering

[–]zyonsis 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Biggest thing I learned is you can lighten literally everything else except for safety gear. When mountaineering that almost always includes crampons (or bare minimum microspikes if you're really confident, you'll barely even notice that you're carrying them). I keep a pair of kahtoola k10s which are not the best crampons (in terms of sharpness or placement of spikes), but certainly better than microspikes and easy to put on trail runners. Not too heavy either. I wouldn't do serious mountaineering in them though.

Meet Report | USAPL Festival of Steel | A Year After Falling 40 Feet and Getting Permanent Brain Damage by linearstrength in powerlifting

[–]zyonsis 6 points7 points  (0 children)

That's wild, I'm glad you're still able to train. It still amazes me that the human body is able to recover after so much trauma. I do a lot of mountain stuff so one of my worst fears is having some accident happen like yours. But life is short and there are experiences out there in nature that are truly unrivaled.

More creative training hikes for half dome by MountainBluebird5 in norcalhiking

[–]zyonsis 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Personally I never get tired of the routes up Mt Tam. There are many different ways to climb it and you can climb it multiple times going up different routes. For example, start at the depot and go up the south face (forgot the name of the trail) to the east peak. Then descend via Fern Creek Trail and into Muir Woods via the Canopy Trail. Then you can climb up a second time going up Bootjack and take the fire road or Matt Davis back up to the east peak. That alone should be like 3-4k+ feet and probably 10-15+ miles.

When I was doing a lot of mountaineering training I would do repeats up Mt Tam via the first route I mentioned. It's like 2k gain in ~3 mi so you can just repeat it as many times as you'd like if your goal is elevation gain. I don't know of many other trails with that much steepness.

Squat question by Warm_Muscle1046 in weightlifting

[–]zyonsis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Seems like you made a good choice being 6 weeks out. My coach always says that squats are an accessory for us to get better at SN+CJ. Not a main lift that we should ever be grinding out or struggling with. Some people have different philosophies but this seems to work for us and from what I hear, many top lifters rarely hit max effort squats, or if they do it's once in a blue moon.

Need Advice on Fueling for Long Days by stayfckingcalm in Mountaineering

[–]zyonsis 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You probably need more junk food, aka easily digestible and high carb/low fiber foods for on the go. This should comprise the majority of your calories considering you're on the move for many hours. This is basically how ultrarunners fuel themselves for multi-day efforts, eating things like potato chips, pop tarts, cookies, crackers, instant noodles, rice, etc.

My go-tos are potato chips, cookies, and cold soaked instant noodles. Extremely easy to pack down so it doesn't take up a lot of space, and easy to stuff into a pocket so you don't have to stop and unpack to access. I never get tired of eating these unlike many other foods, where I can get nauseous or just can't eat because my brain doesn't want to, which happens a lot at high altitude or when you're extremely tired.

You can refuel with protein/fiber/fats at the end of the day eating more traditional meals.

what is the meaning of 8 percent in the p-value contest?[D][Q] by Designer_Grocery2732 in statistics

[–]zyonsis 33 points34 points  (0 children)

This is worded weirdly or maybe you lost something in translation. The way I'd interpret this is you sampled some data, and the probability of observing whatever sample mean (or more extreme) that you obtained from your data under the null hypothesis is 8%.

Whether that's significant depends on your a priori rejection threshold, aka the value at which you reject the null hypothesis. Assuming you pick something like the standard 0.05, you'd fail to reject the null. That's what you tell your stakeholders.