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Training program for cross-country skiing: Become a better skier

Training program for cross-country skiing: Become a better skier

Hans Christer Holund and Petter Skinstad’s training program. Made for those who want want to train four to five times a week, and aim to participate in a ski race this season.

The training program is from the epiode with Hans Christer Holund and Petter Skinstad on Skisporet podcast. Listen to the full training discussion in the epiode available on Apple Podcast, Spotify and YouTube.

Training program for the ski season

We recommend you listen to the entire episode of the Skisporet podcast for full insight into what Holund and Skinstad put into their various sessions. They believe this is the “perfect” build-up training week for those who train 4–5 times a week:

Weekly training program

MondayRecovery after the weekend’s long sessions.
TuesdayLight session. Such as on a SkiErg or treadmill.
WedensdayKey session: Intervals. Running on a treadmill, running with poles or a SkiErg machine.
ThursdayRest
FridayLight training. Feel free to do some strength training on this day, but don't lift so heavy that you get stiff for the weekend’s important long sessions.
SaturdayKey session: Long hard session.*
SundayKey session: Long hard session.*

*Ideally, you should have two long weekend sessions, but obviously, you don't do this every weekend. Holund suggests prioritizing your hard sessions if you have to choose between that and the other runs on a weekend.

This training program is designed to give you the best possible preparation for your key sessions, intervals on Wednesdays and long weekend sessions. On the other days, you must focus on your workout and keep your body moving without sacrificing the resources needed for the so-called key sessions.

Intensity during the intervals

You can run intervals on a treadmill or on a Skierg machine. See our suggestions for sessions further on in the article. First, we have an important question to ask the World Champion in cross-country skiing:

How hard should you train in your interval sessions? Should you go all out or stay controlled and avoid reaching peak heart rate?
The amount of time you spend in the cardio zone is more important than how fast your heart rate is. I’d rather have you running at a slightly lower intensity that lasts for six minutes than have you giving your all in a four-minute run. So the answer is that you need to control it, says Holund.

So why does Holund recommend interval training without going at your maximum pace?
You might feel like you've trained more if you're really tired and feel the lactic acid burning, but the training effect is just as good if, during the intervals, you lower your heart rate a couple of beats. Ideally, you should be able to walk off the treadmill feeling that you have more to give. I like to say that it should be comfortably hard. You should be breathing heavily but not be out of breath. I never train in zone 5, which is close to peak heart rate.

How steep should the treadmill be? On social media, professional skiers tend to have a 10% incline when they run intervals.
I recommend that a recreational skier run on a 5–6% incline. If you've set the incline too steeply without training, your muscles will stiffen before you get your heart rate up sufficiently. Then you'll lose a lot of the interval effect, where the goal is to train your heart.

Holund has a good reason you don't want your muscles to become stiff during exercise if the goal is to ski in winter. You want to go skiing as soon as possible without burning acid or your body becoming stiff. If you always train at acid-burning intensity during intervals, you're training something that you won't need this winter.

The same applies if you do intervals on a SkiErg machine: You need to avoid your muscles becoming stiff.

If you notice that the intensity drops towards the end of the interval, you probably start too hard. Then start the next interval at a slower pace. The resistance of the ski machine also helps to control the intensity. Do not set your resistance so high that you don't get your heart rate up. Many skiers put it somewhere between five and seven.

Hans Christer Holund is world champion long-distance cross country skier. Here is his gold medal during the World Cup in Seefeld 2019. Image: NordicFocus

Intervals for treadmills, ski machines and outdoor training

6x6 intervals on a treadmill
Set the treadmill at a 5-6% incline and run intervals of six minutes. Repeat a total of six times with a two-minute break between each interval.

Intervals on a ski machine
10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 min.
The first interval lasts for ten minutes, the next one for nine minutes, the next eight minutes, and then proceed to the final interval, which is “only” one minute. Pause for 60–90 seconds.

Running with poles
Here we mean intervals where you run on steep uphill slopes with poles. Here too, you can run 6x6 minutes.

Roller skiing
6x6 or 6x8min where you are poling on roller skis. Preferably on a long uphill slope.

Hans Christer Holund stresses that it is not what activity you do that matters most but that you reach a high heart rate during the interval. Swim, use a rowing machine, run in thick mud, or do any other exercise that will help keep your heart rate at 90% of its max.

Long-distance roller skiing

It's the weekend; you’ve got time off and are going on a long ski run. Ideally, both days if you have the time and opportunity to do so, but the most important thing is to have at least one ski run of up to three hours. These should be on roller skis if the aim is to train for the winter.

Long, easy ski run

Roller skis are the most ski-like form of training you can do and probably the activity that will best prepare you for the forthcoming ski season. This long session should be easy and preferably last 2–3 hours. Intensity: Talking pace.

Hard long session

According to Holund and Skinstad, this is the most important session in the program. A hard session should last 2–3 hours, starting slowly and gradually speeding up. Feel free to finish it off by giving your all as though you’re doing Vasaloppet. “Remember that you’re training for what you’re going to be good at, and it’s the hard run that most resembles the ski race you’re going to do,” says Holund.

Long distance skier Petter Skinstad shares his training tips in the episode on Skisporet Podcast. Here together with his brother Mårten Soleng Skinstad.

Strength training for skiers

Hans Christer Holund makes a surprise revelation regarding his strength training. Listen him talk about it in the podcast.

For recreational and keen skiers, he and Petter Skinstad recommend focusing on strength training that only involves your body growth and that you focus on core training. You need to be able to ski well technically, maintaining a strong and stable position during thousands of pole strokes for several hours. For Petter Skinstad, who poles for miles on shiny skis, you need to be strong in everything from your wrists and elbows to your back, abs and hips. He emphasizes that regular ski-specific strength training needn't be overly complicated.

Different versions of sit-ups, hip thrusts, planks, body lifts, and dips are good, simple exercises that make you better prepared for winter skiing.

How heavy should you lift? According to Holund and Skinstad, this depends on how strong you are already. They recommend adding a little extra weight if you are light. If you’re a big and strong person, it’s enough to exercise with your body weight.

Also, remember to avoid this common mistake that several recreational skiers make: "Many skiers strength train in spring, summer, and autumn, but stop in winter. This is the opposite of what you should do because you want to be as strong as possible during the winter. You should therefore remember to get some strength training in between ski sessions," says Holund, who keeps his strength training to 5–10 minutes a day on his abs and back throughout the winter.

Both agree that strength training should not come at the expense of the key sessions in the program.

Training on skis

You’ve been training well in autumn with weekly interval sessions, but now you want to take the time to enjoy some nice, easy skiing. Should you swap these out so that you continue focusing on intervals or can you do a few easy sessions where you just focus on your skiing? Hans Christer Holund believes that you can easily benefit from the latter if your goal is speed in Birken or Vasaloppet in March. "I think your body will benefit from a period of up to a month in December or January when you take a break from intervals and focus on long, easy skiing. Occasionally, you can add in a tougher cross-country skiing session," he says.

In the weeks leading up to the competition, he recommends that you sharpen your fitness as follows: "Hopefully, you'll get plenty of distance in with your long ski sessions in December and January. In the three weeks leading up to the competition, reduce the distance and increase the intensity of some of the sessions. This means that you step up the interval training again. This is a safe and secure recipe for getting into shape, and something that will work for most people," says Hans Christer Holund in the podcast.

Summary: How to be perfectly prepared for the ski season

  • Use autumn to train hard with intervals and long ski sessions. Focus on being the best you can be in these sessions.
  • Vary between roller skiing, running and ski machines in the autumn. Roller skis are the most important form of training.
  • Add in some light strength training, focusing on the muscles you use when skiing.
  • Prioritize getting as many miles in as possible on your skis in December and January.
  • In the last few weeks before the competition, taper the distance and increase the intensity of the sessions.

Listen to the full episode with Hans Christer Holund and Petter Skinstad in the Skisporet podcast. Happy training.