Zé wrote:So you hiked back down to the museum?
That would explain the soreness. Soreness comes from eccentric muscle contractions, which basically means the muscle is trying to contract but is being stretched out.
So in hiking, when you walk downhill, your quadriceps and gluts are being contracted but stretched, leading to soreness if not used to that level of eccentric work.
The steeper the grade, and more elevation loss, the worse it is. The only hike I've ever been sore from is Iron Mt #1 in the San Gabriels because there is about 7000 ft descent on really steep terrain.
Actually, had you done the whole C2C to the top and back down to the tram, you would have likely been less sore than you are now, because you would have done less downhill!
climbrx wrote:We didnt go to tram for many reasons. our plan was to hike till a certian time and see what we could see then turn around. We didnt have a second car at the tram even if we could have made it. I dont know how much snow or ice we would have incounteded and neither one of us had any gear / experience for that type of thing so those are the reasons why we didnt go all the way up. Pardon my incorrect use of the name C2C im still new to all the trail /route names.
Cy Kaicener wrote:My knees hurt coming down just from half way.
When I was young I used to recover in one day, but now it takes four days recovering from Skyline and thats just uphill.
FIGHT ON wrote:Cy Kaicener wrote:My knees hurt coming down just from half way.
When I was young I used to recover in one day, but now it takes four days recovering from Skyline and thats just uphill.
So what is the best way to recover? I've heard if you take a walk or a smaller hike the next day it speeds it up a lot. Sitting around just makes it take longer?
Return to Mt. San Jacinto & Santa Rosa Mountains
Users browsing this forum: Baidu [Spider] and 8 guests