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Archive for the Category "Canyon Ranch"

Water’s Healing Power Apr 12

If you are seeking relaxation and pampering, Canyon Ranch has a menu of over 200 services available to soothe, relax and revitalize your body, mind and spirit.  Your all-inclusive stay includes a generous individual allowance for professional consults and spa treatments. You can choose to be massaged, wrapped, manicured and pedicured to a state of bliss. Or you could meet with an exercise physiologist to design a fitness program to take home, consult with  a nutritionist to develop a practical, customized meal plan or receive a heart-centered Healing Touch session with a certified therapist.

So many choices. so little time. My advice: explore services NOT available in your home city.

Watsu Pool

For example, I tell everyone about the Aquatic Center at Canyon Ranch in Tucson. It is  a sacred space that contains 3 indoor Watsu pools where you can enjoy aquatic massage. There is an entire team of very experienced Watsu therapists here. You may request  either a male or female therapist who will float you in warm water in swirling dance-like movements while he/she stretches and massages your entire body.

During the day, you can gaze up at Native American symbols painted on the dome overhead or close your eyes and just go with the flow. In the evening, soft lighting and soft music create a different atmosphere and mood.

Watsu draws on water’s rejuvenating power. Of course, it also appeals to me as a part-time mermaid. If you prefer dry land, the 100 minute Stone Massage with hot and cool stones and aromatic essential oils is a close second. For more exotic therapies, consider the selection of Asian or Ayurvedic body treatments.

I schedule my Watsu appointments in the evening after dinner. Afterwards, I can slip my spa robe over my swimsuit, slide into those spa slippers, waddle back to my room, sink into that comfy big bed and sleep like a baby until it’s time for breakfast.

Goodnight and sweet dreams.

For more information, go to: www.IslandGetawaysTravel.com
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A Smorgasbord of Fitness Apr 08

As we drove through the main gate and up the driveway, my first view was of the Spanish colonial-style Clubhouse, at the very the heart of The Ranch, as it is affectionately called. (See previous post) After checking in at Registration, I took a guided tour of the property with a staff member from Guest Services, the concierge desk.

I had half expected dry desert with cactus, tumbleweeds and sun-bleached bones.  Instead, I found Southwestern-style buildings set within grounds landscaped with gardens, ponds, streams, and  fountains.  Accommodations are spread throughout in single-story buildings each consisting of a few well-appointed single or double rooms. In one secluded section, the casitas offer 1, 2 and 3 bedroom houses for family or friends traveling together.

CR Fitness ClassWelcome to the 80, 000 square foot Spa Complex featuring extensive spa and fitness facilities with cutting-edge programs and state of the art equipment. Here, you will find the separate men’s and women’s spa areas and treatment rooms as well as the gymnasiums, training rooms, racquetball courts,  a Pilates studio,  a Yoga Dome and the Hiking & Biking Departments. There are also walking and jogging trails, lighted tennis courts and outdoor swimming pools.

Canyon Ranch has been described as the ultimate adult summer camp. Canyon Ranch offers approximately 50 different classes and activities to choose from each day. It is a veritable smorgasbord of fitness where you are encouraged to participate in classes from A to Z: aerobics, aqua classes, boxing, Burdenko, dance classes, gyrotonic/gyrokinesis, meditation, Pilates, Yamuna, yoga, Zumba and much more.

So many choices, so little time. My advice: pace yourself.
You can’t physically do it all in one stay so don’t hurt yourself trying.
Balance is the key here and at home.

Next, the most relaxing spa treatment I have ever had.

For more information, go to: www.IslandGetawaysTravel.com
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A Desert Eden Apr 05

Forty years ago (1979), owners Mel and Enid Zukerman founded Canyon Ranch and developed their concept of a health resort dedicated to life enhancement. Set in the foothills of Tucson’s Santa Catalina Mountains in Arizona’s lush Sonoran Desert, it has long since become a world-renowned center for wellness. They have indeed created  a unique haven for relaxation, recreation and optimal health.

Canyon Ranch is an amazing place that almost defies description.  I first went there over 20 years ago thinking I knew what to expect. Of course, I was aware of its reputation for being an award-winning  spa.  I had read that it was a luxurious, ultra-all-inclusive, popular with celebrities (including Oprah!). In fact, it has received the Best Destination Spa Award from Conde Nast Traveler magazine multiple times. But I was about to learn that there is a lot more to their  immersion resort experience. I would come away delightfully surprized and completely overwhelmed and continue to go back for more.

Find out WHY as we begin making use of their abundant resources in the next post.

For more information, go to: www.IslandGetawaysTravel.com
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Day 16: Tee Time Dec 28

 The 3,400 square foot Golf Performance Center at Canyon Ranch in Tucson features state-of-the-art training aids and technology for golf enthusiasts. Beginners to advance players will benefit from individual consults with the resident PGA professionals as well as lessons, clinics and related fitness training.

Golf Performance Center

Golf Performance Center

Your personal services allowance can be used for a la carte golf appointments and plus play. Golf packages are also available that include private sessions plus rounds of golf at nearby Ventana Canyon (10 minutes away). Transfers, golf cart, driving range and greens fees are all included. Imagine playing against the backdrop of the Santa Catalina Mountains with newfound friends you met at the Golf Center.

Very serious golfers can elect to participate in the intense, individualized Peak Performance Program as it is applied to the specifics of this sport. (See previous posts Days 6-15 on the Peak Performance Program for runners).

For a complete list of upcoming 2010 retreats, go to
http://www.IslandGetawaysTravel.com/Wellness%20Retreats.htm

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Day 15: Stuffing My Face for Fitness Dec 23

by guest blogger, Michael Antonucci, author of www.RunningIsFunny.com

My peak performance training program at Canyon Ranch concluded with meetings with nutritionist Hana Feeney. I described my diet to her in great detail, from typical off-season meals to what I eat before, during and after long runs and speedwork.

I stay away from junk food, rarely drink alcohol, and pasta addiction is in my DNA. I always eat before a run, always use PowerBar Gels during long runs, and always have a Naked Juice fruit smoothie when I’m done, followed by a full breakfast. I’ve never had stomach problems while running and I thought my diet was the least of my problems.

But, as usual, I was wrong.

While my diet was perfectly adequate for a healthy middle-aged male, it was far short of what was necessary to fuel the number of miles I was running. Hana computed my average daily intake at 2,300 calories. My proportions were good, with carbohydrates making up about two-thirds of my diet. But for a training schedule with a lot of hour-long runs, plus several multi-hour runs, Hana figured I needed about 3,000 calories – an increase of about 30 percent.

I doubt there are very many people who hear the words “you need to eat more” from their nutritionist. I was licking my chops at my unexpected good luck. But, of course, there was a catch.

This wasn’t an invitation to load up on ice cream and cheeseburgers. The list of foods included apples, bananas, berries, low fat yogurt, natural peanut butter, almonds, brown rice, sweet potatoes, beans, and a huge raft of whole grain foods – including some dense, but tasty, breakfast cereals.

Hana also instructed me to reduce the time between gels during long runs, drink the Naked Juice Protein Zone for muscle repair, and added recommendations for vitamin supplements. I now take daily an antioxidant packet of Vitamins C and E, natural beta-carotene, CoEnzyme Q10, and glutathione, along with an omega-3 fatty acid supplement.

It was a lot to swallow, so to speak, but your engine won’t run well on beer and hot dogs. Food is more than fuel, but let’s face it: we’ll try almost anything to improve our running, but a revolutionary change in diet is probably the last thing we’ll consider.

So, with a folder full of papers, charts, graphs, and the hearty best wishes of the good folks at Canyon Ranch who examined every aspect of my physical well-being, I headed for home. Injuries kept me from reaping the full benefit of the program, but the lessons learned will serve me well for the rest of my running life.

The Peak Performance Program is also available for cycling, golf, swimming, tennis and triathalon training. This specialized health and fitness package can be added onto any group date.

For a complete list of upcoming 2010 retreats, go to
http://www.IslandGetawaysTravel.com/Wellness%20Retreats.htm

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Day 14: Overmatched by Dumbbells Dec 22

by guest blogger, Michael Antonucci, author of www.RunningIsFunny.com

I avoided it for as long as I could, but I still ended up in the weight room. If I’m skeptical about the benefits of weight training for distance runners, at least I’m not alone. There are a lot of articles online about runners and weights, and they range from the skeptical to the hostile. Not to mention weights can be downright dangerous.

But no one was suggesting that weight training would directly improve my running. My body scan indicated I could use less fat and more lean. A little time in the weight room should improve my overall body composition. Five pounds of muscle would be more beneficial than five pounds of fat.

Exercise physiologist Mike Siemens went easy on me because no one will ever mistake me for Charles Atlas. Old ladies were pumping more iron than I was.

Mike walked me through a strength program that I could continue at home: bench press, lateral pull-down, overhead press, leg press, biceps curl, triceps rope and ball, and leg curl. Interspersed between sets were a series of flexibility exercises utilizing the Burdenko method.

burdenko.jpg

Although Burdenko is best known for aquatic physical therapy, his land exercises are designed to improve coordination, endurance and balance. The catch and pull was tough. Think of it as your standard runner quad stretch, but you grab your foot with your opposite hand while walking and stretching toward the ceiling. It looked like something that would get you hooted off Dancing with the Stars.

I was much better at the pull and kick (pictured) and the crunches. I knew all those sit-ups I did in the military would eventually come in handy.

Mike put the whole sequence on a grid for me, advising me to start it up during my “off-season” (December through February) on my two non-running days per week.

Physical limitations aside, cross-training is contrary to my normal way of thinking, which is, you get better at running by running, better at writing by writing, and off-days are days off. But I’m a middle-of-the-pack runner, not Hal Higdon, so I’ll give it a try.

The Peak Performance Program is also available for cycling, golf, swimming, tennis and triathalon training. This specialized health and fitness package can be added onto any group date.

For a complete list of upcoming 2010 retreats, go to
http://www.IslandGetawaysTravel.com/Wellness%20Retreats.htm

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Day 13: What Are You Running From? Dec 21

by guest blogger, Michael Antonucci, author of www.RunningIsFunny.com

If you have been following my trek through the peak performance program at Canyon Ranch in Tucson, you know I have had to fast for 12 hours, play video games using my legs, give blood, scan my bones and body fat, run a 4-degree grade at 8.5 mph with an oxygen mask over my face, do speedwork in 90 degree heat and I still had the specter of the weight room hanging over me.

But none of this filled me with as much dread as my next appointment: 100 minutes with a behavioral therapist.

“What’s this for?” I asked the Lovely Mrs. A.

“She’s going to find out what you’re running from,” she replied, smiling at me.

Great. Was I going to have to tell her about the duck dreams?

I was worried for nothing. Ann Pardo, Canyon Ranch’s director of behavioral health, immediately made me feel comfortable and it was no chore at all talking about me, me, me.

headexamined.jpgI won’t bore you, dear reader, with the maze of my psyche, but Ann’s open-ended questions are designed not just to elicit information about your running, motivation, or performance, but to lend free rein to your discussion of those things, and see where it leads. In my case, it was very much like a standard counseling session – without any mention of griffins and disembowelment.

Then, in the midst of what had been merely a pleasant conversation with a very nice woman, Ann led me to an epiphany about my running – much to my astonishment. As hard as it is for me to write it here, I got very emotional. Yes, tears were involved.

I was pretty embarrassed, but invigorated at the same time. All the tests, drills and advice I received at Canyon Ranch will certainly improve my running. But nothing will help me more through those last few miles of a marathon than what I learned in my therapy session with Ann.

Afterwards, the Lovely Mrs. A. asked me how it went. “It was wonderful,” I said. “After all those miles and all that training, I actually discovered for the first time why I run.”

“And why is that?” she asked.

“For the best reason of all,” I replied, smiling at her.

The Peak Performance Program is also available for cycling, golf, swimming, tennis and triathalon training. This specialized health and fitness package can be added onto any group date.

For a complete list of upcoming 2010 retreats, go to
http://www.IslandGetawaysTravel.com/Wellness%20Retreats.htm

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Day 12: I Run through the Valley of the Shadow of Death Dec 18

by guest blogger, Michael Antonucci, author of www.RunningIsFunny.com

After a long deep sleep and a substantial breakfast I headed out for a morning run with exercise physiologist Mike Siemens. He’s an experienced triathlete and in 2006 he ran Boston, which is my ultimate goal. His plan is to observe my gait and give me an interval workout to improve the efficiency of my stride.

But as it turned out, I had a few problems with this plan: It was 9 a.m. In Tucson. In August.

The temperature was already 90 degrees F (I checked) and we set out on a trail that runs along the property. There’s a photo of it accompanying this column.

wasteland_400.jpg

OK, I added the cattle skull.

Something I wasn’t immediately aware of was the elevation. Canyon Ranch sits about 3,000 feet above sea level. I live in Sacramento, California, which is – believe me – a hot weather town, but only 25 feet above sea level. So my two-mile “warmup” was more like the last 300 meters of a grueling 10K.

Mike was patient and took me through each of the drills in turn. We began with a few sets of walking lunges. We followed with some high knees, then some butt kicks, and finished off with some strides.

As you can see from the videos, these drills are not designed to make you look particularly cool, but should help put some more boost in my stride. Mike advised me to add these drills to my weekly speedwork, for which he also provided some suggestions.

Now that we knew my max heart rate was 185, he suggested an interval workout that would gradually increase sets of 2-minute runs at around 85 percent max. I would start with five repeats and work my way up to 12.

After 45 minutes I was melting, but I was still able to jog… slowly… back to the facility. Having had my body examined from all different angles, inside and out, it was time to have my head examined.

The Peak Performance Program is also available for cycling, golf, swimming, tennis and triathalon training. This specialized health and fitness package can be added onto any group date.

For a complete list of upcoming 2010 retreats, go to
http://www.IslandGetawaysTravel.com/Wellness%20Retreats.htm

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Day 11: I’m Full of Wind Dec 17

by guest blogger, Michael Antonucci, author of www.RunningIsFunny.com

Having recovered sufficiently from my VO2 max test to understand spoken English, I sat down with exercise physiologist Mike Siemens to examine the results.

Mike explained the uses of the test: to measure work potential, general health and wellness, performance, and efficiency of exercise. He went over a number of ways to increase VO2 max, most of which involved various physiological mutations such as enlarging my left ventricle or increasing my capillary density. I figured if I could do these things, I might as well get the red bodysuit and yellow boots.

v02equipment_400.jpg

But Mike was just setting me up. A practical way to increase VO2 max is to reduce body fat. Clearly I was going to be walking that “last mile” to the weight room, probably with a priest performing last rites for company.

So I was prepared for the worst when Mike showed me the multi-column printout with my results. My heart rate maxed at 185. I burned a max of 3.9 liters of oxygen per minute. But what was the magic number? My VO2 max was 56.

Is that good?

Mike pulled out a table from the American College of Sports Medicine’s Guidelines for Exercise Testing and Prescription that utilized data from a Cooper Institute longitudinal study. My VO2 max put me in the top 10 percent of my age group, and probably the top 5 percent. In fact, I would be in the top 10 percent of males in their 20s.

Mike had another table that estimated potential 10K time based solely on VO2 max. He told me the table suggested I currently had the aerobic potential to run about a 42:30 10K.

I turned around quickly to see who was laughing so loudly, but it was me.

My 10K PR is 47:09. Mike emphasized that running is more than processing oxygen, and many factors affect speed. But obviously there was some room for improvement.

The printout provided one more crucial bit of information. It showed that at marathon pace I was burning 1,100 calories per hour. This led us into a long discussion about glycogen and anaerobic threshold, but the practical application of this knowledge would have to wait for my meeting with the nutritionist.

The Peak Performance Program is also available for cycling, golf, swimming, tennis and triathalon training. This specialized health and fitness package can be added onto any group date.

For a complete list of upcoming 2010 retreats, go to
http://www.IslandGetawaysTravel.com/Wellness%20Retreats.htm

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Day 10: Torquemada’s Treadmill Dec 16

by guest blogger, Michael Antonucci, author of www.RunningIsFunny.com

Leg strength tests and body scans are all to the good, but now I was going to get a chance to take a running test. Even those who are relatively new to running have probably heard of an aerobic capacity test – or VO2 max test. It measures your ability to transport and burn oxygen. If you are able to do this well, your distance running is steady and sure. Do it poorly, and you end up like Pheidippides.

I had a hearty lunch and headed to the small room where exercise physiologist Mike Siemens awaited me, along with a standard treadmill. Many VO2 max tests involve having sensors pasted to your body and an unwieldy contraption attached to your face. But we had a portable wireless gadget that utilizes a normal heart rate monitor and a standard oxygen mask, sending the data directly to the computer through telemetry – much like a guided missile. Although, in my case, it was more like a Nerf dart thrown by a 4-year-old.

vo2max_400.jpg

It all hangs on a harness that makes the entire get-up very unobtrusive, enabling you to concentrate on running. Mike explained how the test would work: I would start with a moderate walk, and he would gradually speed things up until I was running at near-top speed, after which he would add incline until I killed myself.

OK, I added that last part, but Mike wanted to make sure I would actually reach my max, but at the same time avoid any macho self-destruction. He mentioned a team of high school track stars who goaded one of their members into exceeding his max and reaching his next physical threshold – barfing.

Off I went. I must have been a little overexcited because my starting heart rate was 86. Walk. Walk fast. Jog slow. Jog. Run slow. Run faster. By minute 12 I was cruising along at my marathon pace, which is 8:30. At minute 13 we accelerated to 8:00 pace. No big deal.

Minute 14 – 7:30, slower than 5K pace for me. Still feel good.

Minute 15 – 7:00. Now I’m cooking. This is like the last 200 yards in a 5K, except I know it’s not going to end.

Minute 16 – My mile best in my old age is 6:36. Mike asks if I want more speed or more incline. I think about it for a second, and picture myself shooting off the back of the treadmill into the wall. “Slope! Slope!” I gasp. Mike adds two degrees of incline.

Minute 17 – “Are you OK?” Mike asks. I summon enough energy to nod my head, but can’t spare the breath to speak. Mike bumps me up to four degrees of incline.

Oh. Dear. God.

Not only am I running for my life, but up an endless sand dune. My mind departs my body, unwilling to share in the breathless agony. It hovers above me, staring at the treadmill timer—exhorting it, willing it to reach the magic number 18:00.

I make it! And fortunately Mike can see that if he adds two more degrees of incline I’m more likely to vault over the handrail and grab him by the throat. He slows the treadmill gradually while I focus on avoiding a facer into the control panel.

I soon experience a “runner’s high,” otherwise known as “stopping.” It feels so sweet.

The Peak Performance Program is also available for cycling, golf, swimming, tennis and triathalon training. This specialized health and fitness package can be added onto any group date.

For a complete list of upcoming 2010 retreats, go to
http://www.IslandGetawaysTravel.com/Wellness%20Retreats.htm

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