For off-season activities, mountain biking may be the best cross training available for skiingโ€”both mentally and physically. Physically, thereโ€™s the obvious fact that youโ€™re just going uphill and grinding it out. Of course it keeps you in shape. The downhill does as well, and has you shifting weight and working the legs in a very similar manner.

The micro muscles are what might surprise you. You manage to work all those little balance muscles, contorting your body to work around or avoid a tree, as you would while skiing through the trees. Later, when you find yourself sore in places you didnโ€™t think would be sore, you realize the work those micro muscles were doing.ย ย 

Some of my favorite trails have series of turns that mimic skiing fantastically. The mental-physical connection in mountain biking is also an amazing way to prepare for an upcoming ski season.ย  When trying to push your comfort zone, youโ€™re exercising your mind-body connection to its fullest. Again, as in tree skiing, you find yourself in a situation where if you thought about it, you would have nailed the tree. It takes practice to keep the split-second connection from what your eyes see to how your body moves. The uphill grind is a mental exercise, too. It becomes a mind-over-body experience that often occurs high in the alpine, or even below tree line as youโ€™re breaking trail.ย 

While OR doesnโ€™t market bike-specific gear, Iโ€™ve found one item in particular to be great to bring along when heading for a ride in the alpine: the Transcendent Sweater. This article of clothing has allowed me to sit and enjoy a view after a long climb without getting chilled. It doesnโ€™t have to be alpine, either. It could be sitting at a mid-ride destination in the Blue Ridge Mountains. The Echo Duo Longsleeve Tee is also great for riding when you need the quick-drying material and a bit more warmth than the short sleeves.

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