Why a weighted pack matters more than gym strength
Mountaineering is a load-carry sport. Every objective above 3000m involves moving a 10-25 kg pack uphill for hours, and on bigger objectives like Aconcagua or Denali, the load can be 20-35 kg between camps. Gym squats and deadlifts build hip extension power, but they do not build the specific endurance, the postural fatigue tolerance, or the muscle resilience that carrying a pack for six straight hours demands.
The transfer from unloaded hiking to loaded hiking is also not linear. A 30-minute walk with a pack feels manageable for most fit people. A 4-hour walk with the same pack reveals every weakness in the shoulders, lower back, hip flexors, and quads that a flat session of squats will never expose. The only way to train for carrying a pack is to carry a pack.
This is also why training for Aconcagua goes wrong for so many otherwise fit climbers. They arrived strong. They had not done the carry work.
How much weight: the progression
Pack weight is a training variable that has to progress, exactly like dumbbell weight or running pace. Adding too much too soon is the most common mistake. Adding too little (or nothing) is the second.
A defensible progression, calibrated to a 75 kg athlete training for a 4000-6000m objective:
Pack weight is a dial, not a switch. Most amateurs treat it like a switch.
What to load with
Whatever fills the volume and does not slide around. Specific options, ranked by usefulness:
- Sandbags (waterproof, sealed). The gold standard. Soft fill conforms to the pack, weight is distributed evenly, and they will not damage anything if you set the pack down hard. 5kg, 10kg, 15kg sizes let you scale precisely.
- Water bottles or hydration bladders. Cheap, scalable in 1-kg increments (1 litre = 1 kg), and you can dump the load to lighten the descent. The downside: the weight shifts as you drink unless the bottles are full and tight.
- Books, wrapped in plastic. Dense, stable, free. Practical home option. Pad the back of the pack so corners do not dig in.
- Plate carrier weights or weight vest plates inserted into the pack. Compact and even, but expensive.
- What to avoid: loose rocks, dumbbells, and anything that shifts. Asymmetric load is the fastest route to a back injury.
When in the training week to use it
Pack work is high-stress on the postural and stabilising muscles, even when the heart rate stays in Z2. It pairs well with some sessions and poorly with others.
- Yes: long Z2 hikes (the long Saturday session is the best place for the heaviest pack), midweek hill walks, hut-day simulation efforts.
- Sometimes: stairmaster intervals at lower weight (5-8 kg) to train load tolerance at intensity.
- No: threshold or VO2max sessions (compromises form, increases injury risk), recovery walks (defeats the purpose), running (pack jostles, joint stress).
Common pack-training mistakes
- Wrong pack. A daypack with a 15 kg load is misery. Use the actual pack you will carry on the mountain, or a similar-volume hiking pack with a proper hip belt and load-lifters. The pack matters more than the weight.
- Adding too fast. 5kg one week, 12kg the next is asking for a back issue. Progress 1-2 kg per week, max.
- Loading the pack high. Heavy items belong low and against your back, not at the top. High and away from the body shifts your centre of gravity and torques your lower back.
- Skipping pack training entirely on weekday sessions. If your only weighted session is Saturday, the body never adapts to back-to-back load. A 5-7 kg pack on Tuesday's hill walk costs nothing and pays off.
- Training the same pack weight you will use on summit day. Summit day is usually a lighter load (you have left base-camp gear behind). Training carry-day weight is what matters - heavier than summit day, similar to your between-camp load.
- Ignoring foot care. Heavier pack = more force per step = blisters that ruined trips you trained months for. Test socks, boots, and lacing under load before the trip.
How TTM uses pack weight as a training variable
What the algorithm does with your pack
- Pack weight feeds the load calculation. Every weighted session counts more than an unweighted one. The algorithm uses a Pack Load Factor that scales the session's training stress to your pack weight relative to body weight.
- Pack weight progresses across phases. Base starts light. Build adds load weekly. Specific matches the trip's realistic carry weight. You do not need to remember to add a kilo - the plan tells you.
- Peak-specific carry targets. Aconcagua's 17-22 kg carry-day weight is different from Mont Blanc's 6-8 kg summit-day weight. The plan calibrates the final-phase pack weight to your peak.
- Form on pack-heavy days. When your fatigue state (MFat) is elevated, the algorithm reduces pack weight before reducing duration. Form before load.
A representative pack-training week (Build phase)
10 weeks out from a 4000m peak, 10 hours/week budget:
- Mon · easy 60 min Z2, 5 kg pack (habit + posture)
- Tue · strength session, no pack
- Wed · stairmaster intervals, no pack
- Thu · Z2 hike with weighted pack, 2-3 hours, 10-12 kg pack
- Fri · easy 45 min Z2 + mobility, no pack
- Sat · long mountain day, 4-5 hours, 12-14 kg pack
- Sun · rest or 60 min easy on tired legs, no pack
Three pack sessions per week. Pack weight progresses 1-2 kg per week through Build. Pack lives at home with a labelled fill so weight is consistent week to week. The deeper rationale for the polarised distribution is in our heart rate zones for mountaineering guide.
The takeaway
A weighted pack is the most peak-specific training tool a mountaineer owns. Used badly, it injures people. Used well, it builds the load-carry endurance that gym strength cannot. The pattern that works: start light, progress weekly, match the trip's realistic carry weight in the final block, and keep pack sessions to long Z2 days. Get this right, and the carry days on your trip stop being the hard part.