Walking the Varied Road
The techniques presented in this section begin with a big assumption: that you are walking on level terrain. While race walking competitions are rarely held on courses with a significant hill, training walks surely lead you to encounter a hill at one time or another.
Uphill
Race walking uphill requires slightly different technique than walking on a level surface or downhill. Imagine yourself as a bicycle rider in lowest gear. Bike riders spin their wheels in small gears without great resistance. To get the same effect, shorten your stride. A shorter stride reduces the effort required per step, which helps to counteract the extra effort needed to climb the hill. Also, don’t worry about pushing off with your toes as you would on flat ground. The effort would just be sent in the vertical direction. Instead, try to increase the cadence of your legs to compensate for the shorter stride. The faster tempo will assist with maintaining a speed closer to your norm.
Downhill
Once you hit the crest of the hill and head down, you need to shift gears. Elongate your stride, emphasize the hips, and decrease turnover rate. Exploiting hip flexibility, let gravity be your friend and pull you down the hill. For an added surge of speed, allow your swinging leg to attack the ground in front of you. While the braking action mentioned previously slows you down when you overstride, the angle caused by walking downhill counterbalances most of this action.

A final note of caution: if a hill is too steep for you to maintain proper technique comfortably, either jog or health walk down the hill. Remember, race walk competitions do not include sharp hills.

 
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