Training for Hiking, Treks & Climbs | BY Elie Abi Akar | PUBLISH DATE: June 20 2025 | READ TIME: 3 mins | UPDATED DATE: May 14 2026

How to Train for Island Peak

LHO climbers traversing the wavy glaciers of Island Peak under clear skies with panoramic views of the surrounding Himalayas.

Island Peak (Imja Tse) is more than just a beautiful summit tucked into the heart of the Khumbu. At 6,189 meters, it’s a true Himalayan experience, one that merges trekking through ancient Sherpa villages with a challenging, technical climb to the top. For many, Island Peak is a gateway to high-altitude mountaineering. But make no […]

Island Peak (Imja Tse) is more than just a beautiful summit tucked into the heart of the Khumbu. At 6,189 meters, it’s a true Himalayan experience, one that merges trekking through ancient Sherpa villages with a challenging, technical climb to the top. For many, Island Peak is a gateway to high-altitude mountaineering. But make no mistake, this isn’t a walk-up. It demands respect, preparation, and a solid game plan long before you tie in at base camp.
So how do you train for a mountain like Island Peak?
Let’s break it down.

1. Build a Strong Endurance Base

You’ll be trekking for nearly two weeks before even getting to the mountain. Long days on your feet, big elevation gains, and the constant pull of altitude — your body needs to be ready.

What to do:

Hike or ruck with a weighted pack (8–12kg) 2–3 times per week.
Aim for at least one long hike per week (4–6 hours).
Focus on time-on-feet rather than speed: think slow, steady, and sustainable.

2. Train Your Legs to Climb

Island Peak’s summit push includes steep snow slopes and fixed rope sections. Your quads, calves, and glutes will be doing the heavy lifting.

What to do:

Hill intervals: Find a steep hill or stairs and do repeat climbs with your pack.
Weighted step-ups: Add a box and a backpack to simulate summit day.
Include strength sessions 2x a week: squats, lunges, deadlifts…but keep it simple and functional.

3. Get Comfortable With Altitude

No amount of sea-level training can fully replicate high altitude, but you can prepare your body to adapt more efficiently.

What to do:

Trek at altitude if possible, even moderate elevations help.
Use acclimatization protocols in your training treks (e.g. climb high, sleep low).
Prioritize hydration, sleep, and nutrition — they matter more at 5,000m.

4. Learn the Ropes (Literally)

Island Peak isn’t Everest, but it is a mountaineering objective. There’s a glacier crossing, crevasse navigation, and a final steep headwall protected by fixed ropes.

What to do:

Take a basic mountaineering course (or refresher) with ropework, crampons, and ice axe use.
Practice jumaring on a fixed line in a controlled environment.
Learn how to descend on a figure 8 because rappelling skills are essential for the summit day descent.

5. Mental Preparation Is Half the Climb

Summit day can be long, cold, and uncomfortable. You’ll start in the dark, climb with a headlamp, and push yourself through fatigue. Your mindset matters.

What to do:

Train in tough conditions during early mornings, bad weather, and with tired legs.
Visualize the climb: the ridgeline, the headwall, standing on the summit.
Remember your reason for doing this; it’ll carry you when your legs can’t.

Final Thoughts

Training for Island Peak is about more than fitness, it’s about resilience. Show up well-conditioned, mountain-aware, and mentally grounded. Give yourself 3–6 months of focused preparation and, more importantly, don’t underestimate the mountain. Island Peak rewards those who respect it.
We’ve seen firsthand what it takes to reach that summit. And trust us: standing on top of that icy ridge, with Ama Dablam watching from across the valley, is something you’ll carry with you long after the rope is coiled and the boots come off.

Climb on!

















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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Elie Abi Akar headshot

Elie Abi Akar