Why the Squat Matters for Hikers
The squat isn't just a gym exercise—it's one of the most fundamental movement patterns your body uses every day. On the trail, you're squatting when you:
- Duck under low-hanging branches
- Pick up your dropped water bottle
- Set up or break down camp
- Navigate through tight spaces between rocks
- Rest in a comfortable position during breaks
More importantly, the squat reveals how well your entire body works as an integrated system. It requires mobility in your ankles and hips, stability through your core, and coordination between multiple muscle groups—all while maintaining good alignment under load.
What This Assessment Reveals
This squat test evaluates your body's ability to move through a fundamental pattern while maintaining several key checkpoints:
Mobility Requirements:
- Adequate ankle dorsiflexion
- Hip flexion without compensation
- Thoracic spine extension
Stability Requirements:
- Core control to maintain neutral spine
- Shoulder stability with arms extended
- Foot stability maintaining three points of contact
Coordination Requirements:
- Timing of movement initiation
- Maintaining alignment throughout the range
- Smooth reversal from descent to ascent
The Target Position
What we're looking for:
- Thighs parallel to the ground (or lower)
- Torso approximately parallel to your shins
- Maintaining the "two-hand rule" (neutral spine position)
- No loss of the three points of support in your feet
- No excessive forward lean or "butt wink"
What Your Results Tell You
✅ Clean Movement Pattern
If you can hit the target position while maintaining all the form checkpoints, your foundational movement system is working well. This supports:
- Efficient movement patterns on varied terrain
- Better load distribution through your joints
- Reduced risk of compensatory injuries
- Strong foundation for building hiking-specific strength
⚠️ Form Breakdown Patterns
🦶 Feet Turning Out Excessively or lose three points of contact:
What you'll see: Your feet rotate outward during the movement
What's likely happening: Tight calves or limited ankle mobility forcing compensation, weak or underactive shin muscles and glutes
Trail impact: Can contribute to knee tracking issues and inefficient power transfer on climbs
🦵 Knees Caving Inward (Knee Valgus):
What you'll see: One or both knees dive toward the midline of your body
What's likely happening: Overactive inner thigh muscles and tight TFL (that muscle near the front of your hip), underactive glutes and weak shin muscles that should provide stability
Trail impact: This pattern under repetitive load can lead to knee pain, IT band issues, and ankle instability—especially problematic on technical descents
🔄 Lower Back Arching Excessively:
What you'll see: Your lower back curves dramatically as you descend into the squat
What's likely happening: Tight hip flexors, lower back muscles, and lats pulling you into extension; weak or poorly coordinated glutes, hamstrings, and core muscles
Trail impact: Can contribute to lower back pain, especially when carrying a pack or on long hiking days
⬆️ Excessive Forward Lean:
What you'll see: Your torso tips too far forward, disrupting the shin-to-torso relationship we're looking for
What's likely happening: Tight hip flexors and calves restricting your ability to sit back into the movement; weak glutes and hamstrings that should be controlling the descent
Trail impact: This pattern can overload your knees and create inefficient movement mechanics, especially during step-ups and descents
Butt Wink (Pelvis Tucking Under):
- Often indicates tight hamstrings, limited hip mobility, or weak core control
- Can contribute to lower back stress, especially under load
Limited Depth:
- Could indicate restrictions in ankles, hips, or thoracic spine
- May reflect strength limitations or movement coordination issues
The Heel Elevation Test: Your Diagnostic Tool
If you struggle with the basic squat, try elevating your heels on a small board or book and repeat the movement.
If this dramatically improves your squat: Your primary limitation is ankle mobility (often tight calves and restricted ankle dorsiflexion). This is incredibly common and very responsive to targeted work.
If heel elevation doesn't help much: The restrictions are likely coming from your hips, core stability, or movement coordination—different areas to focus your efforts.
Why This Assessment is So Valuable
The squat is like a movement screening that tests multiple systems simultaneously. Unlike isolated mobility tests, it shows you how everything works together under the demands of a functional movement pattern.
It also serves as both an assessment and a progression tool. As you address the specific limitations it reveals—whether that's ankle mobility, hip stability, or core control—you can use the squat itself to track your improvement over time.
Your Movement Baseline
Remember, this is a movement check-in, not a performance test. The goal isn't to achieve perfect form immediately—it's to honestly assess where you are right now so you can make targeted improvements.
Some people will nail this movement pattern, others will have clear areas to work on, and many will fall somewhere in between. All of these starting points are valuable information that guides your path forward.
Building From Here
Whether you crushed this assessment or struggled with multiple aspects, this information tells us exactly where to focus your movement and mobility work. The squat pattern will improve as you address the specific limitations it reveals, and those improvements will translate directly to better movement on the trail.
This foundational movement pattern supports everything else you'll do in your return to hiking—from building strength to improving endurance to moving confidently over technical terrain.