View Full Version : Paging Gym Rats and Fitness Nerds
Foggy_Goggles
12-24-2003, 08:44 AM
I’m tired of my routine. I need to switch it up a bit. I go to the gym 3 days a week minimum, sometimes more. Currently, I stretch first (I love stretching), do 25mins of cardio on the orbital, then hit the weights. I go:
Day 1 – arms, chest
Day 2 – legs, shoulders
Day 3 – abs, back
I’m just using the regular machines (and free weight “machines”) for the standard exercises. 3 sets of 15 reps. I’m going for basic fitness with an emphasis on core strength and shoulders (‘cause of a previous injury and surgery). I’m in pretty good shape, I carry a couple lbs of cube fat, but want to be a machine. My ski posse is insane (a smokejumper, a former college tight end, and a injun maniac) and they are always ½ a step in front of me. Also, I have a hut trip planned in BC in March that I want to rule.
1. How should I change my workouts?
2. Are there any websites that have good workout listed
3. What should I do to document progress, I don’t keep track of anything
4. Any particular exercises you recommend.
I eat a pretty good diet (no fast food) but nothing special.
Thanks
truth
12-24-2003, 08:52 AM
Here ya go... (http://www.bodyforlife.com/train_mens.shtm)
personally i am all about the pool, you still need to do leg strengthening for skiing, but the pool tends to kick your ass in all around way similar to a rough day in the bc....plus girls in bathing suits; can't go wrong there.
homerjay
12-24-2003, 08:57 AM
Suggestions (I need some help, too...NOT an expert or even close)
More/different Cardio.
Longer, lower intensity to build an aerobic base, combined with high intensity short stuff. Does your gym offer spin class? I reccommend it. If you like to run, it's great prep for skiing....when it sucks just visualize yourself trailbreaking and skinning like a maniac.
Stretch after cardio, not before. Warm muscles stretch more effectively.
I started doing regular yoga classes about 2 months ago. Core strength, flexibility, and balance are all improved.
my $.02 - and that's probably all it's worth.
Benny Profane
12-24-2003, 09:03 AM
Outside magazine always has articles with long, involved schedules to attain some sort of level, but, jeez, that's not leaving much time and energy for the rest of your life. Sounds like you got it down pretty well, but I'd be more aerobic (spinning, stairmaster for an hour).
My solution is to bring the weed. My people always wait the old man with the smoke.
Ireallyliketoski
12-24-2003, 09:09 AM
Foggy,
If your knees are good I would suggest throwing some running into the mix. Hands down this has been the only thing that I've really notice help my overall endurance and ability to keep going all day. The key is to do what I call interval running, start off with a jog for about 1/2 mile to warm up, then stretch for a bit, then sprint for about 1/2 mile, jog 1/2 mile, sprint 1/2, so forth and so on. I usually only do a total of 3 miles. What this has taught my body is how to deal with lower oxygen levels, I mean you are huffing during and after the sprints. So when you are touring at a steady pace it will feel very comfortable. I just started running this year and this was the only training I did for a 1/2 marathon I ran this year (longest previous distance was 4 miles) and I did the 1/2 in 1hr 50 minutes, not the greatest time but I only trained for about two weeks. When I was jogging the race at a nice steady pace I felt so comfortable and I believe this was because of the hard short sprinting.
Yoga too is great and take up rock climbing if you need another ridiculously expensive hobby :)
Strider
12-24-2003, 09:10 AM
exrx.net
SledNeck
12-24-2003, 09:18 AM
Foggy,
Everybody has their own idea for fitness, however, I will speak from my own experience. I used to be fat boy, 235(+/- ). Decided bout 3 years ago to change my lifestyle. Now 185lb and 11% bf.
How do I do it? Intense weight-training and interval cardio training.
You want core-strength? dead-lifts and squats are the key to core strength. In addittion, to that you should try to keep you reps in the 8-10 range. 15 is great for a super light warm up set, but, for work range it is extremely catabolic and will do more harm then good. Simply put its called overtraining.
Diet is 9/10'ths of the law. You need to eat 6-8 meals a day that are evenly distributed caloricly. If your maintaining weight bout 15 calories per pound in bodyweight per day.(180 lbs *15 calories bout 2700) Experiment with the ratios of macronutrients to see what works for you. I do 50% protein 30% Low GI Carbs and bout 20% EFA's. Keep track of your diet by opening a free account at www.fitday.com (http://www.fitday.com)
For a good weight training series go to: http://www.wannabebig.com/article.php?articleid=25 (http://http://www.wannabebig.com/article.php?articleid=25)
Bottom line for core strength is big heavy compound moves.
To see results you must always push yourself beyond the comfort level, its just like skiing, if your hard-corp you'll see results. Step it up.
Oh, hope thats not too gym rat for you....
Foggy_Goggles
12-24-2003, 09:27 AM
So Carl Williams, ? about the body for life thing.
Say its an "upper body weight training day" do a do 6 sets of 1 exercise for each body part (Chest/Shoulders/Triceps/Back/Biceps).?
Can I do the cardio on the same day as the weights and make it a 3day instead of 6day program.
If I go an extra day should a just do cardio?
Have you used the program, does it work?
truth
12-24-2003, 09:44 AM
Originally posted by Foggy_Goggles
So Carl Williams, ? about the body for life thing.
Say its an "upper body weight training day" do a do 6 sets of 1 exercise for each body part (Chest/Shoulders/Triceps/Back/Biceps).?
Can I do the cardio on the same day as the weights and make it a 3day instead of 6day program.
If I go an extra day should a just do cardio?
Have you used the program, does it work?
The 6th set for each body part should be a different exercise...I know that's not very clear on the site.
Yes, you can always add more cardio...the idea of the BFL program is to make it doable over the long haul...think years not weeks.
Don't look at as an extra day, rather you are alternating your upper and lower body wieght workouts with cardio or rest days in between. So if you follow that schedule your next weight day would be lower body. Don't discount the value of a day off...the body needs time to reboot, especially if you mix in ski days, travel and the stresses of daily life into the mix. The idea is to give you a framework to guide you over the long haul. Reality will dictate where you need more flexibility in the program, while the program will allow you to get back on track with a purpose.
Yes, I've been working with Bill Phillips from EAS since 1996. Reliable and honest info that is not interested in making you into a monster, just a healthy functional human body.
Snow Dog
12-24-2003, 09:54 AM
If you can do 3 sets of 15 then you need more weight. When I reach the point that I can do 2x10 then it's time to increase the weight. To build muscle you want to stimulate growth but not damage the existing muscle. So pushing 'til I can't push no more works for me. I try and do the weights twice a week. Muscles build for 3-4 days after being stressed and then start to decline. So once a week is almost pointless.
Then I add 2-3 days of cardio. At least an hour on the bike, longer if I'm hiking or skiing. Get a heart rate monitor (the chest kind). I don't do cardio without it.
You'll need lots of protein to build those new muscles. I think it's 1 gram per pound of body weight per day. That steak of chicken is only 20-30% protein so an average 150# would need 1-1.5 pounds of meat a day. I use protein powder to buld up. It's cheap and concentrated.
That's my advice.
Sledneck said it best, more weight less reps. Squats are great but risky alone. If the place has a good squat machine, use it. Dead lifts are great too. They must be done with very strict form or you will blow your back out. A good website is Dr. Squat. Try to use fee weights as much as possible, including dumbells. When you hit a wall and can't add more weight, go up in 1 or 2 pound increments instead of 5. Always try to add more weight each week , even if it is only a few pounds. I understand that cardio is best done after lifting. Make sure you eat some protien after lifting and drink tons of water. It's been working for me the last 6 months. I'm sorry I ever stopped but hope to keep it up for good now. Really makes a difference on the hill.
Foggy_Goggles
12-24-2003, 10:27 AM
This rools. OK so it seems like some systems recomend more weight less sets and some less weight (or changing weight) more sets. Is it true that more weight is better for size and more sets is better for fitness and athletics? I want to be a fitter better athlete not have a better beach body.
[confused]Truth, does that six set deal mean that if I was training quads I'd do 5 sets of leg presses and 1 of leg extentions?
Lumpy
12-24-2003, 10:47 AM
I frikken love watching the lower rep/more weight rats with a spotter on either side of the bar and the lifter using every muscle in the system to facilitate getting that extra ten pounds up for MAX. What a fukkin joke.
I suppose its all dependent on what you want out of the workout. I stay with lower weight, isolate the muscle group and do it, precisely, and in control. 4 reps of 15 keeps the heartrate up if you don't sit aound with the meatheads between sets for 5 minutes and bullshit about your shitty relationship, new ultra wicking workout thong, or "supplement" cycle of the month.
But, I just like the high rep, lower weight workout to keep my ass and gut from rivalring Fat Bastards.
Three to Four days a week in gym (three max during ski season).
Day 1- Back and Triceps, Abs 20 minutes of cardio ( 2 minute intervals to 80% of target heart rate, with one minute rest speed)
Day 2-Chest and Biceps, same on cardio
Day 3- Shoulders, Abs 15-min of cardio, three minute intervals at 80% of heart rate.
SledNeck
12-24-2003, 11:00 AM
But, I just like the high rep, lower weight workout to keep my ass and gut from rivalring Fat Bastards
Contrary to what some people believe, high rep, lower weight workouts will NOT burn fat more efficiently. What they will do is burn muscle. Lean muscle is what burns fat, builds strength and builds endurance. To keep lean muscle you must stimulate growth and overload, else the body sees fit to cannibalize its own tissue and store fat for reserves.
And yes HIIT (High Intensity Interval Training) post weight is the best time to do cardio. Google it, 3 times a week of a 20 minute HIIT session, is far more productive 5 times a week of 45 minute endurance type cardio session.
HIIT links: http://www.wsu.edu/~strength/hiit.htm (http://http://www.wsu.edu/~strength/hiit.htm), http://www.exrx.net/FatLoss/HIITvsET.html
truth
12-24-2003, 11:07 AM
Originally posted by Foggy_Goggles
This rools. OK so it seems like some systems recomend more weight less sets and some less weight (or changing weight) more sets. Is it true that more weight is better for size and more sets is better for fitness and athletics? I want to be a fitter better athlete not have a better beach body.
[confused]Truth, does that six set deal mean that if I was training quads I'd do 5 sets of leg presses and 1 of leg extentions?
Something like that...everyone's body will respond to various stimulus in different ways. I know my legs get bigger from lifting higher reps...same with my arms. My chest and back are opposite. I vary my workouts according to what my body is doing (but 15 years in the gym will give you that kind of understanding).
As for the leg workout...I break it down into Quads, Hams and calves and do six sets for each. For quads you could do 5 sets of leg press followed by a superset (means no rest in between) of extensions.
Ideally you want to raise the weight lifted with each set for the first 4 and then drop back to the set 1 weight for the 5th set. If you nail your weights right so that you can only get the 12-10-8-6-12-12 reps you will be toast going on 1 minute rest.
The 1 minute period is key as it gives the muscles time to blow out the acid even though you might not feel ready for the next set. Wear a watch witha countdown timer as it makes it easy to stay on top of the sets. You'll be amazed how hard and how much work you've pumped out in 45 minutes of lifting.
Lumpy
12-24-2003, 11:10 AM
Originally posted by SledNeck
Contrary to what some people believe, high rep, lower weight workouts will NOT burn fat more efficiently. What they will do is burn muscle. Lean muscle is what burns fat, builds strength and builds endurance. To keep lean muscle you must stimulate growth and overload, else the body sees fit to cannibalize its own tissue and store fat for reserves.
I guess I'm not looking to burn fat in my weight workout, just keep everything toned, not build muscle, but keep the heartrate up. I feel that only facilitates my cardio workout. Seems that higher reps lower weight, at least in my case, fatigue the muscle more. Whereas I seem to have reserves left if I subscribe to the low rep high weight. Couple with a short burst high intensity cardio it seems like a good philosophy.
At least I'm not sucking a valve when I start skiing in Nov. so it must be doing some good....that and the size 44 Dickies are kept at bay.
truth
12-24-2003, 11:16 AM
Sled Neck is kinda right....though he belongs to the meat head school of training. BTDT...it works but it's not the only way as he might have you believe. High reps...20+ where the activity becomes primarily aerobic could do this to a lean body. A fat ass will benefit from any activity, period.
Snow Dog
12-24-2003, 11:17 AM
Originally posted by Foggy_Goggles
This rools. OK so it seems like some systems recomend more weight less sets and some less weight (or changing weight) more sets. Is it true that more weight is better for size and more sets is better for fitness and athletics? I want to be a fitter better athlete not have a better beach body.
[confused]Truth, does that six set deal mean that if I was training quads I'd do 5 sets of leg presses and 1 of leg extentions?
To increase strength (power) then you need to push the muscle to failure. Once you reach the strength you want then increase reps for endurance. One training program was super slow -- one set with 20-30 seconds per rep 'til failure with no more than 10 reps. The idea is to stress the muscle continuously.
To get a beach boy body takes a lot of time and dedication. It also means burning off all the fat to bring out muscle definition. This means high cardio. I remember reading that (in his bodybuilding days) Arnold ran 5 miles a day to keep the fat off.
Xover
12-24-2003, 11:38 AM
Here I come from a totally different; way out angle. Based on your original description and reading between the lines on what you would like to accomplish - try:
... plyos w/emphasis on explosiveness
... weight/non-weighted movements that emulate skiing movements
... trail run or hike or at least get on the treadmill and crank up the incline to like 8-10%
.. also continue to work on "core" strength
These are what I concentrate on the last two months of the fall (September and October) and nobody except Dan the friggin man can hang with me ALL day, bell to bell, hitting it hard, multiple days in a row; not braggin, just telling you how it is. Most others usually fade around 3ish and call it a day.
Oh ya one last thing; good supplements of protein, glutamine and glucosamine every day with some creatin and ribose thrown in for good measure on those endurant/power days.
But, above all else go with what your body responds to as far as number of reps, heavy vs. light weight, etc. Everybody's body is different; you gots to learn about yours.
The AD
12-24-2003, 11:44 AM
Originally posted by hev
personally i am all about the pool, you still need to do leg strengthening for skiing, but the pool tends to kick your ass in all around way similar to a rough day in the bc....plus girls in bathing suits; can't go wrong there.
I swim competitively and agree it's good training. Also agree you'll need to do separate leg training because it's difficult to get in a lot of leg work swimming. If you throw in some good hard kick sets with or without a kickboard it will help.
The only problem with swimming is it's very technique critical. If your technique isn't good you'll probably hit the anaerobic threshold pretty quick and you won't be able to continue. If your technique is good, the best way to train in swimming is by doing sets, just like in weights. So, intead of just getting in and swimming amile continuously at a moderate pace, do a set of 15x100 on an interval you can make with maybe :10 seconds rest. This is a gross simplification, but the gist is you probably won't get a lot out of just getting in a splashing around for 30 minutes. There are some good references for swimming training on the web. One good source is US Masters Swimming (http://www.usms.org)
The other advantage of swimming is it tends to be easier on the body than other sprots like cycling, and especially running. You can get shoulder injuries from swimming, but only if you overtrain with poor technique. Usually it's pretty easy on the joints. The down side is you smell like chlorine all the time!
Tippster
12-24-2003, 11:57 AM
Originally posted by The AD
...So, intead of just getting in and swimming amile continuously at a moderate pace, do a set of 15x100 on an interval you can make with maybe :10 seconds rest...
Or you could do 16x100 for a METRIC mile... ;)
Seriously, AD is absofrigginlutely right. I used to swim competitively as well, and breaking it into sets is the way to go. I'll break those sets into a de-facto IM (sans Butterfly - pisses too many people off at the Y). You start with 100 Free, then 100 Back and 100 Breast. If I'm doing kicks that day I'll finish that 1/4 mile with 100 of a kick, then repeat. 10-15 secs rest between hundreds (4 laps in a 25m pool) and 30 secs rest between 1/4 miles (400's), keeping track of heart-rate on my neck.
If I'm not doing kicks, I repeat the free-back-breast 100's 5 times, then finish with a 50m sprint of each of those strokes. Yeah, yeah, that's 50m more than a mile. So be it.
Interesting weight workout, Truth. I need to get back into that, now that I actually give a damn about my fitness again (I quit smoking in July! Gotta love Smoke-away!)
truth
12-24-2003, 12:00 PM
Xover...plyos are great but for an untrained athlete they can do far more damage than good. Few people realize that in any training the most important thing is to use perfect form. This not only prevents injury but allows you to work the targeted area more effectively. This means that the #'s don't matter so much as the amount of work that is being done. the better the form, the harder the effort the more you get out of it. Too many peolpe waste too much time slopping through workouts with the notion that moving the weight / body is the goal. The idea is to work certain muscles in specific ways and be done so you can get on with your life.
Xover
12-24-2003, 12:13 PM
T,
so .... what are you trying to say? :confused: a lil clarification homey.
truth
12-24-2003, 12:19 PM
Originally posted by Xover
T,
so .... what are you trying to say? :confused: a lil clarification homey.
Plyos and an untrained athlete usually end up in PT.
Too much emphasis is placed on heavy vs light when what really matters is how hard you're working. I can squat 400#'s with shitty form and a spotter but get a better workout if I squat 185 with perfect form very slow and controlled. I've spent too much time in the gym in this life and have learned how to check my ego at the door and train hard and smart so that I can stay strong, flexible and healthy without pissing away hours every day in the gym. There is no reason to train for more than an hour on any given day unless you're riding for US Postal.
Originally posted by SledNeck
Contrary to what some people believe, high rep, lower weight workouts will NOT burn fat more efficiently.
Actually, it will. The problem is you'd have to perform the same excercise for at least 30 minutes or longer (much longer) depending on the load-bearing muscle group.
SledNeck
12-24-2003, 12:29 PM
There is no reason to train for more than an hour on any given day unless you're riding for US Postal.
Agree 100% Best results for myself.... High Intensity Lift 35-40 minutes follwed by 20 minutes HIIT, All this in 4 day split
Actually, it will. The problem is you'd have to perform the same excercise for at least 30 minutes or longer (much longer) depending on the load-bearing muscle group.
Context, is everything.... Of course while your training you possibly burn more calories. Over time, however, the depleted muscle tissue will not promote the same level of fat-burning/calory burning potential that the lean muscle tissue would have had you one trained with heavier weight at lower reps.
Its the do I want to be a fat 180 lbs or a lean muscular 180 lbs? I know plenty of 180 lb guys that look thin and work out all the time. They take off their shirt and look like a girl. The thing I consistently see in my Gym is scrawny guys with a gut do high-rep. Lean muscular dudes lift heavy low reps.
Foggy_Goggles
12-24-2003, 12:40 PM
OK, a couple of things..
a. I'm not a gym JONG, I've been working out for years. College athletics will find you in the weight room quite a bit. I've just had to focus and develop a routine now that I work behind a desk. I understand that form is important. My main deal is that I'm trying to workout more efficiently and want to start with something new.
b. I'm going to try the Truth BFL lifting plan. I know a few dudes that have had good success with it. I'll document what I do for a week or so then you can tell me if I'm doing it right.
c. For Cardio, I'm going to go the interval method. Do I really need a heart rate monitor? Can I do the cardio on the same days I lift? If I'm using a treadmill or orbital do I just change the difficulty for the intervals? What about the ramp angle? It would be impossible for me to get to the gym 6 days a week and it's dark out when I'm not at work.
d. Swimming - my form is not good enough for this to be a good workout for me.
e. I'll look into the suppliments. Do I have to cut down on my regular meals if I use the protein powder? When do I take it, after a workout?
What is the best way to document progress? Should I write everything down and compare the weight I'm lifting or is it the subjective stuff like how I "feel"?
Thanks for all the input. I know there is more that one "right way".
Snow Dog
12-24-2003, 01:14 PM
Originally posted by Foggy_Goggles
OK, a couple of things..
c. For Cardio, I'm going to go the interval method. Do I really need a heart rate monitor? Can I do the cardio on the same days I lift? If I'm using a treadmill or orbital do I just change the difficulty for the intervals? What about the ramp angle? It would be impossible for me to get to the gym 6 days a week and it's dark out when I'm not at work.
e. I'll look into the suppliments. Do I have to cut down on my regular meals if I use the protein powder? When do I take it, after a workout?
What is the best way to document progress? Should I write everything down and compare the weight I'm lifting or is it the subjective stuff like how I "feel"?
Thanks for all the input. I know there is more that one "right way".
c - I like it because it gives instant feedback about how hard my body is working. If your on a machine then you can set the pace/effort and the the monitor isn't as necessary. Outside where wind, temperature and variying elevations change the effort it helps keep me in the zone. Otherwise my mile-to-mile times are all over the place and it's hard to tell if you're getting faster or just running harder.
e - The protein supplements are in addition to your regular meat. For me the meat meal is dinner so a supplement or two during the day spreads of the protein intake. The best time is after a workout (within an hour) so I have one scoop (24g of protein) after lifting plus one scoop every morning plus my usual dinner. Plus beer of course.
Keeping a log is handy if you have trouble remebering weights and reps from session to session. For me that's the only reason. How you feel is really important -- the goal is to be healthy, not to promote injury. So if you push it hard (lifting or skiing) then your body may not be ready for more heavy lifting. Pushing yourself because you're tough will just lead to injury. This doesn't include "I don't feel like it, I think I'll go watch peelers tonight" kinds of feelings. You should commit to the time and vary the workload.
The AD
12-24-2003, 03:37 PM
Originally posted by truth
There is no reason to train for more than an hour on any given day unless you're riding for US Postal.
Are you talking about a weight workout, or any kind of workout? I disagree if you're talking about a general conditioning workout like swimming or biking. I'd say an hour is the minimum you should be working out.
truth
12-24-2003, 03:47 PM
Originally posted by The AD
Are you talking about a weight workout, or any kind of workout? I disagree if you're talking about a general conditioning workout like swimming or biking. I'd say an hour is the minimum you should be working out.
You're just not going hard enough.;)
DINMS
12-24-2003, 04:48 PM
I run(Jog) a mile 3 days a week becuase they make me in PE then I go hang out with the tough weight-lift-dudes even though I can only bench like 105 pounds. Then occationaly shame the tough-weight life dudes on the leg press. Is this a good workout?
Stikki
12-24-2003, 05:52 PM
Body For Life- Noooooooooooooo! BFL is basically Epicski for fitness types.
If you want the real deal get on over to T-mag. www.testosterone.net (http://www.testosterone.net)
There are over a thousand articles there and they are all top notch. Go to the FAQ section and start reading. There is a program for just about anything fitness or sport related.
Trust me on this. It will blow your mind.
pollard
12-24-2003, 08:05 PM
I was gonna talk to a personal trainer because I've hit a platue and have been there for a month. But I'll try some of those sites you guys listed. hopefully this will save me some $$
bigtwig00
12-24-2003, 09:41 PM
jsut a suggestion---- im in the weight room at my high school every day after school with the football team. we were state runners up and we have some big fellas on our team. we do our work our in a 2 day rotation instead of three and if u wanna gain massive stength fast you could always look in to things like createan and other protein drugs but they can be harmfull.... we do 4 sets of 5 and use a lot of weight to build strenght faster,, i would imagine its what u would want to do------ again jsut a thought
Lumpy
12-25-2003, 01:19 AM
Originally posted by Foggy_Goggles
c. For Cardio, I'm going to go the interval method. Do I really need a heart rate monitor? Can I do the cardio on the same days I lift?
Foggy, by all means you can do cardio on lift days. Nothing wrong with short, high intensity burst cardio training. You are simply extending out the time period that your heart rate is elevated.
Do you need a heart monitor? No. It helps to pinpoint where you are at in relation to your target rate vs. max rate. Most gyms will rent out a monitor for a buck or so a session. However, after awhile you'll be able to know about where you are at with the heart rate. Hey, if you aren't sucking wind, nut up and push it a little harder. If ya puke while on the cardio machine, you are doin good. ;)
slippy
12-25-2003, 12:48 PM
Originally posted by truth
You're just not going hard enough.;)
I'm confused about this, too. Short workouts won't get me in shape for day-after-day of skiing/sledding/skinning. I realize interval training is good for skiing as it's all about short bursts of energy, but I need endurance too. It seems like 3-a-week short cardio workouts, no matter the intensity, is for weekend warriors? Didn't you mention that you do 20 minute spinning workouts?
Foggy_Goggles
09-16-2004, 03:11 PM
Bump cause it took me forever the find this thread. Time to move from the outdoor gym to the indoor gym.
Ski to Be
09-16-2004, 05:31 PM
Your hut trip is not until March. So just ski harder and longer when the season starts
and don't underestimate diet in the factor. That is what seperates elite athletes from the rest all else being equal
lemon boy
09-16-2004, 05:39 PM
Maybe you should work more on your hand eye coordination
:p :p :p :p
PhishingME
09-16-2004, 06:20 PM
What's the deal with plyos being bad? Is it strictly a form or repetitive movement thing?
The PT hooked me up with a new program and is supposed to show me them tomorrow. They sound like they should work. I was a little sketch, but he said "like doing that leg extendsion is really going to help with skiing in the trees". Kind of makes sense. You need to be explosive. He's thrown in some cool exercises in there like bicept curls standing on one leg, jump squats, and nose breakers on the big gym ball. And one whole core day.
Personally for cardio I prefer the stair master in extra steep boot pack mode, and the eliptical on intense 45 min tour.
Foggy_Goggles
09-16-2004, 06:26 PM
Originally posted by lemon boy
Maybe you should work more on your hand eye coordination
:p :p :p :p
I believe the score is 2-0 me, no? And I've only been out once.
Foggy_Goggles
09-16-2004, 06:27 PM
Originally posted by Ski to Be
Your hut trip is not until March. So just ski harder and longer when the season starts
and don't underestimate diet in the factor. That is what seperates elite athletes from the rest all else being equal
Pay attention, there will be a quiz shortly.
shamrockpow
09-16-2004, 08:07 PM
Originally posted by slippy
I'm confused about this, too. Short workouts won't get me in shape for day-after-day of skiing/sledding/skinning. I realize interval training is good for skiing as it's all about short bursts of energy, but I need endurance too. It seems like 3-a-week short cardio workouts, no matter the intensity, is for weekend warriors? Didn't you mention that you do 20 minute spinning workouts?
There's a difference between short workouts and interval training. Look at AD's swim intervals: 15 (or 16) X 100 meters. That's a mile in the pool which if you're not a trained swimmer is going to take a while (including the rests). Spinning you might also have 30 or 60 second intervals at 90+% but a total workout of half an hour.
Lately I've been running on the outdoor track a lot, but my time is really limited (3-4 times a week). One mile warmup (8 minutes), and then alternate 400 meter intervals (70-75 second range) with 200 meter recovery periods (slow jog/walk). Repeat 6-8 times and finish up with one slow mile jogging and another 6 minutes of strides (to flush the lactic acid) and you have a nice exhausting workout in a really brief period of time. I've lost the five extra pounds I was carrying in one month and now will probably start looking at lengthening w/o slowing down and adding in the free weights.
Just in general: what exercises do you find work best for the back??? Everything else I feel like I know how to work it, but all the machines at the gym seem to tweak the back a little too much and the reverse sit-up is the only thing that seems natural...
jdabasin
09-16-2004, 09:34 PM
Foggy....
One more thing. Get a cardio log going ASAP. I run a lot and I bought a running log that I keep my daily miles in. When I first got it, nothing motivated me more than going to bed and looking at my log and seeing that I bailed that day or I only ran 20 miles that week or whatever. Write down what you do for cardio (and lifting) EVERY day and check it at the end of each week. I seriously motivated myself that way and you start trying to challenge yourself to run more/harder to beat what you did the previous week or month. Worked wonders for me when training for a 1/2 I did last winter. Of course, I've been drinking beers and playing softball this summer....but still running some.
Get a cardio log OR write your mileage/distance/laps on your calendar at work so that you have to look at it everyday.
AltaPowderDaze
09-16-2004, 09:41 PM
Originally posted by PhishingME
What's the deal with plyos being bad? Is it strictly a form or repetitive movement thing? i've tried and apparently don't do this topic justice so:plyo FAQs (http://www.weightsnet.com/Docs/plyometrics.html)
Keoni
09-17-2004, 08:49 AM
Originally posted by Foggy_Goggles
I’m tired of my routine. I need to switch it up a bit. I go to the gym 3 days a week minimum, sometimes more. Currently, I stretch first (I love stretching), do 25mins of cardio on the orbital, then hit the weights. I go:
Day 1 – arms, chest
Day 2 – legs, shoulders
Day 3 – abs, back
I’m just using the regular machines (and free weight “machines”) for the standard exercises. 3 sets of 15 reps. I’m going for basic fitness with an emphasis on core strength and shoulders (‘cause of a previous injury and surgery). I’m in pretty good shape, I carry a couple lbs of cube fat, but want to be a machine. My ski posse is insane (a smokejumper, a former college tight end, and a injun maniac) and they are always ½ a step in front of me. Also, I have a hut trip planned in BC in March that I want to rule.
1. How should I change my workouts?
2. Are there any websites that have good workout listed
3. What should I do to document progress, I don’t keep track of anything
4. Any particular exercises you recommend.
I eat a pretty good diet (no fast food) but nothing special.
Thanks
I didn't read all the replys since I have a short attention span, so maybe some of this has been mentioned, but my .02:
1.How should I change my workouts?
First, do your cardio after lifting, not before.
Change your weight routine every 3-4 weeks or you'll get bored and you (your muscles), usually reach a plateau in your training as well. Mix up (change days) the order of your workouts, change your exercises for each body part that you are working on or do both. Your muscles are able to adapt to what you are doing, you need to give them a "shock" every so often.
2. Are there any websites that have good workout listed
Try www.bodybuilding.com Lots of info
3. What should I do to document progress, I don’t keep track of anything
Keep a log of your progress if you want to know. My memory sucks, if I didn't, I'd just be guessing
4. Any particular exercises you recommend.
That all depends on what you are looking to accomplish. Check the bodybuilding.com site. They have an overview on just about every type of lift and machine exercise.
My one (skiing related) recommendation...Squats. Just make sure you do them correctly, with a spotter. And I thought I saw someone else say this, "check the ego at the door"
Helicrackjnky
09-17-2004, 10:19 AM
Wieght training is good but the only way to keep up with your crew is to increase cardio!! Mix up your cardio do one day of the runner for 45 min. then the next work out do 45 + min on a stationary bike. That is best way to build up stamina/endurance also during cardio sesions switch up your speed thus bringing your heart rate up.
Running up hills is always a good way to get results.
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