Saturday, September 27, 2008

2 new PR today

Had a great workout at the gym this morning.. Well, not exactly in my gym. It was in the unit next to my gym where we moved all the equipment yesterday while the floor crew is in the gym finishing the floors.. Held a training session with Zach, who's a superb high school athlete trying to improve his core strength and vertical jump, and then I gave myself a good workout. Here's my workout for today:

warmed up with about 10 minutes of skipping rope and some handstand walking. then....
3x10 Turkish Getup with 24kg (5 each side)
3x40 secs battling ropes with a 2" rope.. This is done with a 40', 2" rope wrapped around a pole at the halfway point. Grabbing both ends of the rope you swing the rope overhead and down repeatedly to get the rope oscillating all the way into the pole. Do this as hard as you can for 40 seconds. Brutal!

I followed that up with:
5x20 pistols (10 each side)
5x20 hindu pushups
30 seconds rest between sets

the 30 TGU's with a 24kg was a personal best for me, as was the 100 pistols..

If you live in the area, pick up the Sunday Nashua Telegraph tomorrow. There's supposed to be an article featuring Dynamic Strength and Conditioning as an "alternative" means of fitness in the business section (i guess because we're a new business)....

Grand Opening pushed out to Monday Oct 13th.. Need a little more time to get it ready. Will be building the monkey bars this week. Very excited about having a gym with monkey bars!!

All the best,
Kevin

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Raise your hand if you love the Burpee..... Anybody???

Very few exercises that we do at our Functional Interval Training sessions are met with the same amount of enthusiasm (of the negative variety) as the Burpee. I guess I can understand this because they're hard to do and some people don't like doing things that are hard. But the simple fact of the matter is that the burpee is probably the single most effective bodyweight exercise that you can perform. It builds strength, explosiveness, speed, agility, endurance. It enhances range of motion and mobility. I can't think of a single muscle that is not called into play during a repetition of the burpee. The more muscles you use, the more effective the exercise, the more functional strength you develop, the more fat you burn.. For my workout today I took a page out of John Grube's book (aka "The Wildman") and did a reverse/forward pyramid of burpees going from 15-14-13-12----3-2-1-1-2-3----12-13-14-15, resting for 30 seconds between every set.. I followed that up with a rev/fwrd pyramid of power wheel rollouts in a 10-9-8---3-2-1-1-2-3---8-9-10 format with 20 seconds rest between sets....

Workout totals: 240 burpees (actually i think i did 241. going back to the instant replay we'll see that i did 15 in both of my last two sets) and 110 power wheel rollouts.. here's the video of me suffering through the last couple sets of burpees and rollouts (with the help of my friend Jake)..




Yes, burpees are hard, and so are the power wheel rollouts. But they are fantastic full body exercises that build great functional strength and should not be avoided. If they were easy then everybody would be doing them and everybody would be walking around with the physique of a Greek statue.. But they're hard, so people avoid them. If you're reading this then you want to be in the best shape possible. So no more avoiding hard exercises. No time like the present, give me 20 burpees!!

Enjoy,
Kevin

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Time to Get Creative

I sat down with the laptop to put my thoughts in a blog and I turned the TV on and they're showing FarmAid live from the Comcast Center in Mansfield, MA which first made me think of how much better it would sound as the Dynamic Strength and Conditioning Center. Some day....
So the first two acts they put on stage while I'm sitting here is Arlo Guthrie who looks like he's old enough to be Arlo Guthrie's grandfather and they follow him up with Jerry Lee Lewis who has bags under his eyes that you could fit a roll of quarters in.. So this got me thinking what will I look like when I'm 120 and I've come to the conclusion that I'm going to look way better than these geezers. I'll guarantee you they've never lifted a kettlebell or medicine ball and Jerry Lee Lewis probably hasn't performed a full body exercise since he was dating his 14 year old cousin.

So I'm getting real close to getting the gym open and it's been taking every waking moment. I'm even finding it difficult to get my own workouts in. Granted, the type of work I'm doing around the gym is pretty active, especially the fact that I have to go up and down 4 floors of stairs every time I come and go... That's right, there's no elevator to the gym which is an added benefit to all you physical culturists on the functional conditioning bandwagon.. And the best thing about it is that the 67 stair journey to the gym is free! I'm thinking of trying to power wheel up the stairs..... backwards.... (video coming soon) 

Lately I've been having to get creative to get my workouts in. In the gym I've brought up a jumprope, power wheel and a couple kettlebells and I hung up a set of gymnastic rings which are one of my favorite things to play on. But there's so much to do and so little time at this point to do it (trying to open Sept 29) that it's still tough to dedicate time to working out. The other day here's what I did.. I was painting windows (again). Each window has 36 individual panes framed out that need painting. So, after every 3rd pane I cut in I would get off the ladder and do 3 one arm pushups on the right and 3 more on the left.. Back up the ladder for 3 more panes, back down for 3 more one arm pushups on each side. Once I completed my 6th set of one arm pushups I started doing some ring work. I've decided that I want to be able to do back levers and front levers on the rings so I'm starting with the back lever.. I can get a good tucked back lever and I can get it with one leg out straight, but I'm not there with two straight legs yet.. Anyway, I did 6 rounds of back lever work, one round after every 3 window panes completed.. Total workout:
- 36 one arm pushups, 6x3 on each arm
- 6 rounds of back lever work

The next day I was also strapped for time but luckily I'm never short on things that need to be carried up the stairs.. I made 6 trips hauling awkward loads up 67 stairs.. One of my favorite runs were one with a 5 gallon bucket of paint on my shoulder and two 12kg kettlebells in my right hand for something close to 110 pounds total. The other one was a run with a medicine ball bag strapped over my shoulders with 50 pounds of medicine balls in it, a 20kg kettlebell in one hand and a 12kg and 8kg in the other for a total weight of 138 pounds. I've been weighing in at about 146 lately so that's not a bad load up four floors of stairs for a guy my size. It was good to know that in case of emergency I could carry a person up stairs if necessary. Total workout was 6 trips up the stairs with a total load of about 400 pounds. And I also carried two 8 foot sheets of sheetrock (160 pounds) 100 yards so I could lean them up against a telephone pole with the word "free" painted on them. (I ordered a little too much and had no use for it). They were gone in a couple hours.

There you go.. Two days of creativity to fit some good old fashioned functional conditioning into a tight work schedule. The opportunities out there are endless.

That's all for now.. Back to Farm Aid... Holy crap! It's the ghost of Willie Nelson! 

All the best,
kevin

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Make it a double....

I typically don't know exactly what I'm going to do for a workout until I'm about halfway through my warmup.. My warmup usually consists of some skipping rope and joint mobility exercises to get the heart pumping and the joints all lubed up and then I hit the workout. My workouts will usually have most of the following categories covered: push, pull, jump, squat, something ballistic, and something that really works the entire body hard. Sometimes each exercise will have a combination of those. The other day I decided to go with a double kettlebell workout with a 60sec/30sec work to rest ratio.. To me, working with double kettlebells is the best way to improve strength and explosive power. Each exercise calls every muscle in your body into play. Plus, you're working so hard for the interval that you really increase your anaerobic threshold which gives you the ability to work harder, longer which is a real benefit to endurance athletes as well. 

For this workout, since I was doing 60 seconds of work intervals I didn't want to go too heavy since it's important to be able to keep as good a form as possible for the entire interval, so I went with double 16kg kettlebells. For the exercises I chose the following (reps per 60 seconds in parentheses):
push: Military Press (15)
pull: renegade row (11 or 12 each side)
squat: front squats (15-17)
ballistic: double KB swings (30-32)
full body: Double Getup (6)

Doing double kettlebell swings is an unbelievable exercise. You're typically working with heavy weights (in this case about 70 pounds) since you have two kettlebells and you also can't control the speed of the exercise.. With most exercises there is an option to rest for a second or two between repetitions as you get tired. With the swings you are at the complete mercy of the kettlebells since they are always moving.. In 60 seconds, I was doing about 30 kettlebell swings with 32kg.. The last 5 were really difficult to keep getting the weight up to shoulder level and required a lot of determination and focus to continue to recruit every muscle in my body to raise the weights. By the end of 60 seconds my heart rate was way, way up and my body was completely pumped. Excellent exercise!

The double getup is an exercise that Steve Maxwell had me doing when I was training with him down in Philadelphia. This is a fantastic full body exercise that resembles the double KB Turkish Getup except without the weights overhead. Here's a video of one minute of the double getup. 



Give this workout a try and let me know what you think. Make variations as needed. You can do it with one kettlebell (except for the renegade rows, those need two).. Or you can adjust the work:rest ratios and times as well..

All the best,
Kevin


Saturday, September 13, 2008

Make your running fun.. Hit the trails..

Sometimes at the start of our FIT class I'll take the group for a short jog as part of the warmup and we'll mix in some lateral shuffling, skipping, high knees and other stuff to loosen up the joints..  This is a really short jog, like less than 1/3 of a mile... But I always hear "Ugh, I hate running...". I can sympathize with this, although I think "hate" is probably kind of a strong emotion towards something that's actually good for you. The problem with running is that most people associate running with long, slow, boring jogs on open roads. Having to deal with the relentless pounding of the pavement and the traffic that typically feels entitled to the entire side of the road that you've decided to run on and that you have as much right to trespass on it as the chipmunk they just smucked a half mile back. 

I had two running experiences last week that were at complete opposite ends of the spectrum. Now I've never been a long distance runner (or short distance runner for that matter). But I do like to present myself with new challenges so I've decided to run a half marathon in October. I run about once every three or four days to train for the race. Last week my first run was a 7 mile run on roads. This was, I think, maybe the fourth or fifth time I've run on roads in the past 6 months. Almost all my running I do off road. It took me 56 minutes, which is at the 8 min/mile pace I would like to be at for the half marathon, but it felt like it took at least 4 times that long.. It was late morning and it was hot out. There was lots of traffic and I was on roads that had hardly any shoulder so i was getting fairly irritated with the cars and pickups that refused to give me any room. I have to admit, the run was boring and I was getting tired of the pounding the road was giving me. By the time I got home, I was cursing myself for signing up for a half marathon and promising myself I would never do it again. Three days later I went for a run in the woods back on the trails.. I don't know how far the run is but it takes me the same amount of time as 7 miles on the roads takes me.. The difference is that when I'm in the woods I am completely at play.. I'm running up and down hills, I'm jumping off rocks, I'm launching myself off tree stumps, I threw in some bear crawling. I stop at several different rock formations and do sets of plyometric jumps, my favorite is a 40 inch granite landmark that I'll stop and do ten two footed jumps up on.. This run takes anywhere from 45-50 minutes. My heart rate is much higher for much longer than the road running and there are periods where I'm up around 92-95% max heart rate for minutes at a time. So I'm working harder, I'm going anaerobic from time to time which has a much greater metabolic training effect than long aerobic efforts, (like jogging on roads), and most importantly I enjoy it.. A lot! This is what keeps me running. And it's so much better for your joints without pounding the pavement. It also does much more for strengthening the lower leg and foot muscles since there is so much more lateral movement and balancing going on.

So go find some trails to run on and jump on and over as much stuff as possible. Nothing makes you feel like a kid more than running towards a brook and finding a rock or tree stump to give you that extra lift as you launch yourself over the brook to avoid getting wet.. Or try running on just rocks, stumps, and sticks and see how far you can go without touching the ground. Michele and I took my daughter and her friend on a hike last week and on the way down the mountain my daughter said "everybody gets 1o lives, every time you touch the ground you lose a life".. I'm thinking "that's my girl! great idea".. so we're all bounding down the mountain, rock to rock, stick to stump, losing a life here and there.. And before we knew it, we were at the bottom, huffing and puffing, sweating and laughing. It was a great workout and it was a great game...

So next time you're going to go out for a run, get off the roads and have some fun. It will give you a whole new perspective and it will give you a fantastic workout :) 

Enjoy,
Kevin

Thursday, September 11, 2008

The Doubles 500

Recently I've been trying to increase my capacity for doing doubles with the jump rope so I worked an interval session into my workout yesterday that I really liked.. It was 500 doubles (250 forwards and 250 backwards) done in 10 sets of 50 with 30 second breaks between intervals.. I warmed up skipping rope until my heart rate was up and I was feeling limber enough for extended periods of doubles. Then I started into the workout. When doing a workout with the jump rope you're going to miss every once in a while so you need to make sure you start jumping again immediately and continue until you've achieved the goal of the interval. With doubles I was able to get t0 50, both forwards and backwards, half the time without missing, but the other half I would miss once and then just start right back up again. This is a very intense metabolic workout where you're working very hard for short bursts and then taking a short rest which isn't nearly long enough for a recovery. This type of workout is phenomenal for increasing strength, endurance, and cardio. I completed the 500 doubles in just over 10 minutes, it was taking me about 30 seconds to complete the 50 doubles followed by 30 seconds of rest. It felt great!!

I followed this up with 10 minutes of 16kg kettlebell snatches without putting the kettlebell down, alternating hands every 60 seconds.. I got 210 snatches in 10 minutes. Sometimes I like to figure out how much work that is by multiplying the number of reps by the weight of the kettlebell.. In this case I moved 7392 lbs in 10 minutes.. I'm working my way up to where I can do this exercise with a 24kg kettlebell. This is actually known as the Secret Service Snatch Test.

After the snatch test, I did two sets of 5 Turkish Get-Ups on each side with a 24kg and followed that up with a set of an exercise I call a Back Press with Shoulder Opener that would be difficult to explain so I added a video of it.. Make sure if you're trying this exercise you start with low weights. You really work the range of motion in your shoulders and it puts the kettlebell in a precarious position above your head where you definitely need to be able to control the weight.



All in all, it was a fantastic workout and it was completed in about 45 minutes. To re-cap:
- 10x50 jump rope doubles (5x fwrd and 5x bkwrd) with 30 secs rest between intervals
- 10 min 1 arm snatch with 16kg for 210 reps
- 2x10 Turkish Get Up with 24kg (2x5 on each side)
- 1x10 Back Press with Shoulder Opener with 16kg


Sunday, September 7, 2008

The Easy Way Out... Or is it?

As I scrape, sand, fill holes and paint windows at the gym (getting ready for our Sept 27th opening!!) I listen to a classic rock station pretty much all day long.. There's a few things I've learned. First thing is that The Doors actually had one good song.. Can't remember the name of it, but it's a good one. Second thing is that there's some guy named ED who needs a pill to have sex. Funniest thing was when ED's commercial was followed immediately by Bad Company's "Can't Get Enough of Your Love".. I was thinking that if Bad Company had written that song in the present maybe the song would have been "Can't Get Enough of Your Love, But Not For Another 45 Minutes When the Pill Starts to Kick In."... Lastly, there's lots of women who want to have their "breasts augmented" because it makes their boyfriends/husbands like them more.. I guess when they call it a "breast augmentation" instead of a "boob job" it makes it sound more legitimate and less vain.. 


Here's a good one. An ad i saw in the local paper looking for female volunteers with visible cellulite to participate in a study to evaluate a light-based device to get rid of their fat... Sorry, i mean cellulite. Forget about ever having to work out and enjoy a healthy lifestyle.. We'll just shine a nuclear bulb on my butt and burn all that unwanted fat away.. "Hey, I feel great! Really absorbed some good rays today...". And while i'm on my rant about people who like to take the easy way out let's not forget about those who opt for the gastric bypass surgery... Why start eating healthy and exercising when you can just get your stomach stapled so you can only fit a hard boiled egg in there. This is the equivalent of having your child's thumbs cut off so they stop sucking on them.


Is it really worth spending all these thousands of dollars on artificial means to enjoy life naturally? Well, I have a solution to all of these problems. Come on down to my gym at 100 Factory St in Nashua, NH and get some personal training or join in a Kettlebell Workout, Spartan Session or Functional Interval Training session and I'll show you the cure. Think I can't cure what Ed's got.. Lets take a look at the top causes for ED. Things like being overweight, smoking, drinking excessively, high blood pressure, hardening of the arteries, high cholesterol, low testosterone, depression, anxiety.. Exercise and a healthy lifestyle have been proven to reduce, if not completely eliminate any negative impact of all of those issues. I'm no genius, but I'm pretty sure if you eliminate the cause of a problem, then the problem goes away... If people that spent thousands of dollars on boob jobs, stomach stapling, and nuclear fat-burning light bulbs invested even a small percentage of that money on an effective fitness program they would be in phenomenal condition. Don't you think your man would love the natural you when you're in fantastic shape more than some silicone enhanced version? Can you imagine how fantastic you'd be feeling. Granted, it takes some effort to keep yourself in shape. But when you're in better shape than people half your age, brimming with self-confidence because you look and feel fantastic, and enjoying your life to the fullest because you take care of yourself, it is so worth the effort. You can't get it in a pill or doctor's office. There's no gimmicks or quick fixes.. 


The greatest thing about what we're doing at Dynamic Strength and Conditioning is that you're able to get in the best shape of your life with natural, full body movements that increase your strength, power, endurance, mobility, and range of motion.. The old school techniques with an innovative spin keep things fun, challenging, and the results are amazing. The dynamic of the group sessions and personal training pushes you to another level. You'll get more out of your workouts than you ever imagined at a traditional gym. And I can guarantee you, (aside from serious medical issues), you'll never need artificial methods, procedures, or pills to enjoy life naturally, the way it was meant to be...


All the best,

Kevin

Thursday, September 4, 2008

first workout in the new gym

I was working in the gym yesterday getting it ready for the Sept 27 opening and I hadn't had a chance to workout yet.. My girlfriend Michele was there painting windows and our friend Rick from the Wasserman Park FIT class had stopped by to help paint. Rick is so psyched about the new gym that he actually quit his job just so he would have time to help us get ready for the grand opening (well, not really, but it's very cool that people are stopping by to help out).  Anyway, they had the painting well under control so I grabbed my jump rope and started into my workout.. Wasn't sure what I was going to do.. I kind of figured it out while I was warming up on the jump rope. Here's what I came up with.. I completed a circuit that included the following:
- 500 jump rope revolutions, mixing in forward/backward, crossovers, doubles, different footwork.
- 20 pseudo Planche pushups.. i'm working on getting to a full planche pushup where you do pushups with your entire body off the ground in a Planche position.. for now, i'm doing the pushups in sets of 20 while pushing with my hands down around the hips. these get really difficult...
- 20 Pistols (one-legged bodyweight squats), 10 on each leg
- 40 feet of lateral handstand walking.. kick up into a handstand against the wall, facing away from the wall so your heels are against the wall and walk on my hands laterally 20 feet out and 20 feet back.

I went through this circuit 4x for a total of 2000 jumps, 80 pseudo-planche pushups, 80 pistols (new PR), 160 feet of handstand walking... I also mixed in some open floor handstand walking and at the very end i did as many doubles as i could on the jump rope without stopping.. i got to 74 before i couldn't turn the rope or jump off the floor anymore.. The Rolling Stones song "Shattered" was playing on the radio and that was pretty fitting at this point in the workout.. I gave it a great effort and the workout really energized me, which is exactly what I needed at this point in the day since I had to head right out and coach my daughter's soccer team.. Believe it or not, I had way more energy than a group of 9 year old girls :)

All the best,
Kevin