IKFF

Friday, July 17, 2009

Stiff body cure...


Creak, crack, arghhh…


Have you ever woke up and were barely able to get your body moving?
My brother and I re-roofed my garage roof yesterday. He did most of the work on the roof, where as I lugged the materials and tools up and down the ladder. Didn’t seem like much until I woke up for work today.


I figured I was going to have to do something once I got to work to get myself going or it would only get worse. The 1st thing that popped into my mind was my sandbag, I didn’t think much about it at the time and just loaded it into my truck and was off to work. As I was driving I was thinking, “why the sandbag?”.


Once I got here and did my rounds I broke out the sandbag and a rubber band I keep here at work. I warmed up which included a few sets of “hindu squats” I then did 4 rounds of supersets with the bands.


What I did was sort of a seated row without a seat. With my thighs parallel to the floor as well as my back [well pretty close], and my arms fully extended with tension on the band so I can feel the stretch, this was the starting position. I then simultaneously sat upright and rowed the bands back, and slowly went back to the starting position.


Next were flies with the bands again with tension on the stretch position.


With both exercises I held the contracted and extended parts for @ 3 seconds each, and went from contracted to stretch in a controlled manner. Like I mentioned I did 4 rounds of 8-10 reps.


Now the sandbag, which today weighs @100lbs [100.4 to be exact]
1st I did Zurcher [spelling?] squats -3 sets no idea how many reps.
Next I did 3 sets of bearhug squats just 1 set.
Then I just walked with the bag about 80 feet each time, the area I used in the boiler house is @ 40 feet long. One time each, bear hug, left shoulder, right shoulder and, just holding it by the handles.
I finished, well sort of finished, with 4 rounds of shouldering 10x each shoulder. By “sort of” I mean I will continue doing a round of sandbag shouldering with each of my hourly rounds of the plant, BTW 12 hour shift.

This all did work forthe stiffness ....today

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Truth About Kettlebells


The Truth About Kettlebell Training


By Jon Le Tocq



The chances are if you've found yourself at World's Toughest Workouts, you've already entered the world of kettlebells - no well-rounded, killer training plan can be complete without them!


However, is the kettlebell revolutions destined to crumble faster than Ricky Hatton's unbeaten record when something new comes in to excite peoples' training?
kettlebell training
Personally I love the damn things. They've nearly killed me on a few occasions and yet you still feel happy to have them around and have them in your life.


The question is, are they just flavour of the month and only suited to certain people?


When are they really right for us?


Training goals


I like kicking the crap out of myself in training. It's what I do. Yeah I want muscle and minimal body fat, but quite frankly I can't be bothered to watch every calorie that goes in and my macronutrient ratio percentages.


Kettlebells are awesome for my goals. They can be moved in such a way that it almost becomes an art form capable of destroying every muscle in your body in a matter of minutes.


I regularly perform complexes or circuits which leave me feeling like I got hit by a ton of bricks.


Try 5 rounds of 8 reps with two bells of double swings, double snatches, double jerks and renegade push-rows with some burpee-pull ups thrown in for extra pain.


However, if your sole training goal at a particular point is to optimise growth, I don't believe kettlebells are the way forward.


Sure you can alter tempo and work with escalating density parameters to ensure progressive overload for hypertrophy but I still believe the fastest and most effective way is to structure 90% of your training around the big lifts (squat, deadlifts, bench, rows).


Performing squats with bells heavy enough for significant hypertrophy is pretty much impossible.


For those more advanced, the chances are you don't have access to heavy enough bells for deadlifts.


Functional training


Let's be honest, most people who promote 'functional' training don't really know what they mean.


Bicep training through doing curls isn't functional apparently as it's not a compound movement or involve rotation.


But what about athletes who need a strong bear-hug style grip such as in the NFL or MMA?
kettlebell training


However, I believe there are certain exercises and areas EVERYBODY should pay attention to regardless of goals. This includes shoulder mobility, stability and strength, glute strength and the posterior chain in general.


The nature of kettlebell training especially lifts such as the swing and snatch, windmill and get ups, force positive adaptations in these areas. Yes, these can be replicated with dumbbells and barbells but not with the same challenge to stabiliser muscles.


Even bodybuilders need to be doing this stuff unless they want shocking posture and bench press injuries.


What's REALLY working?


A lot of people do like I just did and promote kettlebells because they're great for the posterior chain.
This is true but only when the muscles involved are firing in the first place!


You may well want to kick ass in your training session and see if you can achieve 200 snatches in 10 minutes, but if your glutes aren't firing, all you will do is end up with an overactive lower back and eventually, a sore one!


Most peoples' glutes don't work and should be doing a lot of work like this before they go near kettlebell swings....


(This applies to lunges, squats and any other exercise which is supposedly good for the arse!)


Power training


I believe everybody of any age, fitness level and goal needs to be doing power training.


However if we just look at the top end of the spectrum at those who want athletic ability and to improve sports performance, we hit a bit of a stumbling block.


Unless you have grown up as a gymnast or spend hours each week on mobility, practicing olympic lifts can be just too time consuming to let you get any other training done.


Now don't get me wrong, I think we SHOULD be doing a lot more mobility work than we do, but sometimes the time constraint of our goal just doesn't allow lots of this work to be done. Much of it requires a skilled trainer to work with which many just can't afford or access.


Whilst it still requires practice to master, kettlebell training enables power training to be done through single arm snatches and clean and jerks much more easily. I also think single arm power work is more applicable to many sports such as boxing, tennis and volleyball than barbell work anyway.


However, once you start getting to the heavy stuff, manoeuvring kettlebells can become somewhat harder to move than a barbell, especially holding at the rack position.


For instance, cleaning an 80kg bar is easier for most than 2x40kg bells.


It's also easier to progress by adding 2.5-5kg at a time to the bar than going from 2x40kg to 2x44kg bells.


Again, the training goal matters.


If you want more speed endurance than raw power, kettlebells are probably more appropriate!


Versatility


This bits easy.


You can throw kettlebells around anywhere at anytime.


Kettlebells are just behind bodyweight training in the 'Get out the shitty gym world' stakes.


****************************************************


The key to kettlebell training is understanding why you are using them. It sounds obvious but many use them just because they've heard a lot about them.


You also need to make sure you're firing up the right muscles and using them properly or shoulder and back injuries won't be far behind - leave your fat ego at the door when learning kettlebells.


Get your arse working first. Trust me on this!


They are like sharks - mess with them when you don't understand them and they will eat you alive.


Master kettlebells as part of your arsenal and then we can talk about pulling it altogether for some of the World's Toughest Workouts!


Let me know your thoughts on kettlebell training and how you use it in your own killer plans!

NOTE "INTENSE CONDITIONING" BY JON LE TOCQ is on SALE until this Friday [July,10, 2009] 50% off!!!

Friday, July 03, 2009

Happy 4th plus...


I know I keep having excuses for why I have not done anything here, this time it was a 3 week vacation plus the other excuses J…

Well I took part in the Kettlebell Meltdown transformation
[@ http://kbfatloss.ning.com/] [it is free to join!!!] I lost +18lbs even with the vacation in the middle of the contest.
Next I will be trying to accomplish Josh Henkin’s , “The Ultimate Sandbag”, 3 Rounds of hell, I am a ways off on that so it should be fun. You can read more about it on his blog which you can reah via his website link HERE.

Today [7/3/09] is the last day of Vince Delmonte’s Meal Plan launch sale, so if you are looking for meal plans right down to shopping lists this is for you
Click Here NOW!!!!!

Today workout is from Chaos plus a few changes
A 300 workout
Box jumps 30
Sand bag shoulder 10ea Side
Kettle Jerks 5ea Side
KB swings 20 ea
Complete 3 cycles as fast as possible

Have a great weekend and Happy 4th
P.S. if anyone is having problems viewing my site, like I am please let me know how to fix it thanks