Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Leg Day & Tabata Lesson

Day 2 of the Off Season strength training regimen which caps my reps for each set at 5 so that I can focus on increasing strength. Made great progress as I am finding that I can lift a lot more when I scale down the reps.

Also, I tried a leg focused Tabata at the end of lifting and quickly realized that was not going to work. Complete exhaustion set in quickly. Going forward, the Tabatas will have to focus on different muscle groups than the workout.

Warm Up:

Leg Routine - 1st set is low weight to warm up and focus on form. Sets 2 - 5 are for max weight for 5 reps each.


Notes / Results:

  • Weight: 199.
  • Time: 55 minutes. Was going to stretch it out to 60 but the Tabata was not going to happen.
  • Overhead Squat:
    • Previous high: 75. Goal: 110
    • Sets: 65, 75, 85, 95
  • Deadlift:
    • Previous high: 195. Goal: 275
    • Sets: 225, 235, 245, 250
  • Squat Cleans:
    • Previous High: 75. Goal: 115
    • Sets: 65, 75, 85, 95
  • Straight Leg Deadlift:
    • Previous high: 195. Goal: 250
    • Sets: 185, 205, 215, 4@220

Monday, December 30, 2013

Chest & Back for Strength & Core Tabata

Did a 6 mile run on Thursday that I didn’t post. Accomplished it in less than an hour which is amazing since speed is not my forte.


Back in the gym with the first day of my 2014 strategy and training schedule. Since this is the off season, I have taken the reps for each set down to 5 while focusing on lifting the maximum amount of weight. This gives me more focus as opposed to the previous way of trying to get high reps for cardio during initial sets while working toward higher weights with less reps in later sets. I am now focused on strength and should get more out of the effort I put in.


Warm Up:


Chest/Back Routine - 1 st set is low weight to warm up and focus on form. Sets 2 - 5 are for max weight for 5 reps each.




Core Tabata:
  • Sit Ups
  • Mason Twists
  • V-Ups
  • Cross Over Fingers to Knees


Notes / Results:

  • Weight: 199. Finally broke through the 200 pound plateau. Need to get to 185 by September 1st.
  • Time: 60 minutes. I expect all of my workouts going forward to be 60 minutes.
  • Bench Press:
    • Previous high 175. Goal: 220.
    • Sets: 155, 165, 165, failed at 175 on 5th set and really could have used a spotter. Almost hurt myself.
  • Lat Pulls:
    • Previous high: 170. Goal: 220.
    • Sets: 160, 180, 200, 210
  • Weighted Dips:
    • Previous high: 10. Goal: 35
    • Sets: 10, 15, 20, 25
  • Pull Ups:
    • Previous high: 5 in a set. Goal: 5 with 10 pounds
    • Sets: 4, 3, 2, 3 - last 2 sets swung across the monkey bars; 8 bars first time, all 9 on the second
  • Lateral Pull Downs:
    • Previous high: 180. Goal: 200
    • Sets: 2@170, 150, 150, 2@170
  • 2 rounds of Core Tabata with weights
    • Sit ups: 10 pounds & 5 pounds
    • Mason Twists: 35 pounds & 25 pounds
    • V-Ups: 12kg kettlebell & 8kg kettlebell
    • Cross Over Fingers to Knees: 5 pound plate each time

4 Seasons of OCR Training

After completing the Super Spartan and the Tough Mudder in 2013, my goal for 2014 is to earn the Spartan Trifecta badge and complete my 3rd Tough Mudder. I have been on a good training routine for the last year to accomplish what I did but I see areas for improvement and that is what I am sharing with you in this blog.


Looking forward, I need to improve my upper body strength, especially when it comes to pulling myself over walls and climbing ropes. I also need to continue to work on leg strength as the thought of carrying a 60 pound sand bag up and down ½ mile of Killington mountain scares the hell out of me.


Currently, I go to the gym 4x per week. I don’t do Crossfit and I only do Total Body workouts once per week. I have a problem with Total Body WODs and Crossfit since they are Total Body workouts. I understand the need to work all of my muscle groups in synch as those are “natural” exercises and body motions but I have a contrarian theory. That is if you look at yourself “naturally” you will notice that you have major muscle groups (chest, biceps, quads, etc.) that are anatomically larger and built to provide a great majority of your strength. Not focusing on these groups means you are not maximizing your strength potential. The connecting, or stabilizing muscles that a Total Body workout targets should be considered their own muscle group. Additionally, targeting one major muscle group each day at the gym means that you can come back the next day and let one muscle group rest while working another until failure. A Total Body workout does not allow you to do this.


So, this week my workout schedule looks like this:
  • Monday: Chest & Back weightlifting day at the gym
  • Tuesday: Leg weightlifting day at the gym
  • Wednesday: Rest
  • Thursday: Arms & Shoulders weightlifting day at the gym
  • Friday: Kettlebell day at the gym (Total Body)
  • Saturday: Long run. Due to the weather outside in the northeast this may shift to some low intensity, long duration (2 - 3 hour) cardio.
  • Sunday: Rest
I identified a weakness in my current routine is lack of focus and goals. Currently, I do 5 sets of an exercise, increasing the weight used each set while decreasing the number of reps. The purpose is to get the best of both worlds. The first set of 15 reps at a lower weight contributes to conditioning while the 5th set of 6 reps at my max weight addresses strength. I like this system but I think that I can do better by being a little more focused, thus the change.


Obstacle Course Racing is a new sport I don’t think that the perfect training regimen has been established. Everything that I have read concentrates on building some strength but more endurance. The most glaring deficiency is that the same routines are practiced year round. Especially, Crossfit. As noted above, I have identified my weaknesses so a canned WOD does not work for me since those are for everyone with no regard to experience level. Not everyone who follows the Spartan WOD has the goal of completing the Beast in VT.


Professional athletes in established sports break up their training routine with different goals for different “seasons” during the year so I am doing the same for my 2014 OCR schedule. My first race is the Spartan Sprint on June 1st and then the remaining 3, and most challenging, are the Super Spartan in early September, the Spartan Beast in late September and the Tough Mudder in mid October.


Identifying my schedule allows me to break apart the year into different seasons with different goals. The first third of the year, January through April, is my “Off Season” with the focus on building strength. My “Regular Season” begins in May and continues through August where the focus shifts to conditioning without losing strength gains. This should set me up for my “Playoffs/ Championship Season” where the goal is keep limber and active while saving myself for 3 grueling events within a 6 week time period. The final season, late October through December, is a “Rest/Reflect/Reprogam Season” where I will continue to work out but also use this time to think about what I did right during the  year, what I can do better going forward and try out new things.


Let me show you how this plays out on a regular workout schedule:


Off Season - January through April


Goal: Increase strength by 25%. I know what my max weight for each exercise is today and my goal will be to increase that weight by 25% on each one. I also need to be able to knock out pull ups like I am getting out of bed in the morning.  
Strategy: Low repetitions (max 5) of heavy weights
Finish workouts (60 minutes total time working out) with Tabata. I won’t completely ignore conditioning but will feel very comfortable using the heaviest weights possible during these routines. I can put together Tabata routines that focus on Core exercises or Burpees with weights.


Regular Season - May through August


Goal: Focus on conditioning while not losing strength gains. Increase reps while not lowering max weight.
Strategy: Start at a lower weight on the first set and increase weight each set doing AMAP reps at each weight until I hit my max weight on the 5th set. My weekend long run will include driving out to a mountain/hill area about ½ drive from my home to do trail and hill running. This is sport specific training since the Spartan Sprint, Super and Beast are all on mountains. I will also incorporate other high intensity cardio body weight outdoor exercises to my weekend routine once the weather clears up.


Playoffs / Championship Season - September & October


Goal: Complete 3 grueling events (Super, Beast & Tough Mudder) within an approximate 6 week time frame.
Strategy: Keep limber. Keep active. Allow myself to recover from the last event while resting up for the next. If I am prepared then I am prepared. If I am not, then I am not. No time to push myself for improvement now. Save myself mentally and physically for the events.


Rest/Reflect/Reprogram Season - November & December


Goal: Look back at the accomplishments of 2014 and set 2015 goals and strategies for achieving them.
Strategy: Enjoy. Decompress. Look forward. This is what I have been doing recently and the genesis for this blog post. These past 2 months I have tried some new things. Some worked and some did not. I started with Tabata routines and I see how they can contribute to my goals so I will be incorporating them into my routines. Same with Kettlebell. I also tried 2 monthly challenges that, although challenging, did not address my personal goals and thereby were a distraction of time and energy.  


Keep up with my daily workouts here: 365tothebeast.blogspot.com

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Monday 6 Mile Run + Tuesday Tabata Insanity

Traveling for Christmas forces me to improvise workouts. The good part is that I can find the time to do them and the better part is that I can get creative with what I do. 

Monday I knocked out a 6 mile run like it was nothing. Thursday I am shooting for 9 since the route is a 3 mile loop.

Tuesday my father in law got me into his local rec center so that I could work out while he walked on the treadmill. My father in law is a grandfather. So are 90% of everyone else at this rec center. I used their weight room. A weight room for grandparents.

Improvising and armed only with my phone and a list of exercise routines I copied onto paper from my blog, I dominated the dumbbell area and put my Tabata timer to good use. Check this out:

First I did a regular circuit of a Total Body routine:

  • Barbell High Pulls
  • Dumbbell Curl to Lunge to Press
  • Elevated Feet Press
  • Side Lunge & Press 
I then decided that circuits weren't going to work in this environment as people kept breaking in to use other weights. I was in a very tight area and did not need to dominate everything so I switched to Tabata for each exercise.

In the future I don't think that Tabata is built for 8 rounds of 1 exercise. I am learning from experience. 
  • Tabata Round 1- Barbell High Pulls
  • Tabata Round 2 - Dumbbell Curl to Lunge to Press
  • Tabata Round 3 - Elevated Feet Press
  • Tabata Round 4 - Side Lunge & Press

My father in law was still walking on the treadmill so I kept up with the Tabata.

Tabata Round 5, with dumbbells:
  • Rows
  • Lunges
  • T-Push Ups
  • Side Lunges

Tabata Round 6:
  • Jumping Lunges with dumbbells
  • Push Ups
  • Lunges with dumbbells
  • Reverse Triceps Push Ups (http://youtu.be/5oMnUzy_hQ8) 

Then my father in law was done and that was okay because I was gassed. Writing this blog 2 hours after finishing I feel the burn all over and a little less guilty about going off the diet reservation. 

Merry Christmas and we shall catch up again Thursday or Friday. Friday I will need to get creative again since I won't be going to the rec center anymore this week. 

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Kettlebell Saturday

Got a great Kettlebell workout in today and was surprised to find out it took all 60 minutes. No time for Tabata. I kept an great pace but maybe there was just a little too much to try and squeeze in anything else. Big picture, I am glad that I am getting my gym workouts to 60 minutes.
I am loving these Kettlebell workouts. 3 times during the week I am working the major muscle groups and Kettlebells are targeting and working what seems like every other muscle that is getting ignored. I use lighter weights but am more exhausted at the end.
Warm Up:


Do 5 circuits increasing weight each circuit until hitting a maximum.


Notes & Results:

  • Time: 60 minutes
  • Swing & Catch Goblet Squat: max 11 reps w/ 24 kg on 5th circuit.
  • Clean & Press: max 10 reps w/ 18 kg on 5th circuit
  • Windmill: max 10 reps w/ 18kg on 5th circuit
  • Turkish Get Up: max 5 reps w/ 12kgs on 3rd & 4th circuit. Could only do 3 reps on 5th circuit w/ 12kg
  • Deadlift & Row: max 10 reps w/ 18kg on 5th circuit. Balance is always the key here.
  • No Tabata but I had a cool one lined up with burpees, toes-to-bar, dips & jumping lunges. Next time.