New posts

30 Day Challenges

Jan. 7, 2014, 11:56 a.m.
Posts: 8848
Joined: Nov. 19, 2002

A mountain biking friend posted this on their FB so my wife started it on Jan. 2nd

30 Day Plank Challenge
http://healthiertwist.com/30-day-plank-challenge-day-1/

Once we get through January, we'll be adding another challenge. Any recommendations?

Jan. 7, 2014, 5:58 p.m.
Posts: 961
Joined: April 9, 2006

10,000 kettlebell swings challenge:

https://www.t-nation.com/workouts/10000-swing-kettlebell-workout

www.travelswithtyler.com

Jan. 7, 2014, 6:18 p.m.
Posts: 7707
Joined: Sept. 11, 2003

One arm pushups. The trick is to relax your shoulders and lats and focus on your arm and stabilize your core.

http://www.beastskills.com/one-arm-pushup/

Jan. 7, 2014, 6:51 p.m.
Posts: 3154
Joined: Nov. 23, 2002

superman planks

We don't know what our limits are, so to start something with the idea of being limited actually ends up limiting us.
Ellen Langer

Jan. 8, 2014, 12:30 p.m.
Posts: 1876
Joined: March 2, 2006

Its not a 30 day challenge but one of my yoga instructors would put on a Yoga Hell Week every few months. It went as follows:
Day 1: 50 Sun Salute A
Day 2: 25 Sun Salute B
Day 3: 50 Sun Salute A, 25 Sun Salute B
Day 4: 25 Sun Salute B, 25 Sun Salute A
Day 5: 75 Sun Salute A
Day 6: 50 Sun Salute B
Day 7: 100 Sun Salute A
You were allowed to consume only as much beer as you sweat during the class at the pub after.

Grumpy Trail Builder in Training

Jan. 10, 2014, 11:23 a.m.
Posts: 13216
Joined: Nov. 24, 2002

The PLP Challenge - Push-ups, Lunges, Pull-ups

Depending on your pull-up numbers (which is nothing more than an orientation how many reps you can safely start with), you simply add +1 every day - pretty incredible volume at the end.

You can spread the load across the day. The original is aiming at 60 days, but I think it can easily be altered.

Article HERE.

"You don't learn from experience. You learn from reflecting on the experience."
- Kristen Ulmer

Jan. 14, 2014, 4:33 a.m.
Posts: 13216
Joined: Nov. 24, 2002

10,000 kettlebell swings challenge:

https://www.t-nation.com/workouts/10000-swing-kettlebell-workout

After two weeks of not getting the full clusters in, I gave up. My body is no longer used to the volume and intensity of this, for several reasons.

For the next twenty workouts I focus on recoverable volume (5 days of swinging as much as I want and feel), say anything between 50 and 100 kb swings.

I want to improve muscular power output and endurance, and there is no point in killing myself tryiong to achieve it, if you know what I mean.

Along with working, family life, chopping firewood and felling trees, and running (Lost a bet and have to enter a halfmarathon this summer, after 22 years of not seriously running) the original program was simply not doable.

"You don't learn from experience. You learn from reflecting on the experience."
- Kristen Ulmer

Jan. 14, 2014, 10:43 a.m.
Posts: 8848
Joined: Nov. 19, 2002

30 Day Plank Challenge
http://healthiertwist.com/30-day-plank-challenge-day-1/

The jump from 60 sec. to 90 sec. is tough.

Apparently I'm using a muscle in my lower back not shown in the pic above. I guess it could be where the lower abdominals attach to the back.

Anyone else doing this challenge?

Jan. 14, 2014, 12:56 p.m.
Posts: 0
Joined: April 8, 2011

Im doing it, on day 6 whcih is rest.
I have however been doing full minutes to start.

Abs feel pretty strained today, prob should have been just doing 20, 20, 30, 30, 40.

Cool thing is I swear I've leaned up already. I think I will be planking for a minute or 2 every day after this challenge.
Awesome results for so little time spent on an excercise.

90 sec is just around the corner for me.
I'm gueesing its not that a minute or 90 seconds is so tough all by itself, but it the consecutive back to back days that actually make this a challenge.
I'll report back once I'm in the 90 zone and perhaps suffering more

Jan. 14, 2014, 1:04 p.m.
Posts: 8848
Joined: Nov. 19, 2002

I think the 50% time increase from 60 to 90 is the difference. My wife made the jump, I didn't. Felt like I was being stabbed in the back. Tonight is a rest day but will try 90 again tomorrow.

Improvement to core strength will be great for once the season cranks back up again.

Jan. 14, 2014, 6:59 p.m.
Posts: 12194
Joined: Nov. 19, 2002

:lol:

Jan. 14, 2014, 7:04 p.m.
Posts: 12194
Joined: Nov. 19, 2002

Anyone else doing this challenge?

We'll start right now.

Jan. 15, 2014, 9:32 a.m.
Posts: 961
Joined: April 9, 2006

After two weeks of not getting the full clusters in, I gave up. My body is no longer used to the volume and intensity of this, for several reasons.

For the next twenty workouts I focus on recoverable volume (5 days of swinging as much as I want and feel), say anything between 50 and 100 kb swings.

I want to improve muscular power output and endurance, and there is no point in killing myself tryiong to achieve it, if you know what I mean.

Along with working, family life, chopping firewood and felling trees, and running (Lost a bet and have to enter a halfmarathon this summer, after 22 years of not seriously running) the original program was simply not doable.

after day two I didn't think I would be able to keep going, but I have stuck with it. two more rounds this week to finish off week two and I'll have 4000 swings under my belt. my body has adapted much quicker than expected with my total time dropping from 46 minutes on day one to 30 minutes on the second workout of week two by reducing each rest period. the main thing holding me back is my grip for the last two rounds of each day. I lost four pounds after week one, but am more impressed with my time decrease, feeling much more fit.

It's crazy to read about a group that did the ten thousand in ten days.

www.travelswithtyler.com

Jan. 15, 2014, 2:17 p.m.
Posts: 13216
Joined: Nov. 24, 2002

after day two I didn't think I would be able to keep going, but I have stuck with it. two more rounds this week to finish off week two and I'll have 4000 swings under my belt. my body has adapted much quicker than expected with my total time dropping from 46 minutes on day one to 30 minutes on the second workout of week two by reducing each rest period. the main thing holding me back is my grip for the last two rounds of each day. I lost four pounds after week one, but am more impressed with my time decrease, feeling much more fit.

It's crazy to read about a group that did the ten thousand in ten days.

Sick and congrats - I think maybe I was simply too fast, not giving my body enough rest between sets and clusters. This year I definitely want to repeat it and see how far I will manage to go.

Yes, I was seriously blown away by the article on that one. The thousand-a-day that is. But the main guy is some seriously strong person.

I think my lower back and my hip hinge is simply not ready for it. I rather play it safe than wasting the prep for the new biking season and the halfmarathon.

"You don't learn from experience. You learn from reflecting on the experience."
- Kristen Ulmer

Jan. 15, 2014, 8:25 p.m.
Posts: 2412
Joined: Sept. 5, 2012

after day two I didn't think I would be able to keep going, but I have stuck with it. two more rounds this week to finish off week two and I'll have 4000 swings under my belt. my body has adapted much quicker than expected with my total time dropping from 46 minutes on day one to 30 minutes on the second workout of week two by reducing each rest period. the main thing holding me back is my grip for the last two rounds of each day. I lost four pounds after week one, but am more impressed with my time decrease, feeling much more fit.

It's crazy to read about a group that did the ten thousand in ten days.

what kettlebell weight did you start with and what are you at now

#northsidetrailbuilders

Forum jump: