Archive

Posts Tagged ‘supan’

CrassFit Workout of the Day 2009/10/15

October 18th, 2009 Simon Voggeneder No comments

Good evening and welcome to the world of chill!

Our climate has opted to skip autumn and flowed from late summer directly into pre-winter conditions. But cold conditions are not enough to stop us from working out (we even did a training camp at Dominik‘s premises last winter amid a snow storm – no problem at all!). The advantage of working out in the cold is that the temperature itself is little of a problem, as your body is challenged constantly and thereby warmed from within.

Nontheless, it is of great importance that you keep your workouts short in the cold season – especially the rest pause between sets and exercise blocks should be minimized as you cool out almost immediately and thereby are likely to catch a cold. Opt for a workout that is of short duration but of high intensity.

For this workout, I did likewise. The core of the workout is a system that I read about on Testosterone Muscle, authored by (who else ;) ) Dan John: The Litvinov Workout. Hammer thrower gold medalist Sergey Litvinov has a very distinct training pattern: He combines heavy basic exercises with sprint intervals. This type of workout is very short yet extremely intense and therefore more than suited for our timely needs.

We therefore did:

Warm-Up

Pre-Fatigue

5 + 5 Push Press 24 kg Kettlebell
3 x Rope Climb
- 3 rounds

5 + 5 (or 3 + 3) Turkish Get-Up 16 kg Kettlebell as finisher.

The pre-fatigue training targeted the upper body musculature, as it would not be challenged too much in the upcoming Litvinov circuit. We did a pushing exercise, a pulling exercise and (to my knowledge) the best abdominal exercise – the get-up. Needless to say that this part of the workout was very intense already – just try to read it from Peter’s mimics. The foremost problem with the exercises was the lack of grip strength we were able to show – if you have no feeling whatsoever in your hands, climbing is an utter struggle.

Peter was the only one attending (besides me) this time. Dominik and Rainer didn’t make it and Harald will be in Graz for studying for quite some more time.

Metabolic Conditioning

Litvinov Circuit
Front Squat (16 + 24 kg Kettlebell), 8-15 reps
400 meter sprint (including a hill sprint)
3 rounds

The Litvinov circuit is not to be underestimated! I tried to do the number of squats prescribed but utterly failed by doing 6-5-3 squats in the respective rounds – it simply was impossible to accomplish more than that, despite slow running on my side. Not only fatigue is a factor in metabolic conditioning training, nausea is another critical one. The degree by which I was feeling nauseous during the second sprint already was close to the edge of being bearable. Still, this is what gets you further and nothing else :)

Post-Fatigue

Kettlebell Complex of

  • Clean
  • Military Press
  • Front Squat

5 repetitions, 3 rounds, using one 16 kg kettlebell

The post-fatigue training was incorporated as the Litvinov circuit is intense but still we somehow felt like it was not enough – the capability of the body to come back is tremendous. Three rounds of this light-weight complex was a good finisher to use up the last reserves :)

Ironic: After the completion of our workout, the feeling in our hands had returned. We were able to perform better rope climbs after the workout than at its start. :D

Mission Accomplished! :) Cold climate couldn't stop us from enjoying a great workout.

Mission Accomplished! :) Cold climate couldn't stop us from enjoying a great workout.

I am very much looking forward to the next workout. Dominik has revealed a hard nut to crack as the next workout suggestion :)

Train on and stay strong,
Simon

CrassFit Workout of the Day 2009/10/08

October 9th, 2009 Simon Voggeneder 1 comment

Yesterday we assembled once more for a heavy CrassFit workout – with one thing to surprise us positively – Dominik found the time to join us again. He is a great motivator and I really feel that he is the true core of our group – the workouts overflow with intensity and motivation whenever he joins us.

After I wrote about the least crass of CrassFit, as Peter put it, I knew that it would become harder this time – but little did I know about how hard it really became.

We did the following workout:

Pre-Fatigue

Three rounds of

Ladder one up to four repetitions of the following complex

  • Swing
  • High Pull
  • Clean
  • Military Press or Push Press
  • Squat

using either the 16 kg or the 24 kg kettlebell.

Paired with rope pull-ups for the same repetitions.

Metabolic Conditioning

3 rounds of
Hill Sprint
10 Burpees
Jog to start of hill

[---]

Initially, we planned for five rounds of the metabolic conditioning but cut it down to three, due to the sheer fatigue we experienced after the strength part, which really was the main part of our workout.

I brought a 24 kg competition kettlebell with me – a weight most of us weren’t used to. As for me, I have never (push) pressed it more than three times – only Dominik is used more than this. We struggled in our fight against gravity – and prevailed. Rainer used the 16 kg kettlebell and did a great job – it is high time he purchases his first one for private use :)

Handling a weight you have never handled before is a tremendous challenge that forces your body to progress in strength. We got together in pairs and paused in the time our partner did the kettlebell complex – a pause that we were in dire need of. As I neared the last repetitions, a stiff feeling in my forearms was the most urgent problem apart from the fatigue in my legs – especially when you do push presses, your legs are working all the time.

We talked a lot about the transfer from kettlebell training to other feats of strength and share the experience that kettlebells are a tremendous help to become a monster in regards of strength, velocity and full body stability. Just focus on the basic movements (swings, (deadlift) high pull, clean, press, snatch and squat – supplemented with the get-up) and master them.

After the strength workout, I had a hard time finishing the metabolic conditioning work. Already after round 1 I was barely able to jog my way down to the foot of the hill. If I have ever been close to vomiting during a workout, it was yesterday – a degree of intensity I have never experienced so far.

This is, what gets you further. Incorporate as much intensity into your workouts as you can possibly sustain and grow stronger than you have ever been!

Wasted but happy after roughly an hour of kettlebell madness

Wasted but happy after roughly an hour of kettlebell madness

Train on and stay strong!
Simon

CrassFit Workout of the Day 2009/10/01

October 2nd, 2009 Simon Voggeneder No comments

Yesterday we went for another great CrassFit workout. After a short break of one week without workout (attendees were either sick or had no time – I wouldn’t go for it all alone, did kettlebell complexes instead :) ) we got into gears just fine.

Unfortunately, Harald and Dominik were absent, for good reasons: Harald is back to Graz and Dominik occupied with heavy manual labor – so it was only Rainer, me and Peter.

We did the following workout:

Pre-Fatigue

5 x 5 Frog Jumps uphill
5 + 5 Turkish Get-Up (with water bottle or 16 kg kettlebell, according to level of expertise)
5 x 2 Lengths rope climbing

For the frog jumps, it is especially important to gain momentum with the right arm work. Look at how Peter is doing the jumps and what impressive horizontal leaps he can take. This is due to long training (he is an active track & field athlete). Lead the arms from down below up and forward and time the movement of the hands with the movement of the feet to achieve maximum leaps.

The Turkish get-up is one of the best exercises to train your abdominal strength but also one of the most dangerous. I highly recommend that you start training it using no weight at all. Start to add resistance only when you have learned the technique! It is important that the shoulder is resting in its socket and the arms are straightened toward the sky – and the look is always facing the hand reaching out of the clouds.

Start slowly and always part the movement into steps. Watch Peter’s form – he is doing great!

Finally, the rope climbing was the first exercise I couldn’t film due to the darkness – I will make sure that I take a good source of light with me in future to enable video capture also amid night hours.

Metabolic Conditioning

5 rounds of:
5 L-pull-ups (easier variation: tucked in knees)
16 Lunge walks
10 L-push-ups
200 meter running

The darkness and other circumstances prevented us from documenting this one. To explain the L-pull-up and the L-push-up, I will provide videos.

The L-pull-up works abdominals as well as the back and arms – it is a lot harder than a regular pull-up. Tucked in knees are the easier version that I used, due to the inability to perform an exercise this hard.

Watch this video at 3:00. Here you see a variation of a push-up with legs up the wall. This is how the starting position of a L-push-up looks like – from there on, it is like a handstand push-up: Descend like you are to ram your head into the ground and push yourself up again. Any wall or elevated platform is fine for doing this – just keep in mind to have a right angle between legs and torso.

We shortened the run a bit due to the circumstances and used it for regeneration issues. In total, this was the easiest workout of the CrassFit series up to date and will be remembered as such. The preparation was suboptimal and will be augmented next time.

Well done, night figthers!<br><i>There was nothing left to feel, when I fell into the night...</i>

Well done, night figthers!
There was nothing left to feel, when I fell into the night...

I am looking forward to next week’s workout. It will be a major test for metabolic and muscular endurance, I guarantee :) Hopefully, with good lighting assistance to be able to capture it properly.

Train on and stay strong,
Simon

Crassfit Workout of the Day 2009/09/15

September 16th, 2009 Simon Voggeneder No comments

Good morning, fellow readers!

Yesterday we did another CrassFit training session with the following program:

Pre-Fatigue

Focus: Strength + Jump Power

2 rounds of
10 knee tuck jumps
10 whole body jumps (explosive push-ups with the whole body up in the air)
5 explosive pull-ups
5 squat-clean + press (2 x 16 kg kettlebell)

During the pre-fatigue part of the workout we started to realize that it would become a harder workout than we thought ;) Our metabolism was truly fired up by these two rounds – the explosive form of these exercises make them really hard on the body. As a rule of thumb, the metabolic stress is determined by the vertical leap of the movement and its resistance. Squat cleans (with presses) totally destroy the metabolism and if you continue with knee tuck jumps, you are sure to shoot your pulse frequency up into new all-time heights.

Metabolic Conditioning

Focus: Timed Workload (Minute Drills)

60” of

  • Split jumps
  • Clap Pushups
  • Rope pull-ups
  • Burpees

with approx. 20” rest between exercises

approx. 2′ rest

75” of

  • Jump squats
  • Push-ups
  • Pull-ups
  • Kettlebell swings 16 kg

with approx. 20” rest between exercises

approx. 2′ rest

90” of

  • Squats
  • Puppy push-ups
  • Body rows
  • Mountain climbers

With the metabolic conditioning, Peter (who designed the workout) was not 100% correct about the nature of the workout. All of the attendees experienced muscular failure before systemic failure (which is the intention of metabolic conditioning). But not too much of a problem – we did what we could. Initially, we planned the three blocks as 60”, 90” and 120” time under tension blocks but opted to reduce the load as we experienced enormous fatigue after the first block already.

Harald told me between the blocks, that time is relative, after complaining about my level of fatigue. And how relative it is ;) These were amongst the longest seconds I have ever experienced.

Post-Fatigue

Focus: Static Holds

60” static hold of

  • Body row (arms 90° flexed)
  • Wall sit (30” 45°, 30” 90° leg flex)
  • Push up (variable positions)

The static work was the crowning of a tremendously intense workout. The sheer intensity and density of the workouts is the reason that we were unable to do filming this time – so there is no video documentation, I am afraid :( Apart from the workout intensity, it gets dark earlier and earlier these days so we have to put up with training in darkness in future, I guess. At the time we finished this one (20:00), darkness was embracing us already.

Four madmen. Out in the darkness. Wasted and done.

Four madmen. Out in the darkness. Wasted and done.

Darkness will not stop us, for sure. The next workout session is scheduled for next Tuesday, 22nd of September 2009. This time, it’s Dominik‘s turn to design the workout. He already told us that he will take a barbell with him. What diabolic intentions he has on his mind? Stop by here in one week’s time to find out :)

Train on and stay strong,
Simon

CrassFit workout of the day 2009/09/08

September 9th, 2009 Simon Voggeneder 2 comments
Dominik lifting the heavy cement

Dominik lifting the heavy cement


Odd objects in movement – this was the slogan of our latest CrassFit workout. Our comrade Harald supplied us with tremendous tools to train in classical strongmen-fashion:

  • Water tubes filled with cement (25 kg each)
  • A gym ball filled with water (circa 42 kg)
  • The biggest advantage of these training utilities is their price. Harald calculated the tubes for us. Buying the PVC tubes, the metal grip and the cement (50-50 with water), he invested around 15 Euro for both of them. The waterbag is even cheaper – depending on how much money you spend on the gym ball you may well afford it for a few Euros.

    After a warm-up session consisting of numerous coordinative exercises (ducked backward lunges for instance – a hard challenge for the CNS), we split up in groups of 3 and 2 persons. One group started with workout A, the other with workout B.

    Workout A

    3 rounds of
    Farmer’s walk with 2 Tubes, 100 m (2 x 50)
    Sprint, 200 m (4 x 50)

    Workout B

    5 rounds of
    Waterbag shouldering 5 each side (NOVICE: 5 waterbag lifts, bearhug)
    Pull-Up x 5
    Kettlebell military press 5 each side (16 kg kettlebell)

    Workout A was short, sweet and hard. The tough part was the waterbag lifting in workout B. If you haven’t had the chance to lift a waterbag yet, I highly anticipate trying it. Without a center of gravity, the whole body has work the stability constantly in order to balance out the water masses and their force of gravity. Explosive lifting and absolute control are key factors of this exercise –pull-ups and military presses are like rest, in comparison.

    As a ‘finisher’, we tried out overhead presses with the cement tubes. It was beyond my capabilities but well within Dominik’s abilities – hats off to my strong comrade!

    In conclusion, this workout was a highlight for our CrassFit course. It was inspiring and motivating and we look forward to more workouts with even more attendees – with five of them we set a new temporary record at this stage.

    Rainer (our newcomer - warm welcome to him :)), Harald, Dominik, me and Peter - five men, infinite willpower and a great workout

    Rainer (our newcomer - warm welcome to him :) ), Harald, Dominik, me and Peter - five men, infinite willpower and a great workout

    More to come next week – training is scheduled for next Tuesday 18:30, Freinberg park.

    Train on and stay strong,
    Simon

    P.S.: Dominik delivered my new kettlebells alongside yesterday’s training. I will put them to good use :)

    A 16 kg fitness kettlebell alongside a 24 kg competition kettlebell

    A 16 kg fitness kettlebell alongside a 24 kg competition kettlebell

    CrassFit Workout of the Day 2009/08/17

    August 17th, 2009 Simon Voggeneder No comments
    Jägermayrhof sign

    This is where we are heading to

    Due to the heat of the day, we postponed our CrassFit workout today from the scheduled start of 6 PM to 7:30 PM, which turned out to be a great idea – otherwise, the heat of the summer day would have melted us away!

    tools

    A CrassFitter's default toolchain

    This time, we settled for a more ‘humane’ workout than last time. Dominik couldn’t attend this time, sadly, so it was just me, Peter and his sister Josi.

    We did (NOVICE level in brackets)

    Pre-Fatigue

    3 rounds of

    5 Double-Kettlebell Front-Squat + Jerk (2 x 16 kg) (5 Kettlebell Front Squat 8 kg)

    5 Dips (either bar or rings) (Dip support hold x 5)

    2 x ~2m rope climbing (5 body rows)

    frontsquat

    Squatting deep and hard

    pre_fatigue

    Rope climbing and body rows simultaneously

    pre_fatigue2

    Squeezing the full ROM out of the dip

    pre_fatigue3

    Trying hard to climb the rope

    pre_fatigue4

    Nice front squats with 'babybell'

    Main workout

    I decided to call it “Dauerwurst” (German classification for sausage like salami), after its inventor Wursti, a fellow from Muscle Corps who equipped me with training routines last year and the long duration of the workout (for a circuit trial).

    5 rounds of

    15 Burpees (10-15 Burpees with push-up progressions instead of push-up)

    15 Body rows (15 Body rows)

    20 Kettlebell swings 16 kg (20 Kettlebell sumo high-pull 8kg)

    20 Russian twist 8 kg Kettlebell (20 Russian twist with water bottle)

    20 Jumping jacks

    burpee_airtime

    Burpee airtime!

    twist

    Peter going all-out with the russian twist

    Post-Fatigue

    Walking lunges + overhead press with 16 kg Kettlebell (same with 8 kg Kettlebell)

    post_fatigue_madness

    Putting the kettlebell over the head - with all might!

    post_fatigue_madness2

    I struggled and almost failed on this attempt

    post_fatigue_madness3

    Josi showed a tremendous performance - nice walking lunge with overhead press

    We did a great job getting to our limits and beyond – systemic failure is the goal of this workout, so make sure that you do not go for muscular failure – the body rows are especially dangerous to go too far. Give yourself some leeway with them and go for the highest anaerobic workload you can manage.

    Have fun working out and post your experiences in comments. We did not time this workout – the core workout should be about 25 minutes if done properly.

    Peter will be away the next two weeks and head for Canada, so expect at least Dominik and me the next two weeks for workout coverage!

    Train on and stay strong!

    Simon

    CrassFit Workout of the Day 2009/08/10

    August 10th, 2009 Simon Voggeneder 4 comments
    This is how I felt like after the workout :)

    This is how I felt like after the workout :)

    Light rain could not stop us from performing at our very best at this second CrassFit meeting.

    The workout routine:

    Pre-Fatigue

    Hill Sprint
    Clean + Squat x 5 ( 2 x 16 kg Kettlebell )
    Double Rope Climb
    Dips x 5

    Doubles Ropes for Double Rope Climbing

    Doubles Ropes for Double Rope Climbing

    Main Workout

    “Joachim”
    8 Burpees
    4 + 4 Push Press (16 kg Kettlebell)
    8 Pull-Ups
    8 Swings (16 kg Kettlebell)

    Post-Fatigue

    Zac Even-Esh Circle #1 + #2

    #1:
    Clean + Push Press + Walk (extended arms) + Push Press x 5
    Rack Position Walk + Squat x 5
    Farmer’s Walk + Rows x 5 + Push-Up x 5

    #2:
    Push-Up explosive + Clean + Squat + Push Press x 5
    + Circle #1

    Peter, me, Dominik: Done :)

    Peter, me, Dominik: Done :)

    We all felt pretty much wasted after this extremely intense workout session. This is nothing like anything I have experienced before – the finisher was almost too much. For me – at least – it was beyond my limits.

    Watch the video footage of the finishing exercises:

    Zac Even-Esh Circle #1 – GMX Video

    Zac Even-Esh Circle #2 – GMX Video

    Zac Even-Esh Circle #2 – GMX Video

    Zac Even-Esh Circle #2 Dominik – GMX Video

    First CrassFit meeting (2009/08/05)

    August 8th, 2009 Simon Voggeneder 1 comment

    On Wednesday, 18:30, the first (unofficial) CrassFit workout meeting took play in the Freinberg Park, next to the Jägermayrhof, Linz, Austria. This is the first of a series of workouts that will take place weekly here in Linz.

    Attendees

    This first CrassFit meeting was a small one with only four attendees, due to private arrangement: Me (Simon), Dominik (from naturtraining.at), Peter (a mutual comrade from Dominik’s workshops) and his sister. Plans for advertising the training are underway – the attendee numbers will rise for sure.

    From left to right: Me, Dominik, Josi (Peter's sister), Peter

    From left to right: Me, Dominik, Josi (Peter's sister), Peter

    Location

    In the evening, the Freinberg Park is a quite silent area, even with the mild temperatures we had. For our first workout, we searched the park for suitable places to do exercises we planned on and are elemental to CrassFit (dips, pull-ups, …) and we were a bit disappointed not to find the ideal space. The city of Linz installed a Fit4 circuit in this park but unluckily it is firstly split into fifteen stations and secondly does not offer a long and high hanging pull-up bar – which would have been integral for our upcoming workout. Finally we (Peter and me, at that time) improvised and chose a playground with its swing framework. In addition with a Jungle Gym, we figured we had sufficient pulling options.

    Workout

    We decided for a metabolic conditioning workout beforehand which perfectly suited the landscape we were training in

    • 20 kettlebell swings (16 kg kettlebell)
    • 10 Maxwell-Burpees
    • 400 meters running (including a hill sprint as finisher)

    5 rounds (for time)

    Peter and Dominik fighting against Iron BellsPeter and Dominik fighting against Iron Bells

    We decided to stop the time although it was not important to us which time we would need to finish – to finish, that was the goal. I had a hard time to keep up proper form with the swings and as the rounds of the circuit progressed, I was feeling increasingly nauseous. I am sure I would have cancelled the workout after three rounds if the others did not push me further – they were formidable!
    Peter’s sister did an earlier version of the workout – 10 high jumps, 10 push-ups on a slide (easier than normal) and the running. She did very well for her first try on circuit training :)
    I finished the workout within 19’43”, approximately 2′ slower than both Peter and Dominik, who were equally fast.

    ... with the last breaths, up the hill… with the last breaths, up the hill

    As a finisher, we did a dip ladder on the Jungle Gym, up to 7 repetitions. I personally maxed out at five, Peter’s sister did static  holds in support instead.

    Dips Madness - Ladders and StuffDips Madness – Ladders and Stuff

    Done. Strenuous but great fun. Regardless of how nauseous I felt during the workout, the feeling afterwards is priceless and well worth the effort undertaken.

    Conclusion

    The meeting was a blast! Training with other fanatics (you may even call them ‘lunatics’ ;) ) in the park is so much fun, I’d even pay for attending – even better that it is free now and will always be.

    The next workout is scheduled for Monday, 10th of August 2009 – I’m looking forward to it!

    Post your thoughts and times in comments ;)

    Simon

    Impressions

    crassfit_20090805_05 crassfit_20090805_06crassfit_20090805_07crassfit_20090805_08

    Categories: crassfit Tags: , , , ,