Squishy wrote:I don't belong to a fitness club, but I do have a treadmill and free weights at home. I'm also going to install a pull-up bar in the basement in front of the big screen TV. My physical strength isn't nearly as bad as my cardio - right now I can curl 40 lbs and bench press 200 lbs, and the last time I had access to a Smith machine I managed to squat a monster 680 lbs. Might have to work on grip strength for the PREP test, but I've been crushing tennis balls in my free time.
:
I see lots of "monsters" at the gym......and super strong, but only 2% only do real cardio. So things would be bad if they got hold of you in the first 30 seconds, but after a minute the cardio would prevail......just have to look at UFC for all that, guys gas out with poor cardio, then get really "rocked".
Could do a mixed run that would get everything going at once.
(IE: Sprint from one hydro pole to another = 100m, drop and 15 pushups, sprint another 100m, 15 situps, run 500m, jumping jacks, 500m, 15 step ups (step up onto park bench) with each leg leading for 15, 100m sprint......end it with...100m of two foot jumps forward, followed by 100m of alternating lunges with a twist (left/right) )
Basically a mixed bag of tricks, no expensive equipment and will fully prepapre you for a PREP with the stopping, starting stuff.
Another good grip strength, is put a weight on a rope attached to a broom handle/baseball bat. Hold broom straight out with both hands and turn it tighten the rope, raise the weight, and once at top, reverse on the way down controlled. Stengthens grip and forearms.
Above is merely a suggestion/thought and in no way constitutes legal advice or views of my employer. www.OHTA.ca