Death by Pull-ups

RRL Team at the Ragnar Trail.  Good times

RRL Team at the Ragnar Trail.  Good times


Warmup:

Box Breathing 5 minutes


30 overhead squats with PVC


10x each: Pushups, Situps, Dips, Pullups, Burpees


Skill: Jump Rope 3 minutes


Core: Sandbag Getups.  Max reps in 5 minutes with 60 lb bag


Workout: A.
Bench Press 5-5-5-5


Workout B.

Death By Pull-up
With a continuously running clock perform:
1 Pull-up in the first 1 min, 2 Pull-up in the second 1 min 3 Pull-up in the third 1 min ... Continuing this for as long as you are able. Use as many sets each minute as needed.


Workout C. Yoga and Gratitude



Post times, reps and/or loads to comments

Legs, Legs, Legs


Me and my son, Turner, running the Battlefrog, 15K obstacle course

Me and my son, Turner, running the Battlefrog, 15K obstacle course


Warmup:

Box Breathing 5 minutes

30 overhead squats with PVC


10x each: Pushups, Situps, Dips, Pullups, Burpees


Skill: Jump Rope 3 minutes


Core: Situp or pushup progression (whichever needs more work)

3 rounds- 30% of 2 min max + 10, then max for last set


Workout: A.
50 back squats @ 135 lbs

50 situps

50 front squats @ 115 lbs

50 pushups

50 Overhead Squats @ 75lbs

50 push press @ 45 lbs

50 Air Squats

50 Lunges

For time


Workout B.

Still Waters run deep

12 minutes



Post times, reps and/or loads to comments

Mid-life crisis channeled to Ironman

Mid-life crisis channeled to Ironman

Alan Lebovitz is one of my oldest and dearest friends.  We went to Bright School together, played sports and went waterskiing as kids.  Alan has always been a terrific athlete and when I moved back to Chattanooga, Alan became a regular early on at the garage.  This year he has entered his midlife crisis and instead of buying a Porsche, he decided to do an Ironman.  While the garage is simply not the same without his everyday presence, I am very proud of Alan and wish him the very best in his Ironman.  Alan has gone "Lone Wolf" on us and is training for this race alone, sometimes waking up super early to get in long bike rides and still have time for his family. 

Read More

From Couch to Marathons

Dave Porfiri is a good friend who I met through producing the Fitness Truth show.  Dave is a television producer too and we actually shot a Fitness Truth episode on his first few days at the RRL.  (Watch it HERE)  Since then, Dave has taken off and never looked back.  He has run over 35 races including a life goal of a Marathon and a couple of back to back Tough Mudders.  I caught up with Dave to ask him some questions about how it is all going.


Hey Dave,

How many marathons and other races have you run so far?


I'VE RUN SIX MARATHONS AND OVER 30 RACES OF SHORTER DISTANCES.


Impressive!, Tell us about your transformation.  Where were you athletically and how did you make the big change?

TWO YEARS AGO I DECIDED TO GET OFF THE COUCH, LARGELY DUE TO YOUR ENCOURAGEMENT. ALTHOUGH I WAS NOT REALLY OVERWEIGHT AT THAT TIME, MY FITNESS WAS SORELY LACKING. FOR SEVERAL YEARS THE ONLY EXERCISE I HAD DONE WAS BRISK WALKING THREE MORNINGS A WEEK. IN RETROSPECT IT WAS PRETTY LAME, BUT I GUESS IT WAS BETTER THAN NOTHING. GETTING INVOLVED WITH THE RRL AND CROSSFIT WAS A MAJOR LIFE CHANGE FOR ME. I DOVE IN HEAD FIRST TO SEE WHAT WOULD HAPPEN AND THE TURNING POINT FOR ME WAS
PARTICIPATING IN MY FIRST ATHLETIC EVENT SINCE MY SCHOOL DAYS. IT WAS A LOCAL OBSTACLE RACE AND CROSSFIT CHALLENGE CALLED THE HELLBENDER. I WAS ON A TEAM WITH TWO OTHER RRL MEMBERS AND I WAS VERY WORRIED ABOUT NOT LETTING THEM DOWN BECAUSE I KNEW THEIR FITNESS WAS SO MUCH BETTER THAN MINE. BUT THEY WERE VERY SUPPORTIVE AND WE ENDED UP COMPLETING THE DAY'S EVENTS IN A RESPECTABLE FASHION. THAT GAVE ME TREMENDOUS CONFIDENCE. ABOUT A MONTH LATER, I RAN MY FIRST 5K RACE AND STILL HAD LINGERING WORRIES ABOUT BEING ABLE TO FINISH IT. I FINISHED IN DECENT TIME AND I HAVEN'T LOOKED BACK SINCE. INCLUDING THE SIX MARATHONS, I'VE RUN OVER 35 RACES SINCE THEN - 5K'S, 8K'S 10K'S, 15K'S, HALF MARATHONS AND OBSTACLE RACES. I'M HAPPY TO SAY THAT I'M AT A POINT NOW WITH ALL THE SHORTER RACES THAT I AM PRETTY MUCH SETTING A NEW PERSONAL RECORD EVERY TIME I RACE.


What was your inspiration?

MY INSPIRATION TO GET OFF THE COUCH WAS MULTI-FACETED. IT REALLY STARTED WITH YOU MAKING THE SIMPLE INVITATION TO JOIN THE RRL. YOU NEVER ONCE MADE ME FEEL UNWORTHY BUT TO THE CONTRARY, YOU CONVINCED ME THAT IF I PUT IN THE TIME, I COULD TRANSFORM MY LIFE. I WAS ALSO INSPIRED BY THE FACT THAT I WANT TO REMAIN VERY ACTIVE AS I AGE. I'M 46 AND HAVE TWO PRE-TEEN DAUGHTERS. I WANT TO BE AROUND FOR THEIR WEDDINGS AND FOR ANY GRANDKIDS THAT COME ALONG. I DON'T WANT TO BE SITTING IN A CHAIR WATCHING TV IN MY 70'S AND 80'S. AT THAT AGE, I STILL WANT TO BE RUNNING, HIKING AND OTHERWISE VERY ACTIVE. BUT IT STARTS NOW. I FEEL LIKE RIGHT NOW EVERYTHING I AM DOING IS LAYING THE FOUNDATION FOR MY HEALTH AND FITNESS FOR THE LAST THIRD OF MY LIFE.  AS FOR ONE LAST THOUGHT ABOUT WHAT HAS INSPIRED ME, I LIKE TO TELL PEOPLE THAT I AM GOING THROUGH A MID-LIFE CRISIS BUT CHANNELING THE ANXIETY IN A POSITIVE DIRECTION. INSTEAD OF HAVING AN AFFAIR OR CHANGING CAREERS, I AM FOCUSING ON BECOMING A LEGITIMATE ATHLETE.


It is easy to say you are going to make a change, easy to start working toward a goal, but in your case, you have committed and surpassed your goals only to make new ones, even more aggressive ones.  What do you attribute this to?

I'M A VERY GOAL-ORIENTED PERSON. ALWAYS HAVE BEEN. I'M HIGHLY MOTIVATED BY SETTING GOALS AND ACHIEVING THEM. I GET BORED VERY EASILY, SO I MUST HAVE GOALS. I STARTED OUT JUST WANTING TO RUN MY FIRST SHORT RACE, BUT OVER TIME THE GOALS EVOLVED INTO WANTING TO RUN FASTER AND TO RUN LONGER RACES. I WILL KEEP DOING WHAT I'M DOING AS LONG AS I KEEP SETTING GOALS AND ACHIEVING THEM. ON THE FLIP SIDE, IT CAN BE VERY DISCOURAGING TO SET A GOAL AND TO FAIL. LUCKILY, THAT HAS NOT HAPPENED A LOT TO ME YET, BUT WHEN IT DOES HAPPEN, I START QUESTIONING MY TRAINING AND MOTIVATION AND I TRY TO ANALYZE WHAT WENT WRONG. IN MOST CASES, I SIMPLY SET A GOAL THAT WAS NOT REALISTIC.


Tell us why you selected a marathon as your goal originally?

I'VE ALWAYS BEEN FASCINATED WITH THE MARATHON EVERY SINCE I WAS A KID GROWING UP IN MIAMI. IN 1981, MY MOM TOOK ME TO SEE THE ORANGE BOWL MARATHON. I STILL REMEMBER HOW SURREAL IT WAS GETTING UP BEFORE DAWN AND SEEING ALL THESE PEOPLE LINING UP ON THE STARTING LINE. I ACTUALLY MADE A LITTLE SUPER-8 MOVIE ABOUT THE RACE AND MY MOM DROVE ME AROUND TO DIFFERENT VANTAGE POINTS SO WE COULD TRACK THE PROGRESS OF THE WHOLE RACE. AT ONE POINT WE ACTUALLY DROVE ON THE STREET BEHIND THE LEAD RUNNER'S POLICE ESCORT AND I GOT SHOTS HANGING OUT THE WINDOW! ANYWAY, THAT EXPERIENCE WAS ALWAYS IN THE BACK OF MY MIND AND OVER THE YEARS I THOUGHT ONE DAY IT MIGHT BE COOL TO TRY RUNNING A MARATHON BUT I NEVER REALLY CONSIDERED MYSELF WORTHY. AT ONE POINT IN THE MID-90'S WHEN I WAS LIVING IN LOS ANGELES, A FRIEND OF MINE STARTED TRAINING FOR A MARATHON AND INVITED ME TO GO TO SOME OF HIS SPEED WORKOUTS. I TRIED THAT A FEW TIMES BUT I QUICKLY GOT BORED. AT THAT TIME IN MY LIFE I WAS MUCH MORE INTERESTED IN HIKING AND BACKPACKING OUT IN THE WILDERNESS AND THAT ACTUALLY KEPT ME PRETTY FIT. I DIDN'T REALLY HAVE THE TIME TO DEDICATE TO RUNNING. FLASH FORWARD TWENTY YEARS AND I FELT I WAS FINALLY AT A GOOD POINT IN MY LIFE TO MAKE THE KIND OF TIME INVESTMENT REQUIRED FOR PROPER MARATHON TRAINING. I HAVE TO SAY I DIDN'T SET OUT WITH THE MARATHON AS A GOAL INITIALLY BUT RATHER FOCUSED ON SHORTER RACES. ONE BY ONE, AS I RAN THOSE SHORTER RACES, MY CONFIDENCE AND FITNESS INCREASED TO THE POINT THAT I WAS READY TO TACKLE A MARATHON. THE TURNING POINT WAS MEMORIAL DAY OF LAST YEAR WHEN I COMPLETED MY FIRST HALF MARATHON. I WAS ABLE TO FINISH THAT WITHOUT STOPPING AND THAT GAVE ME THE FINAL MOTIVATION I NEEDED TO FOCUS ON A MARATHON.


What additional training did you do while working toward the first marathon?

LOTS OF CROSS FIT AND DEDICATED OLYMPIC WEIGHTLIFTING TRAINING WITH A LOCAL STRENGTH COACH. ON SATURDAYS, I PARTICIPATED IN GROUP RUNS WITH THE LOCAL TRACK CLUB. THERE'S A GUY THERE, BILL BROCK, WHO HAS BEEN VERY ENCOURAGING. HE ALONG WITH YOU AND STEVE FAUER, MY STRENGTH COACH, HAVE SEVERAL THINGS IN COMMON. YOU ARE ALL NON-JUDGMENTAL AND MATTER-OF-FACT ABOUT WHAT I NEED TO DO TO ACHIEVE MY GOALS. ALSO, YOU ARE ALL GOOD AT JUST GIVING LITTLE NODS OF ENCOURAGEMENT ALONG THE WAY. THAT IS THE KEY FOR ME. JUST TO HAVE SOMEONE TELL YOU 'YES, YOU CAN DO IT' IS GREAT MOTIVATION.  I DON'T KNOW IF I WOULD HAVE EVEN ATTEMPTED THE FIRST MARATHON WITHOUT THE CONTINUING ENCOURAGEMENT OF YOU GUYS AND MY FELLOW ATHLETES. LATELY, I'VE ALSO GOTTEN TO KNOW A LOCAL RETIRED HIGH SCHOOL TRACK COACH, VAN TOWNSEND, AND HE TOO HAS BEEN A GREAT INSPIRATION AS I WORK ON IMPROVING MY TIME AND MY RUNNING FORM. WHEN I GO TO HIS SPEED WORKOUTS, I AM DEFINITELY THE SLOWEST PERSON THERE AND MOST OF THE OTHER RUNNERS ARE HALF MY AGE, BUT VAN DOESN'T TREAT ME ANY DIFFERENTLY. IN HIS EYES, I'M AN ATHLETE WORKING ON A PERSONAL GOAL AND I'M NO LESS IMPORTANT THAN THE FASTER PEOPLE THERE,  AND THAT REALLY MEANS A LOT TO ME.


What are your new fitness goals?

RIGHT NOW I AM VERY FOCUSED ON IMPROVING MY MARATHON TIME. THERE ARE GUYS MUCH OLDER THAN ME RUNNING FASTER MARATHONS, SO I KNOW ITS IN MY REACH TO GET THERE. I ALSO LOVE OBSTACLE RACES. I JUST DID TWO TOUGH MUDDERS ON BACK TO BACK WEEKENDS AND I WANT TO TRY ALL THE OTHER ONES OUT THERE. THOSE ARE APPEALING BECAUSE THEY ARE OBVIOUSLY MUCH MORE ABOUT TOTAL BODY FITNESS AND I DON'T WANT TO BECOME TOO ONE DIMENSIONAL. THE STEREOTYPE OF THE DISTANCE RUNNER IS A VERY THIN, ALMOST SICKLY LOOKING PERSON. I DON'T WANT TO BE THAT AND THAT IS WHY I CONTINUE TO BE RELIGIOUS ABOUT WEIGHT TRAINING. LUCKILY, MY STRENGTH COACH IS CUSTOMIZING MY TRAINING SO THAT I CONTINUE TO GAIN POWER, SPEED AND STRENGTH, BUT I DON'T BULK UP TOO MUCH. I LOVE CROSSFIT TOO AND WANT TO CONTINUE WITH THAT BUT IT HAS BECOME A HUGH CHALLENGE FOR ME TO CONTINUE THAT WITH THE SAME INTENSITY I HAD INITIALLY WHILE ALSO RUNNING HIGH MILEAGE WEEKS. I HAVE LEARNED MORE AND MORE THAT REST AND RECOVERY IS ABSOLUTELY CRITICAL FOR ME. I USED TO FEEL GUILTY ABOUT TAKING A DAY OFF, BUT NOW I AM THE OPPOSITE. I'VE BECOME VERY GOOD AT READING MY BODY AND I JUST KNOW WHEN I NEED TO TAKE A DAY OR TWO OFF.  I COME BACK STRONGER AND BETTER THAN BEFORE WHEN I DO THAT. WHEN I DON'T LISTEN TO MY BODY AND PUSH TOO HARD, I SOMETIMES GET SICK OR REALIZE THAT WHAT I'M DOING IS COUNTER-PRODUCTIVE AND I'M NOT MAKING ANY PROGRESS.


What advice do you have for someone that is in a similar situation to you before you made the transition?

LOOK FOR INSPIRATION AND LATCH ONTO IT. IF IT IS NOT COMING FROM WITHIN, THAN LOOK FOR EXTERNAL INSPIRATION. DO IT FOR YOUR KIDS OR YOUR SPOUSE. KNOW THAT YOUR DAY-TO-DAY QUALITY OF LIFE WILL IMPROVE IMMENSELY IF YOU COMMIT TO FITNESS, NOT TO MENTION THAT YOU WILL GAIN CONFIDENCE. IN AN EVER AND FAST-CHANGING WORLD, CONFIDENCE CAN BE IN SHORT SUPPLY. WE ARE ALL BOMBARDED WITH CHALLENGES IN OUR LIVES AND WE CAN ALL USE ALL THE SELF-CONFIDENCE WE CAN MUSTER TO GET THROUGH THE DAY-TO-DAY GRIND.

ALSO, JUST MAKING A COMMITMENT TO A PARTICULAR RACE IS A GREAT MOTIVATOR. ONCE I DECIDED I WAS GOING TO RUN MY FIRST 5K, I HAD SOMETHING TO TRAIN FOR THAT WAS CONCRETE. FOR ME, TRAINING FOR THE SAKE OF TRAINING IS VERY HARD. WHEN I'M TRAINING, I WANT TO BE THINKING ABOUT WHAT MY NEXT SPECIFIC GOAL IS. IT COULD BE TO TRY SOMETHING NEW, LIKE A NEW OBSTACLE RACE OR TO IMPROVE MY TIME ON MY NEXT 10K.


What have you learned about gear, shoes, pre and post race diet, training…etc?

I'M STILL LEARNING A LOT ABOUT THESE THINGS AND IT IS CLEAR THAT THERE IS NO CONSENSUS. THERE'S A LOT OF MARKETING HYPE OUT THERE AND IT CAN BE VERY FRUSTRATING TO SORT THROUGH ALL THE BS AND FIND OUT WHAT THE TRUE SCIENCE IS. SO, I READ A TON AND TRY TO ARM MYSELF WITH AS MUCH INFORMATION FROM AS MANY DIFFERENT SOURCES AS POSSIBLE. I'M WEARY OF 'DRINKING THE KOOL-AID' OF ONE PARTICULAR PHILOSOPHY TO THE DETRIMENT OF ALL OTHER OPTIONS. I THINK THERE IS SOMETHING POSITIVE YOU CAN TAKE FROM JUST ABOUT ANY DIET OR TRAINING PHILOSOPHY. RIGHT NOW, MY DIET IS CARB-HEAVY BECAUSE OF ALL THE RUNNING I'M DOING. I REALIZE THAT IS A NO-NO IN SOME CIRCLES, BUT IT WORKS FOR ME AND I'VE MANAGED TO LOSE SOME WEIGHT IN THE LAST SIX MONTHS. I'M BIG ON POST-WORKOUT RECOVERY DRINKS WITH CARBS AND PROTEIN. I'VE FOUND THAT WHEN I DON'T DO THAT, I'M DEFINITELY MORE SORE THAN USUAL THE NEXT DAY. PRE-RACE AND DURING RACE NUTRITION IS SOMETHING I'M STILL EXPERIMENTING WITH. I DON'T THINK I'VE FOUND THE BEST STRATEGY FOR ME. I HIT THE WALL HARD EVERY TIME IN MY MARATHON RUNNING, EVEN WHEN TAKING GEL PACKS WHILE RUNNING. I HAVE BEEN TRAINING ON AN EMPTY STOMACH ON PURPOSE, EVEN ON MY LONG RUN DAYS. I HAVE BEEN DOING THIS TO TRY TO TRAIN MY BODY TO BE MORE EFFICIENT AT BURNING FAT, BUT NOW I'M BEGINNING TO THINK THAT I NEED TO DO THE LONGER RUNS WITH SOME KIND OF PRE-RUN NUTRITION AS WELL AS NUTRITION DURING THE RUN ITSELF. I'VE RECENTLY READ ON SOME BLOGS THAT THE STOMACH WILL SHUT DOWN IN A LONG RUN TO HELP THE BODY FOCUS ON THE RUN ITSELF, MAKING GEL PACKS USELESS. THIS PROBABLY EXPLAINS WHY THEY HAVEN'T REALLY WORKED FOR ME. BUT SUPPOSEDLY, THAT CAN CHANGE BY TRAINING WITH THE GEL PACKS. SO THAT IS SOMETHING I'M PROBABLY GOING TO EXPERIMENT WITH.  FOR ALL THE RACE DISTANCES, I'VE BEEN MAKING GREAT SPEED GAINS LATELY EXCEPT FOR THE MARATHON BECAUSE OF THE GLYCOGEN DEPLETION PROBLEM.

AS FOR GEAR, I'M RUNNING WITH ZERO DROP ALTRA SHOES. INITIALLY, THEY CAUSED ME A LOT OF ANKLE PAIN, BUT THANKFULLY THAT HAS GRADUALLY SUBSIDED. I WORE OUT THE FIRST PAIR AND AM JUST BREAKING IN A NEW PAIR. THEY ARE DEFINITELY NOT CUSHY SOFT SHOES. YOU DEFINITELY FEEL EVERY POUNDING STEP WHEN YOU RUN IN THEM, BUT I BELIEVE THERE IS A LOT OF SOUNDNESS IN THE PHILOSOPHY BEHIND THE SHOES. AS FOR OTHER RUNNING GEAR,  I WAS WEARING COMPRESSION SHORTS BUT STOPPED DOING THAT IN THE LAST SEVERAL MONTHS. I'M NOT SURE WHY, BUT I JUST PREFER RUNNING IN STANDARD RUNNING SHORTS AND I DEFINITELY DON'T THINK MY SPEED HAS SUFFERED.


What injuries, if any, have you encountered?

THANKFULLY NONE AND I ATTRIBUTE THAT MAINLY TO THE STRENGTH TRAINING THAT I HAVE BEEN VERY CONSISTENTLY DOING FOR TWO YEARS. YOU CAN'T BEAT THE FLEXIBILITY AND MUSCLE DENSITY THAT YOU DEVELOP IN A WELL-RUN OLYMPIC STRENGTH TRAINING PROGRAM. ABOUT SIX MONTHS AGO, I  BRUISED MY SHIN ON A FAILED BOX JUMP DURING A CROSSFIT WORKOUT. I WENT TO THE ER BECAUSE I FEARED THAT I MIGHT HAVE GOTTEN A STRESS FRACTURE. WHEN THEY X-RAYED ME, THE ER DOC TOLD ME THAT HE WAS AMAZED AT MY BONE DENSITY AND THAT HE HAD NEVER SEEN ANYONE MY AGE WITH SUCH STRONG BONES. TO ME, THAT WAS A BIG ENDORSEMENT TO CONTINUE WITH THE WEIGHT TRAINING.

I THINK IT WOULD BE VERY DISCOURAGING IF I GOT HURT. I'VE BEEN SICK A FEW TIMES (USUALLY WHEN I'VE STRAINED MY IMMUNE SYSTEM TO ITS LIMITS BY OVER-DOING IT) AND THAT WAS BAD ENOUGH. THERE'S NOTHING MORE FRUSTRATING FOR ME THAN TO BE CONSTRAINED FROM WORKING OUT FOR LONGER THAN TWO DAYS. WHEN I HAVE TO WAIT A WEEK OR MORE TO RECOVER FROM AN ILLNESS, IT IS AGONY FOR ME.


How did you overcome these injuries?

BOUNCING BACK FROM ILLNESS IS ALWAYS A BUMMER BECAUSE I DEFINITELY LOSE CARDIO FITNESS AND HAVE TO WORK REALLY HARD TO GET IT BACK. NOT SO BAD WITH STRENGTH FITNESS THOUGH.


What advice do you give someone getting ready to run their first marathon?

RUN A TRIAL MARATHON FIRST. IF YOUR GOAL IS A JANUARY MARATHON, RUN ONE IN OCTOBER AS A TEST. I THINK THERE IS A LOT OF VALUE TO DEMYSTIFYING THE MARATHON. THERE IS A LOT OF SPECTACLE WITH ALL THE PEOPLE INVOLVED AND IT CAN REALLY CONTRIBUTE TO PRE-RACE JITTERS. IF YOU DO A TRIAL MARATHON BEFORE YOUR "REAL" ONE, YOU CAN ELIMINATE A LOT OF THOSE QUESTIONS YOU HAVE ABOUT WHAT THE RACE WILL BE LIKE.  YOU DON'T HAVE TO FINISH IT. JUST RUN ONE TO SEE HOW YOU DO IN RACE DAY CONDITIONS. IF YOU FINISH IT, SO MUCH THE BETTER. THAT IS ESSENTIALLY WHAT I DID. I HAD THE GOAL OF A JANUARY RACE AND DECIDED ON A WHIM TO RUN ONE IN OCTOBER JUST TO SEE HOW I WAS PROGRESSING IN MY TRAINING. AT THAT POINT, MY LONGEST RUN HAD ONLY BEEN 18 MILES.  I WOULD HAVE BEEN HAPPY TO HAVE RUN AS FAR AS I COULD DURING THE RACE AND DROP OUT, BUT I JUST KEPT GRINDING AWAY AND I WAS ABLE TO FINISH IT. IT WAS A SLOW TIME TO BE SURE, BUT IT GAVE ME A TREMENDOUS CONFIDENCE BOOST, SO MUCH SO THAT I DECIDED TO RUN ANOTHER RACE THE NEXT MONTH AND IN THAT ONE, I WAS ABLE TO IMPROVE MY TIME BY TEN MINUTES. THE THIRD ONE I RAN WAS THE "REAL" ONE I HAD BEEN TRAINING FOR ALL ALONG AND I WAS ABLE TO IMPROVE MY TIME BY ANOTHER 30 MINUTES! SO, IT WAS DEFINITELY NOT A CONVENTIONAL MARATHON TRAINING STRATEGY, BUT FOR ME, IT WORKED.


Have you done any other events recently?
What did you think about it?


I JUST FINISHED TWO TOUGH MUDDERS IN EIGHT DAYS - NOT SOMETHING I RECOMMEND FOR ANYONE. I'M REALLY SORE RIGHT NOW AND HAVE SCRAPES AND BRUISERS EVERYWHERE, BUT IT WAS FUN AND CRAZY. THE RUNNING PART OF THE MUDDER IS PROBABLY THE EASIEST THING FOR ME OBVIOUSLY - ITS TEN MILES. THE BIGGER CHALLENGE WERE THE THINGS THAT REQUIRE UPPER BODY STRENGTH - THE MONKEY BARS, THE WALL CLIMBS, HAND WALKS, ETC. I WAS ABLE TO CONQUER EVERY OBSTACLE HOWEVER, THANKS AGAIN TO MY CONTINUING OLYMPIC STRENGTH TRAINING. TWO YEARS AGO, I NEVER COULD HAVE ATTEMPTED ANYTHING LIKE A TOUGH MUDDER.  NOW HONESTLY, IT WASN'T THAT PHYSICALLY CHALLENGING - MORE OF A MENTAL CHALLENGE THAN ANYTHING ELSE. WHEN YOU HAVE TO DO OBSTACLES CALLED "THE ARCTIC ENEMA," "ELECTROSHOCK THERAPY," AND "FIRE IN YOUR HOLE," IT CAN BE A LITTLE INTIMIDATING. BUT IN RETROSPECT, NO OFFENSE TO MUDDERS OUT THERE, A MARATHON IS A LOT HARDER.


What are you training for now?

AFTER I REST A FEW DAYS, I'LL GET BACK INTO THE GRIND OF MY TWENTY WEEK MARATHON TRAINING PROGRAM THAT I'M CURRENTLY DOING. MY NEXT MARATHON WILL BE IN OCTOBER AND I HAVE A SPECIFIC TIME GOAL. BETWEEN NOW AND THEN, I'M GOING TO CONTINUE TO RUN AS MANY SHORTER RACES I CAN. I'LL PROBABLY END UP RUNNING 3-4 5K'S, A COUPLE OF 10K'S, MAYBE ONE HALF AND AN OBSTACLE RACE.


Thanks Dave!  Great story!

SealFit from the archives

Goruck is in Chattanooga tonight.  Good luck to all that are participating!

Goruck is in Chattanooga tonight.  Good luck to all that are participating!


Warmup:

Box Breathing 5 minutes

30 overhead squats with PVC

10x each: Pushups, Situps, Dips, Pullups, Burpees


Skill: Jump Rope 3 minutes


Core:

120 pushups for time

120 situps for time Army standard


Workout: A.
Back Squat 5-5-5-5


Workout B.

SealFit Work Capacity from the archives

Complete the following for time:

60x KB swing (53#/35#)
60x calories on rower
50x KB swing (53#/35#)
50x calories on rower
40x KB swing (53#/35#)
40x calories on rower


Workout C.

Still Waters Run Deep or Fish Bowl


Good workout this morning!  Back Squats started light and went to 245 for me because of my calf injury.  I just stayed a little light and did not feel any strain.

The Row/KB workout was not as bad as it looked on the board.  Ended with a 12 minute Still Water.  Clear head...ready to roll

PM Workout:

Warm up:

General warm up


30 minutes of PT.  Everyone got in a circle and called out exercises and numbers for 30 minutes.  Selection Candidates wore 30 lb ruck.

Pushups, pullups, situps, burpees, bear crawls, crab walks, wall balls, monkey bars, air squats, tabata squats, Russian twists and flutter kicks.

Post workout:

Guys hung out, drank a beer and laughed.  Great way to end the week and start the weekend!



Post times, reps and/or loads to comments

6-26-14

Hayden hits me with a hose during the 1000 burpee/5 mile Run-Burpee-Run workout

Hayden hits me with a hose during the 1000 burpee/5 mile Run-Burpee-Run workout


Warmup:

Box Breathing 5 minutes

30 overhead squats with PVC


10x each: Pushups, Situps, Dips, Pullups, Burpees


Skill: Jump Rope 3 minutes


Core:

5 minutes in front leaning rest (plank)

then, immediately 200 flutter kicks



Workout: A.
5 mile run

or

Row 500 m

10 burpees

AMRAP 40 minutes


Workout B.

Bench Press 5-5-5-5-5


Post times, reps and/or loads to comments

I cant let my calf injury hold back the group.  We need to be running and the one thing I know with running is that you either use it or lose it. 

So, while the guys did a 5 miler, I stayed back and did a 500 m row/10 burpees amrap for 40 minutes. 

I am frustrated with the calf injury.  Got acupuncture yesterday, but I am just going to have to stay off it.  No running or rucking for about 2 weeks.  Then, I will move into it very slowly. 

Our Selection training has started a while back, but we will be doing an intensive 10 week program that starts at the end of July.  I HAVE to be sure that I am 100% healed and ready for the training to begin because there are alot of double days and alot of running and rucking ahead of us.

Sandbag Tailpipe


Warmup:

Box Breathing 5 minutes

30 overhead squats with PVC

10x each: Pushups, Situps, Dips, Pullups, Burpees


Skill: Jump Rope 3 minutes


Core: Every Minute on the minute (EMOM) do max reps for 30 seconds of Pushups/Situps

Odd Minutes: Situps

Even Minutes: Pushups

Continue for 12 minutes (6 rounds of each)


Workout: A.
“Tailpipe” – Sandbag style
Partner 1 runs 200m, while Partner 2 Holds the sandbag overhead. P1 and P2 switch roles when P1 returns for the run. Do a total of three sets for time. If the partner holding the sandbag drops it, both partners do 10 burpees for each drop.


Workout B.

“The Bear and the Rabbit” – Sandbag style
Teams of two complete a total of
4 x 200m laps of Farmer Carry (60/30, per hand)
P1 (rabbit) performs 2 Sandbag Farmer Carry while P2 (bear) runs. When P2 catches up to P1 they switch off. P2 picks up where P1 left off. Continue to do this until a total of 4 x 200m laps of Farmer Carries are completed as a team. Make it harder by carrying heavier Sandbags. Do not run with the sandbags. Rule of thumb, if you can run with them, they are not heavy enough.


Workout C.

Still Water/Fish Bowl 10 minutes


Post times, reps and/or loads to comments


Back from my trip to the Florida Keys with the family.  Great trip with nice dolphin on fly and spearfishing for the boys.  My daughter got to swim with the dolphins and we ate some amazing food.  I hurt myself so badly at Chef Michaels in Islamorada and the night before at The Outpost in Marathon that I went on a 24, then 36 hour fast.  I think I ate so much at those dinners that I wasnt even hungry.  I have read that intermittent fasting is good for you...who knows.  I can say that the feeling of being stuffed full is not as good as the feeling of being fasted, to me anyway.

I pulled from the Goruck training page today to do some sandbag work and overhead holds.  I found one that was pretty good.  They took the "Tailpipe" workout from Mark Twight at Gym Jones and put a sandbag twist on it.  We then did a turtle and hare workout which ended up with more running than I thought. 

I am still working to recovery on my calf.  I made it about 100 yards before I felt a painful twinge and stopped immediately.  I rowed the remainder of the workout.

Here are some shots from our recent trip.

33 free range organic, hook caught dolphin.  Can NOT get any better protein source than these!

33 free range organic, hook caught dolphin.  Can NOT get any better protein source than these!

First dolphin on speargun for Turner

First dolphin on speargun for Turner

First Dolphin on fly for Hayden

First Dolphin on fly for Hayden

First Dolphin on fly for Turner

First Dolphin on fly for Turner

First fish on speargun for Turner

First fish on speargun for Turner

First fish with a speargun for 7 year old Reed

First fish with a speargun for 7 year old Reed

Kids in the water with dolphins 

Kids in the water with dolphins

 

Great family fun!

Great family fun!


Tuesday, June 24, 2014

"Do not let what you cannot do interfere with what you can do."

John Wooden


Warmup:

Box Breathing 5 minutes

30 overhead squats with PVC

10x each: Pushups, Situps, Dips, Pullups, Burpees


Skill: Jump Rope 3 minutes


Core: situp progression x 5 rounds


Workout: A.

21-15-9 reps, for time of:

Pull-up

Ring Dip

Burpee


Workout B.

Every 1 min for 10 mins do:

3 Power Snatches, 135/95 lbs

6 Toes-to-bars

9 Box Jumps, 24/20 in




Post times, reps and/or loads to comments


Beep Test

"The cure for everything is saltwater - sweat, tears or the sea."

- Izak Dinesen

Trevor suggested that we do the Beep Test today.  Here is a video demonstrating:


Warmup:

Box Breathing 5 minutes

30 overhead squats with PVC

10x each: Pushups, Situps, Dips, Pullups, Burpees


Skill: Jump Rope 3 minutes


Core: Lying Hip Swing x 30


Workout: A.
Beep Test


Workout B.

Death By Push-up
With a continuously running clock perform:
1 Push-up in the first 1 min, 2 Push-ups in the second 1 min 3 Push-ups in the third 1 min ... Continuing this for as long as you are able. Use as many sets each minute as needed.

Start at round 10

 

Post times, reps and/or loads to comments

Foot Care Kit

Photo courtesy of Goruck.  Read their tips on foot care HERE

Photo courtesy of Goruck.  Read their tips on foot care HERE

Blisters are going to happen as you are getting ready for an event like Selection or Kokoro.  They may even happen during the event and even if your feet are hard as stones, you need to be prepared to fix them.

In making my kit I continued to think that I was making it so I could help out a team mate because I don't like thinking negatively.  Either way, I will be prepared.

You don't need much to be able to prevent blisters or continue on after some have formed.  My kit fits inside an Altoids box.

IMG_4861.jpg

The contents are:

Leatherman Micra with scissors

Alcohol swabs

Needles

Thread

Moleskin

Duct tape wrapped on a pencil

Band Aids

IMG_4862.JPG

This stuff easily fits in an Altoids can and can be waterproofed by putting that in a snack sized ziplock. 

IMG_4863.JPG

The whole kit can easily be put in your shirt pocket or in any backpack. 

This stuff is what I need, but you may need more or less.  The important thing is to have some sort of a kit that you can use to take care of yourself or a team mate.  It could be the difference in finishing or not or in extreme cases, life or death.

Goruck Selection? SealFit Kokoro?

I received this email today and thought that others might have the same question



Tom:
 
Love your website, check it every day and incorporate a part of your daily wod to add to my daily wod each morning. What is the “Selection” that you keep referencing? I am 43 and will 44 in September, I am wrestling mentally with attempting the Sealfit 20X challenge in September. Haven’t signed up for it yet but am moving closer every day. What is your experience with it?
 
Layne


and his follow up:

Thanks, and yes. On the other issue, I have been doing crossfit for over a year, am respectable in my performance at the box (not going to become master qualified at this point) but want to push myself a bit. Is the 20X challenge that opportunity? Have you completed it or Kokoro?
 
LCJ


My son, Turner 16, during his SealFit 20x

My son, Turner 16, during his SealFit 20x

SealFit Kokoro?  SealFit 20x?  Goruck Selection?  Goruck HCL? Death Race? Leadville? Tough Mudder?  Spartan Beast?  What the hell are you talking about?

I guess this world of events that try to kill you may not be in everyone's vocabulary.  I had no idea what any of these things were just over two years ago.  So when I talk about these events on this blog, some people may not know what in the world I am talking about.

Layne's email was a reminder of this and I hope that others who are interested but don't understand something I talk about here will simply send an email.  I will do my best to explain.

As for Layne, he is 44 and doing well in CrossFit but looking for a bigger challenge to celebrate his birthday.  Well, there are some great challenges out there.  Here are some explanations and suggestions of things that are currently on my radar:


Log PT in the surf at SealFit Kokoro 30

Log PT in the surf at SealFit Kokoro 30

SealFit

SealFit is run by CEO and founder, Mark Divine, former Navy Seal.  He has created an amazing training program that incorporates the 5 mountains of development (Physical, Mental, Emotional, Awareness, Kokoro) and is the finest all around program I have ever seen.  He has a training center in Encinitas, CA and runs academies and events from there as well as in remote locations.

Academies: SealFit offers 3 Academies


SEALFIT Fundamental Academy

This is a 3-day SEALFIT Academy that focuses on the fundamentals of the SEALFIT physical training model and Unbeatable Mind principles. The event is available only as a live-in option at SEALFIT HQ. One can attend as an individual by enrolling in a public event through the SEALFIT.com web site, or you can contact us to customize a private event for your corporate team. There are no physical pre- requisites for this event. Read More

SEALFIT Comprehensive

Not for the faint of heart, the Comprehensive Academy stretches you far beyond your current levels of performance and success. This is deep, immersive training into SEAL philosophy and 20x principle, helping you tap into deep inner power that can forever transform your life. Read More

SEALFIT Immersion

The 3 Week SOF Immersion Academy could be just what you’re looking for. Based on THE original program Coach Divine designed for Special Operations candidates in 2007, it is the longest, most in-depth SEAL program currently offered to civilian trainees.

http://sealfit.com/sealfit-academies/ 


SealFit also trains the mind with Unbeatable Mind

http://sealfit.com/unbeatable-mind-events/

The Unbeatable Mind program is fantastic.  I am an Unbeatable Mind Member and work on it every day.


SealFit also offers 2 signature events

20x is designed to teach you that you are capable of 20x more than you currently believe.  It works...trust me.

http://sealfit.com/sealfit-events/20x-challenge/

Then, there is Kokoro, a 50 hour event.

From Sealfit.com

SEALFIT Kokoro Camp is, quite simply, the world’s premier training camp for forging mental toughness, modeled after the US Navy SEAL Hell Week. Yes, it is brutal. No, it’s not for everyone. You may not qualify, or make it through the training. Yet, if you’re ready for this challenge… - See more at: http://sealfit.com/sealfit-events/sealfit-kokoro-camp/#sthash.XcmOalkG.dpuf


I am a proud graduate of SealFit Kokoro class 30.  I highly recommend this and all other events SealFIt offers, but I do not suggest that you take Kokoro lightly.  Train for it specifically and plan no less than 4 months on top of your lifetime best physical fitness level to be ready for this.  Repeat...no joke.

Further, I recommend the SealFit program and Unbeatable Mind for everyday training and a way of life.  They are far more than just a challenging event.  Mark Divine and the elite staff can show you how to challenge yourself and grow daily in all 5 areas of focus.


Our Team in Goruck class 404

Our Team in Goruck class 404

Goruck is an organization founded and run by Green Beret Jason McCarthy.  I love Goruck events!  They have several events that stair-step in difficulty culminating in the ultimate, 48 hour Goruck Selection.

These descriptions come directly from the Goruck.com website


Goruck Light is an introduction to the team-based training found in Special Operations. It is also much less grueling than our original event, the GORUCK Challenge. Your class will consist of up to 30 participants (aka members of your new GORUCK family). One Cadre, an experienced member of Special Operations, will teach leadership as your class overcomes adversity to become a team. Team being a very important word. GORUCK Light is a team event, never a race. 

4-5 Hours, 7-10 Miles
Average Pass Rate: 99%


Goruck Challenge is a team event, never a race. Think of it as a slice of Special Operations training where - from start to finish -- a Special Operations Cadre challenges, teaches, and inspires your small team to do more than you ever thought possible. Leadership is taught and teamwork is demanded on missions spanning the best of your city. The hardest part? Signing up.

8-10 Hours, 15-20 Miles
Average Pass Rate: 94%


The intent of the Goruck Heavy is to build better Americans, 24 hours at a time. Through the GORUCK Heavy, participants learn a different side of themselves from lessons learned from the Cadre. These lessons learned are either from the different backgrounds each Cadre has in their respective military or civilian careers and sharing experiences from overseas conducting kinetic and non-kinetic operations. These lessons learned are then applied in a 24 or more hour class through different events in a practical setting through shared misery, pushing each participant past their perceived mental, physical, and psychological breaking points.

The GORUCK Heavy is designed around six key objectives:

  1. GR Heavy will be the ultimate team event.
  2. Conduct leadership under very stressful conditions.
  3. Theme is built around AMERICA and why we are the greatest country in the world.
  4. This is a GORUCK Selection prep course.
  5. Earn your “individual” patch.
  6. Heighten each participant’s sense of accomplishment.

24+ Hours, 40+ Miles
Average Pass Rate: 50%

Goruck HCL There is not an official page for this but HCL stands for Heavy, Challenge, Light.  Yes, people sign up for all 3 and do them consecutively.  Seem like the hardest thing ever?  Well they have another...


Goruck Selection

48+ Hours. Selection is an individual event. Our Cadre will enforce a standard adopted from our roots in Special Forces Assessment and Selection. Those participants who do not meet the standard at any point will be performance dropped at our discretion. Selection begins with a gear inspection and PT test.

Is This For You?

Probably not. Selection is not for everyone.

48+ Hours, 80+ Miles
Average Pass Rate: < 10%

Here is another 3rd party article about Selection.  http://alldayruckoff.com/training/goruck/selection/


Death Race

(description from the Death Race website)

The Death Race is the ultimate challenge, designed to present you with the unexpected and the completely insane! Nothing else on earth will challenge you like The Death Race, both mentally and physically.

Every Death Race is it’s own uniquely brutal challenge, no two races are alike. The race, created by Ultra athletes Joe Desena and Andy Weinberg, was developed as a way for athletes to test themselves both mentally and physically. The Death Races take place in the unexpectedly challenging terrain of the Green Mountains in and around Pittsfield, Vermont and have lasted over 70 hours. We provide no support. We don’t tell you when it starts. We don’t tell you when it ends. We don’t tell you what it will entail. We want you to fail and encourage you to quit at any time.


As if one Death Race wasn't enough, they now have several to choose from:

Summer

Winter

Team

Mexico


They also have training camps which look fun in some sort of demented way

Training Camp

The Death Race has an affiliation with Spartan Race which offer a difficult but far less intense series of races called Spartan races.  They are obstacle races that range between 3-12 miles.


As you can see there are plenty of challenges out there.  These are, of course, in addition to an ultra marathon, Ironman, Obstacle Races or something like the Western States 100, or worse...the Leadville 100.  If you want a challenge, they are out there...just don't kill yourself.


My take on all of these things

I am all for them if they help you to grow as a person.  Of the events listed, I have only done the SealFit Kokoro camp, Goruck Challenge and am currently a SealFit and Unbeatable Mind member.  The entire philosophy of SeaFit is to grow and to reach new levels of performance both mentally and physically.  It is an overwhelmingly positive experience.

Goruck is also an overwhelmingly positive experience designed to build better Americans and teach you about leadership and team work.  I love these aspects about both Goruck and SealFit.  Selection, however, is a different animal altogether.  It is not a team event and they seem rather proud of the 10% pass rate.  We will see how that one goes.  That is what I am currently training for.

I don't know enough about the others to have an opinion.  I can tell you that I am drawn to the challenge and I think that doing Kokoro, Selection and a Death Race would put me in a pretty elite little group.  I am getting WAY ahead of myself...only 1/3 the way there and Selection is not something that you look past...or really even anything that you look forward to.

I like it that there are goals out there beyond where I am currently and I am sure that there are other events that i don't even know about that are equally as challenging as some of these.  If you know of any, put them in the comments.

So, to answer your question, Layne, I strongly encourage you to do the 20x.  I watched my 16 year old son go through it and it is no joke either.  He was transformed into a man in 12 hours.  The effect was not fleeting, but permanent.  Every 16 year old should be required to do a 20x.  You will grow, you will develop and they will challenge you.  Sign up, make sure you are in shape and can exceed the standards easily and be prepared to give it your absolute best throughout the entire event and you will do just fine. 

Anyone out there preparing for any of these events?  Alumni of any?

 

SealFit from 12/22/09

"There are no great people in this world, only great challenges which ordinary people rise to meet."

-William Frederick Halsey, Jr.


From this morning...30 lb ruck makes this extra tough

From this morning...30 lb ruck makes this extra tough


Warmup:

Box Breathing 5 minutes

30 overhead squats with PVC

10x each: Pushups, Situps, Dips, Pullups, Burpees


Skill: Jump Rope 3 minutes


Core: 10 minute sandbag get-ups with 60 lb bag for max reps


Workout: A.

SealFit Work Capacity from 12/22/09

2000 m Row

Rest 2 mins

30 Hang Power Cleans 95 lbs

30 Pull-ups

30 Kettlebell Swings 53 lbs

30 Burpees

20 Hang Power Cleans

20 Pull-ups

20 Kettlebell Swings 53 lbs

20 Burpees

10 Hang Power Cleans 95 lbs

10 Pull-ups

10 Kettlebell Swings

10 Burpees

For time.  Selection Candidates wear 30 lb ruck throughout entire workout


Workout B.

Still Water Runs Deep


Post times, reps and/or loads to comments

SealFit has been archiving workouts for many years and there is some real gold to be found in their archives.  I ran across this one in my notes and included it today.  It fit with what I was trying to accomplish.  Pile a 30 lb ruck on top and it was perfect.

We had a visitor today who was brought in by a member who has been a little absent.  Good to have both of them today.

 


Ruck PT

Warmup:

Box Breathing 5 minutes

30 overhead squats with PVC

10x each: Pushups, Situps, Dips, Pullups, Burpees


Skill: Jump Rope 3 minutes


Core:  Situp progression 30% of 2 min max +5 reps x 3 rounds.  4th round work full minute for max reps


Workout: A.

Bear Crawl down and back ( approx 50 m)

20 burpees

Crab Walk down and back

20 situps

Partner Wheelbarrow down/switch and come back

20 x pick 120 lb sandbag up put it on top of jerk box and push it to the other side.  Partner repeats.

Ruck 400 m with 50 lb ruck and 120 lb sandbag.  Switch as needed

Amrap 25 minutes

Selection candidates wear 50 lb ruck throughout workout.  Never let it touch the ground.  On feet during situps, in front during crab walk.


OR (for those who might not like crawling around on the ground as much as the rest of us)

Cindy

5 pullups

10 pushups

15 squats

AMRAP 20 minutes


Workout B.

Bench 5-5-5-5


Finisher: Blog or "Big Girl" over the shoulder throws.  The Blob which has been renamed "Big Girl" is a big exercise ball that I filled with water.  I think it probably weighs about 150 pounds.  It is a good finisher to take the ball from the ground and go up and over the shoulder.  This ball is also far easier on the driveway than the concrete Atlas stones.

Post times, reps and/or loads to comments


Always move forward

"You may be on the right track, but if you just sit there you'll get run over."

-Paul H Dunn

Me and my Dad, 76 years old, after he came in and did 100 consecutive pushups on his 76th birthday.&nbsp; He also completed the 10,000 pushup challenge this year!&nbsp; Real Old Man Strong!&nbsp; Always moving forward.&nbsp; Good job Dad!

Me and my Dad, 76 years old, after he came in and did 100 consecutive pushups on his 76th birthday.  He also completed the 10,000 pushup challenge this year!  Real Old Man Strong!  Always moving forward.  Good job Dad!


Warmup:


Box Breathing 5 minutes

30 overhead squats with PVC

10x each: Pushups, Situps, Dips, Pullups, Burpees


Skill: Jump Rope 3 minutes


Core:
Situp progression x 5 rounds (30% of 2 min max every min on the minute for 5 minutes, then max reps on 6th)

Pushup Progression x 5 rounds (30% of 2 min max every min on the minute for 5 minutes, then max reps on 6th)



Workout: A.

20 Toes to Bars
20 Kettlebell Swings @53 lbs
x 3 rounds for time

Selection Candidates wear 45 lb ruck



Workout B.

100 burpees for time
Jump onto a 45 lb plate, clap overhead

Selection Candidates wear 45lb ruck


Workout C.

Warrior Yoga


If you are not growing you are dying.  Even if you are doing the right things, you must continually challenge yourself and grow.  Find your weakness and test it, build on it, make it your strength.  For these reasons, we have decided to do Selection.  For these same reasons, I decided to do Kokoro, Alan decided to run an Ironman, Ted decided to move to England for a year, someone else went to night school to learn Chinese.  Life is enjoyed the most when you are not comfortable, when you are pushing to the edge of anything you have done before. 

We can not always be traveling the world, or doing a crucible event like Selection or Kokoro, but our daily mental and physical training can take us to places within our selves that we have never been before.  We dont have to stay there long and it doesnt interfere with our everyday tasks or responsibilities, but the benefit is sometimes just as great as if we had traveled across the ocean to a strange and foreign land.

100 burpees for time can take you there.  You can see places that on first glance you do not want to go, but once there, you become more comfortable and travel through with no worries.  When it is over, celebrate the small victory of entering the pain cave and slaying the dragon that lived there.  For the rest of your day, have the confidence to know you can do anything, no matter how uncomfortable...just get in there, get started and it will become comfortable.


"The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy."

-Martin Luther King, Jr.



3 man teams

Before and after of the clean up.&nbsp; Thanks to my wife and kids for helping!&nbsp;

Before and after of the clean up.  Thanks to my wife and kids for helping! 

Yesterday, my family and I pulled everything out of the garage, pressure washed the mats and let it all have the MRSA baked out of it by the sun.  It was long overdue and the amount of shit that was under the mats was amazing.  The garage was cleaned from top to bottom including the doors, stereo, drawers and cabinets.  Happy Father's Day.   It was perfect.

I left everything outside last night as I knew that alot of strong guys would be here to help first thing this morning.  The warm up was putting the garage back together.  It took 10 minutes and everything was back in place.

We had 18 people this morning which could be a problem if you only had a little bit of gear.  We are fortunate at the RRL to have plenty of equipment; more than most CrossFit gyms, but I like to do workouts that don't require alot of stuff and that are simple in explanation.  The leap frog style is a great format to accomplish both.

I knew we would have a big group today so I set up 2 workouts both of 10 minute duration and both leap frog style.  We broke into teams of 3 and did the following:


Workout A.

100 battle ropes

max pushups

max wall balls

Winner is the team with the highest running count of wall balls


Workout B.

20 GHD situps

Max Push Press @ 75 lbs

Row for calories

Winner is the team with the highest running count of calories on the rower.


Each of these workouts works the same way.  There is one station which dictates the time the other athletes stay on all stations.  One station is set as the determining station for winning.  On workout A, the first athlete does 100 battle ropes.  The second athlete is completing max pushups in the time it takes the first athlete to complete the 100 ropes and the third athlete completes max reps of wall balls.  When the first completes the ropes, he moves to the pushups and the pushup guy moves to the wall ball and continues with the running count.  We continue like this for 10 minutes and the team with the most wall balls wins.

The second workout was the same format.  The GHD situps controlled the timing and the rower dictated the win.

3 people can be trained with no equipment or just one thing like a kettlebell or a barbell.  Good format.  I like it.

The Selection candidates wore a 45 pound ruck while doing both workouts.  It was tough and there were some movements that were awkward and made far more difficult due to the ruck weight. I don't think we can be training too many weighted pushups or training with a ruck enough.  From here on out, everything we do will be with at least a 45 lb ruck.  We will also be taking some advice from Selection Graduate, James Vreeland, and giving penalties for getting beat by non candidates.  It pays to be a winner.

We finished with a 10 minute meditation using Mark Divine's Still Water Runs Deep exercise. 

A couple of new guys showed up today.  I hope they will continue to come back.  Seeing new faces at the RRL reminds me of one of my favorite quotes:

“A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.”
Lao-tzu

I wish them good luck in their journey and hope they can help us along ours.

Foot Care

Proper break in and foot care can prevent this happening to you

Proper break in and foot care can prevent this happening to you

With Selection looming on the horizon, I have had to really put some thought into foot care management.  I am blessed with good feet, or shall I say, I have not had alot of problems with my feet, but I have put alot of effort into making sure that is the case.

In Kokoro 30, we traveled a LONG way over 50 hours.  I really have no idea how far we may have gone, but we were constantly running, walking, moving.  We rucked 25 miles, ran lots of 5 to 7 milers, and just moved constantly.  Our feet were wet and boots filled with sand for about 97% of the time.  Previous to my Kokoro training, I would have stopped running if a small grain of sand was in my shoe.  If you want to do Kokoro, Selection or go to the real thing like BUDs or SFAS or anything like that, you can not stop for a little sand in your shoe. Get used to it, there will be far more time that your shoes or boots are wet and filled with muck than nice and dry.

Many people at Kokoro had issues with their feet, but I did not and it was a major factor in why I did well there and even more of why I actually enjoyed the experience.  Your feet are everything and when they go, your mind is likely to follow.  At the end of Kokoro, I saw some guys pull off their boots and socks to reveal the worst looking blisters I have ever seen.  Some had 2 or 3 areas that were blistered, bleeding and extremely painful looking.  I thought to myself and even out loud that if my feet looked like that I am not sure I would have made it. 

Those were some tough guys with unbeatable minds.  Hooyah to them, but I dont want to go into that pain cave for any reason.  Here is how I avoided it last time and plan to keep my feet healthy for Selection:

Break in your boots.  There are zillions of articles on the internet and forums that are written by professional soldiers and people with far more experience than me that are better than anything you will find here.  Search out forums like Professional Soldier and search foot care or boot break in.  They are very particular about posting there...dont do it.  Just read the gold info on the site and learn from it.  There are guys who have rucked heavy loads for more than 250,000 miles that share their knowledge.  Use it.

New age boots.  I used the Under Armour Valsetz boot and it has worked great.  It is really like a running shoe.  This boot and others like them require FAR less effort to break them in, but still need to be broken in in my opinion.  If your event allows them, I suggest them from my own experience.  Those in Kokoro with UA, Bates, Nike or New Balance sneaker boots all did fine.  Others came with steel toe leather boots and boots that were brand new and really hurt at the end. One of the best things about this boot is that it is NOT waterproof and there is plenty of mesh where the water just flows right out.  This is very important.  I do not recommend a waterproof boot for these type events as the water typically stays in the boot as well.  We are not talking about walking through mudpuddles.  This is 5 foot deep full immersion for hours.  Water IS GOING TO get in.  Pick a boot that dries quickly and lets the water out as fast as it comes in.

Break in.  I wore my boots as much as possible and got them wet before workouts every day for 3 months.  I was careful to let them dry outside everyday so they would not get real funky inside.  Walking wet, running wet and rucking wet along with just being in wet boots and socks was a huge factor in getting my feet prepped for the event. 

I think anyone could probably break in a pair of boots and walk tons of miles with nice dry socks, but in Kokoro and, I am assuming Selection, that is just not reality.  You will be wet the whole time.  Even if you get a chance to change socks, your boots are still wet so your feet are wet right away.  New socks still feel awesome but boot changes were nice to get the 3 lbs of sand out of the boot rather than to experience a nice dry foot again.  Things change when your foot is wet.  Socks can bunch up, sand gets in, and your foot slides around.  If you are not prepared for this, your feet will get shredded.  Do yourself a favor and live in wet boots and socks as much as possible.

Blisters/hot spots.  This is going to happen.  In fact, you need it to happen in training both to let you know if your boots need to be broken in further or if your feet need to get toughened up.  When you get a blister, your body responds by building tougher skin or calloused skin in that area.  It works perfectly every time.  Soon you wont be bothered by that spot any more because your feet are tough.  Make sure this happens in training NOT in the event.

After.  After the ruck or workout and you have worn the boots until the are dry or until you cant stand it anymore, pull the boots off, rinse them off and hang them out to dry.  I pull out the insoles too.  I then dry the feet, and give them a bath in rubbing alcohol and let air dry.  Watch for athletes foot starting and address it immediately.  Check for blisters and hot spots.  If you have blisters, consult the Professional Soldier site and various other websites about blister care in SFAS and you will get lots of good info.  Tincture of Benzoin has fallen out of favor for blister treatment over the last few years.  I have never tried it, but it is a sticky liquid that was injected into the blister to glue it back to the skin.  I have heard good and bad reports.  Some say that the pain will make you pass out.  This is enough for me.  I dont want that.  I just pop the blister with a needle and drain it.  If I have to keep going, Moleskin works well.

I will do an alcohol bath again at night which seems to help a little to toughen the feet.

The best advice is to get the boots broken in well beyond what you may think and continuously with water.  Do everything in wet boots.  Practice sock changes and pay close attention to the condition of your feet.

Toenails.  Cutting toenails is so important.  NEVER cut your toenails within a day or 2 of your event.  I always cut them about 5-6 days out and my nails do not grow fast enough to cause any problems in that time frame.  I can address any issues needed with a touch up but many people have had trouble when cutting nails the night before an event. 

I have always cut the nails with fingernail clippers but after reading tons of info on Professional Soldier and other forums, I have gone to using toenail clippers which are straight, not curved and cutting the big toenail straight across rather than curved.  So far so good.

If you are experimenting with different cuts, 200 days out from your event is about right.  Do not experiment close to your event.  It could be a disaster.

There is much debate over foot care and boot break in but there are also the constants which are; make sure they are really well broken in, be prepared for wet feet, and spend a ton of time in the shoes or boots you will wear in the event during training.  Do this and you will both enjoy your event more, but primarily...finish!

Andy Weaver Preps for 60 mile race


Andy Weaver has been coming to the garage for about 7 months and has used our training to help prepare for a 60 mile trail race which is coming up soon.  Andy was nice enough to answer a few questions in case any of you freaks wants to give something like this a try.  We wish Andy luck and will catch up with him after the race is over to gather a little more info on how someone might prepare, finish and recover from a race like this.


TR: Hey Andy!  Tell us about the race you are getting ready to do.  

AW: It is the Rock Creek Chattanooga Mountains Stage Race, and it's part of the Salomon Trail Series. It's a three day event that covers three mountains and 60 miles. Friday is 18 miles on the mountain bike trails of Raccoon Mountain, Saturday is 22 miles on the Lula Lake Land trust and Covenant College trails of Lookout Mountain, and Sunday is the bear. 20 miles on Signal Mountain staying mainly on the Cumberland trail.

TR: Have you ever done it before?

AW: Yes. I ran it in 2012. It is still the hardest race I have ever run. It is so demanding, because you have to keep waking up for three days and running again. I remember waking up the second morning thinking there is no way I can run 22 miles today, but I did. It took about 3-5 miles to work the muscles out but once I got moving I felt great. Signal was just flat out tough. The stretch from mushroom rock up to signal point was hell. It was very rocky and extremely technical, very hard to settle into a rhythm. It was 96 degrees when I finished the race on Sunday and I started feeling very cold. I had a temp of 104 and stayed sick for a week. Wait, why am I doing this again?


TR:  What have you done to prepare for this race?

AW: I have trained a lot of different ways this time. Since the last time I did this I have incorporated CrossFit into my training. It has taken my stamina and endurance above what I imagined I could do. I ran 3-4 times per week with 1-2 days of CrossFit. I did a lot of extra leg work as well.

 

TR: Have you changed your diet?

AW:  Not too much. Just try to stay away from white bread and refined added sugar. I eat a lot of fat and protein.

 

TR: How many miles per week are you running?

AW: About 20-40 depending on that weeks intensity.

 

TR: How much road vs trail miles?


AW: Most of the weekly miles were on the road. My weekend long runs were all done on the trail, except for the 20 miler I did when I ran to your house for the Jon Atwater fundraiser.

 

TR: What shoes are you using for training and for the race?

AW: My road shoes are brooks pure cadence, trail shoes are brooks pure grit, and probably come Sunday I'll pull out my Hokas


TR: How are you planning your nutrition for the race?

AW:  I’m just going to make sure I eat every 30 mins. That's my body's perfect time for refueling. I'll be eating fruit and nuts and m&ms or really whatever i can grab from the aid station.


TR: What advice would you give someone who wanted to do this race next year?

AW: Just allow yourself 3 months or more of training. The key to any long race is getting in plenty of long runs. You need a long run to where you feel like you can't take another step, then run 3 more miles. It's all mental. You just have to convince your body that it's capable of way more. Easier said than done.


TR: Do you have a goal time?

AW: In 2012, I did it in 11 hrs and 16 mins. My goal is to shave 45 mins off my total time.

TR:  Thanks!  Good luck on the race.  We will talk to you and get a second interview after the race.

Ruck PT

Great to have Trey back with us after his North Pacific trip.&nbsp; Yesterday, he brought his son, Grady.&nbsp;This is how you scale a workout.&nbsp; Smaller ruck, smaller sandbag, same exercises.&nbsp; Good work Grady and Trey!

Great to have Trey back with us after his North Pacific trip.  Yesterday, he brought his son, Grady. 

This is how you scale a workout.  Smaller ruck, smaller sandbag, same exercises.  Good work Grady and Trey!


Warmup:

Box Breathing 5 minutes

30 overhead squats with PVC

10x each: Pushups, Situps, Dips, Pullups, Burpees


Skill: Jump Rope 3 minutes


Core:

Sit-up progression x 5 rounds

Take 30% of your max 2 minute score and hit that number every minute on the minute for 5 minutes.  On the 6th minute, work the entire minute for max reps


Workout: A.

Ruck PT

With a 45 pound ruck or 45 pound sandbag complete the following for time:

50 Walking Lunge Steps

50 Pushups with ruck on

50 Squats

50 Sit-ups

50 Thrusters using the ruck or sandbag

50 Sit-ups

50 Squats

50 Pushups with ruck on

50 Walking Lunge Steps


Workout B.

10 minutes of Gratitude


Post times, reps and/or loads to comments


Happy Birthday Michael Miller!  How did you like the 60 pound ruck? 

By RRL tradition, we wear a weight vest on our birthday, despite the workout.  Sometimes it is no big deal, others make for a birthday that you will not soon forget.  Instead of putting a vest on under the ruck today, Michael decided to bump up the ruck weight from 45 to 60.  This makes a big difference on a workout like this.  Happy 37th!

This one took me 18:14 but I was only using a 45 lb ruck.  I liked it and feel like we definitely need more work on lunges and walking lunges. That is a tough movement, but one we will encounter alot in Selection.

We ended the day with 10 minutes of gratitude meditation.  This is a powerful way to start the day and remain in a state of gratitude.  Focusing on breathing while laying in the dead man pose, we think about everything we are grateful for and then end with clearing our mind of all thought...or at least attempting to.

This is an outstanding practice, highly recommended.

Have a great weekend.

Update: Several guys came over this afternoon so we hit this one again.  I was able to do it in 15:47 with 45 pounds, wet ruck, wet boots.  Good times.