Tell me about your exercise routine
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I'm doing this program.0
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I run one day, use FitnessBlender two days, then rest a day. My rest days still in include a walk with my dog and my 10,000 steps.
Works for me. Plenty of recovery, workout 5-6 days a week.0 -
Ok, so my mom did kickboxing for a while and she said that she lost a lot of weight doing that and she was always having fun while doing it. The thing is, I don't have kickboxing classes near me and my gym doesn't either. Has anybody done Tae Bo and has it helped them? I have a DVD and I'm starting out and can't go to the gym every day yet with my schedule. I also want to start running (even though I hate it) because I know it has really helped people tone their legs.
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bketchum1981 wrote: »NorthCascades wrote: »bketchum1981 wrote: »@NorthCascades or any others who have an interest...Will you give a little more info about your ski experience? I'm thinking of doing the Michigan DNR HeartMISnow virtual 5K. The activity I choose is up to me. I want to do cross country skiing.
I ran 3 - 5Ks and did a Tough Mudder this summer. I continue to workout regularly. Just wondering if cross country skiing a 5K is doable without significant training? It's not that I've NEVER XC skied but I have no means of judging how much stamina/endurance is necessary for a 5K.
I'll write more later if you want to hear more, but as long as you use classic technique and gear (not skating) I think you could ski a 5K tomorrow, and have enough energy to do a victory lap when you're done.
Also, cross country skiing is incredibly fun.
But I've got to take off.
Thank you!
Would love to hear more. I have wanted to take a free one hour lesson with some girlfriends who are reluctant due to their level of fitness (I think?).
I think I have them talked into the lesson. After our lesson is when I want to do the 5k. I'm hoping they will be so daring to join me for that, too.
I do wonder how any minutes for a beginner on trails described as "flat" it would take to do the 5K? I say this because it will be dark and I'm not sure if the trails are lit. I will be checking with the place before I commit completely.
So badly want to incorporate a winter outdoor activity in the rotation of workouts.
P.S. OP please excuse my butting in on your thread. I just wasn't certain how to contact NorthCascades for more info.
For the record, anybody is welcome to PM me at any time with a question. I like having good karma.
I skied cross country when I was a child, this is my third year skiing as an adult. About 20 years went by in between.
I took a lesson before I started. Hired a professional, and I'd guess it lasted about 30 minutes. We went over all of the very basics, and then I was competent to head out on my own, on easy trails. And so I did, later that day.
My first trip out after the lesson, my GPS failed and I don't know how far I went. I'd guess 3 to 5 miles. Can't tell you the pace from that. My second ski was two days later, so I'd had some time to rest. Little over 6 miles, at 1.9 mph. I got to ski one more time that year, this time on a flatter and easier trail, and covered 4 miles at 2.4 mph. I'm trying to give you an idea what to expect as a beginner.
I'm sure you've ridden a bike. Skiing (cross country) is very similar. The motion is like walking, but with each step, the skis glide, the way you can pedal a bike and then coast for a second. Skiing a 5K is less work than walking one. (I skied 15.5 miles with about 3,000 feet of elevation gain, and feel a lot better today than I would have if I'd hiked it instead.) It's still work, though. You can break a sweat in very cold weather, most people dress minimally because it's an aerobic exercise and enough work to keep you warm.0 -
bketchum1981 wrote: »So badly want to incorporate a winter outdoor activity in the rotation of workouts.
Sorry, I missed this. My honey bought me a set of Nordic ski gear for my birthday last month. Having skis has changed winter from the dark rainy season to a time when I get to go spend days on trails through a winter wonderland. I never liked snowshoeing. I don't love riding a bike in the rain, I do it anyway but with little joy. Now, when it gets cold, when it rains, I feel like the playground is filling up with snow. I can't tell you how happy these are making me. But it sounds like you'd understand.1 -
cldale0728 wrote: »How do y'all so y'alls workouts? Daily or every other day? I've been trying to about 20 mins daily. But yesterday I did a lot of leg and core workouts so I'm cramping. Would it be good to still do a little today? Just not as much leg stuff or stay at the same exercise? I don't wanna fatigue my body.
Sounds like you're just starting out, or maybe re-starting. 20 minutes daily is a good start! But if you're weight training, and not using some well-regarded program that changes up the exercises from day to day, I'm suggest making it a point to do different things (different body parts) on alternating days.
If you're literally cramping (like charley-horse stuff), get some good nutrition (especially veggies/fruit for the vitamins & such) and adequate water to drink today, and do something mild, like stretching, or easy walking. If you sit still, things will tend to tighten up. You could also do some self-massage on the cramping parts (by hand, or by rolling a tennis ball over them, or even rolling with a kitchen rolling pin atop a towel, if you don't have a foam roller available). A warm bath may also help relax things, with Epsom salts if you've got 'em.
Since you asked, my routine varies by season. I've been quite active for about 12 years, even while obese.
All year long, I take a spin class (45 minute ride plus some stretching) twice a week.
In Spring through Fall, I row on the water usually 4 days a week (those long skinny boats like in the Olympics, only mine is slower ). Occasionally I throw in a 2-5 mile exercise walk (in addition to whatever random walking the day already has) or a 5-15 mile bike ride if it's a beautiful day.
When it starts being too cold to row, and the river gets icy, I try to shift my routine, but I definitely do a little less volume. I row on a rowing machine usually at least once a week, sometimes more. I try to get going with a full-body off-season weight program. I do more walking for some fresh air (maybe couple of days/week) if the weather makes it enjoyable (not raining, at least somewhere near freezing temp or above (say 28F or above). I've been trying to swim once a week to keep skills up (rowers need to be able to swim).
All year long, I aim for doing 30-60 minutes of something six days a week, but I'm not gonna lie, I slack off some when we're not rowing on water, especially over the Christmas/New Year holidays.
I used to do some video aerobics, but don't much anymore. Partly it's that my aging knees don't love it, partly it's that it's tough to get my heart rate up enough with low-impact aerobics.
But this routine is what I've arrived at over the course of more than a decade being active.
You're doing great - just put in place a routine you can keep up, and expand on over time if you enjoy it. Try to pick activities/exercises you enjoy so much that you'd do them just for the fun, and now great they make you feel. That makes it so much easier to keep up a routine.
Best wishes for success!1 -
Sunday: Arms/Abs and HIIT
Monday: Intermediate cardio then legs/shoulders
Tuesday: Back/Chest and HIIT
Wednesday: Intermediate cardio then legs/glutes
Thursday: Arms/Abs and HIIT
Friday: Low impact cardio and a full body weight circuit
Saturday: Rest day!0 -
@northCascades Thank you for your insight!0
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Me:
I either walk an hour or run 30 min each day.
I do power yoga 2 times a week
Pilates 2 times a week
and another yoga, something more restorative, once a week.
I either walk or ride my bike to work each day. I get about 13k steps a day. I've been walking or riding to work for about 10 years now.
Summer weekends: long walks or hikes with hubs and the dogs
Winter weekends, long walks, or skiing (without the dogs)
I lifted weights for about 20 years. I added Pilates about 5 yrs ago, and then swapped weight lifting for power yoga a year ago.
I'm 51, in menopause, and in maintenance for about 14 years.1 -
I do 30 minutes of yoga most mornings. Boy, do I need that!
Tennis takes priority. So, on those days when I have someone to play with, I play tennis.
On those days when I do not have tennis, I run or do Crossfit. I run probably three times a week, about 5-7 miles, and do Crossfit (or some kind of lifting) one time a week.
I do not take as many off days as I should. But I am trying to get better about rest.2 -
M W F - run for 30-35 mins or more (time or weather permitting)
T T - 30 mins weight lifting
S S - active rest days - usually involves very long walks (1 hour plus)
I feel crotchety and blah if I don't engage in a daily activity of some kind, and I love the refreshed and energized feeling after a good workout.0 -
I workout 6-7 days a week, 45-60 minutes a day. Four days it's lifting weights at the gym, that's non-negotiable. Twice a week I do HIIT on a rebounder (mini trampoline). And the other day I use a recumbent exercise bike (I'm on it now!), do Pilates, or if I'm very very tired, have a rest day.0
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I do a 4 day split lifting program and a day of Glutes work on Fridays. 30 minutes of light cardio 5x week and some walking or maybe snowshoeing, like today.0
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Here's a cut/paste of what my workout week looks like:
SUNDAY - Upper Body
MONDAY - Squats & Calves (AM) + Spin Class (PM)
TUESDAY - Arms + Abs
WEDNESDAY - Legs
THURSDAY - Off
FRIDAY - Upper Body + Abs
SATURDAY - Spin Class (AM) + Legs (PM)1 -
I'm doing P90X3 currently - which is every day for 30 minutes (though one day is a "rest").
I also go to a yoga studio on occasion (less than once a week, lol), and my husband and I just signed up for two lindy hop (aka swing dance) classes once a week with a social dance after. For anyone who doesn't know... lindy hop is a very active dance. Now that we're doing that I have to up my calories on Tuesdays so I wake up on Wednesday ready for more P90X3!
I also have a 10-15 minute light yoga and stretching routine that I do every night that I find helps me fall asleep faster.0 -
I do 30-45 minutes daily on my stationary bike. I also do about 30 minutes of yoga daily. I've recently added a weekly arm workout as well.0
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I'm on a winter schedule right now meaning I haven't done any outdoor activities in a few months. This is my exercise routine each week:
Monday: Weight training with 30 minute run
Tuesday: Run 45 minutes
Wednesday: Weight Training
Thursday: Run 45 minutes
Friday: Weight Training and Abs
Saturday: Rest
Sunday: 2 hour swing dance/lindy hop lessons
Summer: usually train for a half marathon and commute to work by bike.0 -
I do OrangeTheory classes 4-5 days a week (usually 5 if I have the time). During the winter/spring I have one rest day, and the day I'm not at OTF we're snowboarding. In the summer and fall that day is taken up by hiking. No other gym stuff or workouts outside of those.0
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MWF: Indoor rowing, a planned mix of intervals and steady state. 45m.
TTh: Treadmill (run, walk, or intervals) or bike. 45m.
Sa: Lifting & yoga. 45m.
Su: Rest/Band practice. 3h. (I play drums so it's really an arm and core workout.)
If I'm feeling really fatigued or sore, I'll change the workout to an easy day with additional stretching.0 -
cldale0728 wrote: »How do y'all so y'alls workouts? Daily or every other day? I've been trying to about 20 mins daily. But yesterday I did a lot of leg and core workouts so I'm cramping. Would it be good to still do a little today? Just not as much leg stuff or stay at the same exercise? I don't wanna fatigue my body.
Sometimes going and just doing cardio or stretching, or even bodyweight work helps to alleviate the tightness and soreness by reducing lactic acid build up.
I go 5-6 x a week for 60-90 minutes and lift heavy the entire time with little to no cardio. I jumped into this and was tired at first, but your body adjusts. I am on a 4 day circuit which is as follows:
Heavy legs (squats, leg press, quad and ham extensions along with burn outs of low-weight accessory work)
Arms and abs
Power legs (thrusts, cable variations, barbell work including deadlifts and additional dumbbell accessory work and band burn outs)
Back and abs
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Gym five days a week. Two days weights/HIIT, one day steady cardio, two days weights/HIIT. I change it up weekly though so I am not always doing so much HIIT.0
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I workout daily. I actually rarely take off days, unless I have to. (Some people don't suggest that )
I lift weights and since I'm currently bulking, I lift very heavy. I have a chest/tricep, back/bicep, leg, shoulder routine that switches each day.
I do cardio every day that I want to... I'd say about 5 times a week. The stairmaster is my best friend. All it takes is about 10-15 minute at the end of my workout (after lifting).
When I cut, the cardio will be higher and more consistent. Right now, I'm more focused on my lifting and eating!0 -
Sprints/plyos/heavy bag work 3xwk
Brazilian jiu jitsu 3-4 times a week (6 hours a week average)
Muay Thai kickboxing 4 days a week (hour each class)
Weight training 3 times a week.
Sundays off0 -
I try to get in 2-3 days of lifting around 20-30 minutes at a time, then 1-3 days of cardio for 10-20 minutes at a time.0
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4x per week: I pick thins up and put them down.
2x per week: I ride my stationary bike.
When it's not snowy/icy outside - like it is now - I walk 1-1.5 miles at lunch up to 5x per week.0 -
4 to 5 times a week I do 30 minutes high intensity with BJ gaddour's metashred program.
1 or 2 days I will go cycling either on my stationary bike or Outdoors.
My Saturday ride is usually like 3 hours for about sixty miles.
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Gym usually twice a week or maybe 3 times then cycling turbo doing intervals, weekends cycling 2 plus and Sunday cycle for 4-5 hours. Sometimes I'll have a double session of gym in the morning and cycling for 1 hour to 90 minutes around about 10 hours train or more0
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So far, M, W, F stronglifts and T, T, S 1hr walk. Eventually working my way up to adding 5k jogging after lifting on M, W, F.0
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I do every other day and one muscle group at a time. Found that toning exercises work better for me than a ton of cardio too. So..most of my routine is focuse on a cardio warmup and the majority is toning0
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