Posts Tagged ‘kettlebells’

Long Cycle: Gireviks Do It With 2 Hands

Saturday, November 3rd, 2012

 


Two very different and very cool events this week with two very good friends. Monday our friends over at Crossfit Fifty decided they’d press their luck and have us back again. Today it was Blue Coast out in Kapolei.

 

I’ll start with the take home from Monday. Your friends and coaches will tell you…

 

Crossfit Kettlebells Swing MOVE FItness

You’re doing it wrong.

Period.

You’re not.

Period.

 

There are two different schools of thought. Traditionally in Russia, the more familiar “hard” style of kettlebell lifting was the norm for the rank and file fitness nut. Hips back. Shoulders squared. Drive from the hips. Explode. It provided an amazing tool for developing explosiveness and power. However as athletes progressed, those that showed a particular proclivity for the tool were invited into the competitive side of training, the sport of kettlebells. The sport moved beyond developing on off power and explosion and shifted towards explosion over time, a sustained attack. How can you, the athlete, distribute the workload of lifting your bell across as much of the body as possible to create as many explosions as possible over a given amount of time. Greater work production over a prolonged period versus maximal individual explosions over an abbreviated period.

 

You have to decide what your goal is. Neither one is wrong. You have to decide which road is going to get you to your particular goal.

 

My goal is to achieve as many repetitions over a 10 minute period as possible without resting the bells. Several of the athletes we worked with this week have the goal to compete and kick as much ass as possible in a sport environment . Here’s the key. Ask any endurance or ultra endurance athlete. If you want to succeed, you have to find where in your movement patterns you can achieve rest and gain the recovery that allows you to push through the rest of your event. If your event includes kettles, barbell snatches, muscle ups and a C2 Rower…first off you’re f*cked. Secondly, you’re going to have to find a place in there somewhere to catch your breath, recover, prepare for what’s to come, overcome. kettlebells crossfit kettlebell sport MOVE Fitness

 

Economy of movement.

 

Efficiency.

 

Sustainability.

 

Survival.

 

As for the rest of the athletes we worked with this week… Think back. What are the most common goals people come into the gym with? Lose a little weight, gain a little strength and build some cardio ability. So the question becomes one of focusing on your ability to produce massive amounts of explosive force in a few short reps versus developing the strength and stamina to produce more work over a greater period, thus producing a greater total amount of work.

 

There are pros and cons to both. I’m the first to say that anyone claiming to have the one true way is full of it. I have my preferences according to my goals. The key is in knowing the different roads to Mecca exist and exposing yourself to a greater array of tools and techniques.

 

Hawaii Crossfit Kettlebells MOVE Fitness

This year we were privileged to host Hawai’i's first kettlebell competition. Next year we’re aiming for two. You should be there.

 

Jump in. Absolute and utter beginners are especially welcome. Wednesday nights at 6pm and Fridays at 2pm. Email me to reserve your spot in advance.

 

Also look for special kettle series coming to the leeward side and Hawaii Kai very soon. We’ll post more here as soon as we can.

 

 

 

MOVE at Crossfit Fifty

Saturday, October 6th, 2012

Kettlebell Snatch for the Crossfitter

 

Ok, so here’s how it went down. Jack and crew over at Crossfit Fifty were just about the greatest hosts anyone could ask for. Thank you guys and your athletes for being such a chill group to work with.

 

I live and breathe in a very strange and esoteric world. In fact, it’s the kind of world that old school Crossfitters are familiar with. Before Crossfit was the global powerhouse of athletic training it is, it was a small network of garage gyms, warehouse workout spaces filled with people marching to a beat everybody else called crazy. Then everybody else started catching on and began to feel that rhythm down inside their soul.

 

That’s just about where we are in the gs world right now. GS: Girevoy Sport, the sport of lifting kettlebells. Ten minutes of lifting anywhere from 26lbs to 140lbs with no rest, no stopping, no deviation, technical requirements and if you’re lucky one and only one hand switch. Chalky, grueling work born of the farmyards and markets of Russia. It’s our own beat. To the outside casual observer, crazy.

 

But it’s starting to catch on.

Kettlebell Snatch for the Crossfitter

 

Here’s the thing. We set this one up specifically for our Crossfitter crowd. What is it you need to do in your WOD? Produce as much work as possible at each task and have enough left in the tank for the next, and the next and the next. It’s about spending energy. But in the world if increasingly gameified workouts that become competitive events, there’s a flipside; energy preservation and budgeting.

 

That’s where we come in. GS is all about rationing your energy so, as in my case, I can lift 122lbs at a constant pace for maximal total reps over a 10 minute period. One of the biggest energy killers Crossfitters run into is kb swings and snatches. So by looking at where and how you can use your body beyond just hip explosion to not simply move the bell, but to move it with an economy of energy, regularity of breath, minimizing impact and shock to the body…all the sudden it becomes thinkable to knock out those 75 or 100 rep chippers without losing time putting the bell down to catch your breath.

 

What happens to your overall output when the movements that used to drain you actually become refuges of rest and recovery in the middle of your circuit? How much more work can you accomplish when you spread the load out over many joints and muscles instead of one or two, recycling & channeling the energy of the last repetition into the next, and the next and the next? What happens when you save your hands by letting go of the bell with confidence that it will land where you want it?

 


Awesomeness happens.

 

Kettlebell Snatch for the Crossfitter

I have to say, there were some hungry athletes doing some fantastic work out there on Monday. Snatch has to be one of the most complex movements in the kettlebell world. Looking at it, you wouldn’t think so, but when you turn a critical eye to the minutiae of each joint movement, you could write volumes. For having to take in so much information in so little time and then turn it right back around into a training evolution at the end…hardcore.

 

And my proudest moment…not a single stereotypical ripped callous photo to show for it. Awesomeness happened.

 

Our next big event is coming up Saturday, November 3rd at Blue Coast Crossfit from 2pm to 4pm. We’re going to sight in a little tighter on the sport side of things and spend a couple of hours hammering the long cycle clean and jerk. Click here for a map.

 

 

6 Week Weight Loss Bootcamp!

Thursday, April 12th, 2012

 

 

It’s on! We had such a great response to the HoneyBadgers and their work that we’re rolling the same program for anybody looking to kick off their own weight loss program. Starting on Tuesday, April 24th at 5:30pm! (I think we said 29th this morning on the air, so check your calendars, the 24th is the correct date).  We’ll run for 6 weeks, meeting every Tuesday and Thursday at 5:30 for an hour. Class size is limited so email me at jt@movefitness.us to reserve your place.

 

Absolute total beginners are 100% welcome. Let’s get your weight loss goals kicked off now!

 

Class includes:

  • 12 60min sessions of combines cardio/strength conditioning
  • Weekly homework to keep you on track between class times
  • Nutritional tracking and guidance to help establish sustainable, healthy nutritional habits
  • Weigh in assessment on day 1 and weigh out on day 6


Where:

Pro Fitness Studio

863 Halekauwila St (Just off Ward Ave)

 

When:

Every Tue/Thu Beginning on April 24th.

 

Class Fee: $180

 

And We’re Back!

Wednesday, April 4th, 2012

 

 

After our Honeybadgers did such an awesome job and took home gold on the Sunrise Slimdown, we’re back on Hawaii News Now KGMB!

Look for us every Thursday in the 7am  hour. Each month we’ll choose a different health & wellness oriented theme and look at four different aspects or approaches to that theme.

 

This month it’s all getting started and maximizing your time in the gym. In 2000, CDC reported that just 10% of Hawaii residents fell into the category of an obese population. By 2010, that number increased to 24%. Here’s the catch, once we expand that number to include residents that fall into the overweight category along with the obesity numbers, that percentage skyrockets to show 57% of Hawaii residents are currently overweight or obese. Click here to see the official CDC obesity map.  We have got to get ourselves up and moving. To to that, we’re going to look at four tools you can use at home or at the gym to create a fun and dynamic weight loss and strength training program.

 

This month we’re starting with one of my personal favorite  tools in the gym, kettlebells. The Honeybadgers learned all about several different kettlebell movements during the Slimdown. This morning, we took a look at a couple of the more basic kettlebell movements, the clean and jerk and the two handed swing. I’ll post the instructional videos for each here in the blog.

 

If you’re interested in getting yourself started or want to get into a little kettlebell work yourself, join us for our Kettlebell Group Training  every Monday night at ProFitness Training Studio. 863 Halekauwila St. As a special introductory rate, your first two classes are just $10 each. Absolute, utter and total beginners are welcome!

 

Also, please join us next Friday night, August 13th for Hawaii’s very first Kettlebell Sport Competition! All the details here.

 

Kettlebell Clean & Jerk


2 Hand Kettlebell Swing

 

Lifting for Good

Monday, May 2nd, 2011


 

Thank you

 

I just can’t begin to describe the awesomeness that was watching everybody get out and kick some serious ass for a good cause yesterday. There’s still a huge need for more support and aid, so if you were not able to make it yesterday, please consider clicking here and making a donation to the American Red Cross.

 

For those of you that were there…thank you. Thank you very much.

 

And thank you to Ty over at Warrior Hardware for lending us bells and med balls for the occasion. If you’re in the market for some equipment Ty’s the man to talk to. Follow this link to the Warrior Hardware homepage.

 

Now, on to what went down. What did we learn?

  1. Pacing. This was all about a mix between getting through each station’s reps as quickly as possible. The only thing is, with 6 stations and damn near 100 reps at each one, you have to balance pacing with all out effort. While maximal exertion is something we want to train and increase, sometimes pushing to the absolute limit as fast as possible doesn’t get you to the goal fastest. Pulling back just before you hit that wall of physical failure allows you to recuperate more quickly to continue your set.
  2. Work to your level! Yesterday’s training session was rife with opportunities to push yourself too far. Beyond considerations of recuperation vs total time, there’s the issue of your body, what it can accommodate right now and what it can’t. You know how people say that listening is the most important skill in communication? Well, the same is true in the relationship between you and your body. It talks to you all the time. Listen to what it has to say. If you hear when your body is telling you that it’s coming up on its limit in one way or another, by listening to it and taking care of it, you’ll end up getting a better training experience, better results, a safer program and all in much less time. Training movements, rest intervals and other stimuli can ALWAYS be adjusted to your level.
  3. That being said, there are benefits to winning these challenges. I do have to say I was seriously impressed by how fast you all got through that redemption. 10 wind sprints up that hill AFTER 45 minutes of training ain’t no small thing. Proud of you! Congratulations to our first place finishers!

Thank you all again! For those of you interested in continuing this work, or getting more into the technique of competitive kettlebell based lifting, click here to see the schedule of upcoming classes. Thank you all again.

 

 

2 Weeks. Getting Close

Monday, April 18th, 2011

Don’t forget everybody, we’ve got 2 weeks until the Red Cross Benefit: Lift for the Greater Good event for Japan relief efforts. Click the link for more info


Bring friends, friends’ friends. Friends’ friends Uncle and Aunty, anybody!! I want to make this as big of a success for the Red Cross efforts in Japan .


And on top of that, we’re going to have an awesome program for the day. Please come and show your support.

Thursday Recap

Friday, April 1st, 2011

Sumo Deadlift High Pull with 12kg kettlebells in Kapiolani ParkTons of hard work on display yesterday. Man!! Semi severed digits be damned!

 

Recovery. Today was about recovery. Repeated work rest intervals. Turn the taps on to explode out the gates at full tilt. Then stop on a dime. Breathing. Resting. Recharging. Boom. Back into it again until that buzzer sounds.

 

We’re training the body to tap into its energy reserves, deplete them and then recharge them at an ever increasing rate. Through that we’re creating an increasingly efficient machine that can complete more work in less time. More efficient energy usage in the body leads to metabolic conditioning. Increased metabolic response is one of the ket contributors to burning higher levels of energy in the body throughout the day.

 

In very plain terms it’s about training the body to use up the excess energy (fat and stored sugars) more readily while challenging the muscles to ever higher levels of performance (inspiring strength & muscle growth).

 

An increase in lean mass (muscle) and an ever increasing rate of stored energy burn (body fat for the most part) takes us right to that lean, fast, fit place so many of us are striving to achieve.

 

Awesome work guys.

 

Kapiolani Class every T/TH at 7am & 6pm. Small group studio training every M/W/F at 12pm, 2pm & 6pm. Email me or post a comment here to reserve your space. Details available here.

 

 

Tuesday Recap

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

kettlebell trainer honolulu

Lesson 1: Hey Cabbie, how do you get to Carnegie Hall?

“Practice, practice, practice”

 

The things we’re working on in class tend to get pretty technical, especially when we’re working with more advanced movements like a kb snatch. Extension, hips, knees, up on toes, shrug, sink under, relative bell height… At a certain point, the information is there in a cerebral way, but it’s just stuck up there in the brain and won’t make that transition into physical knowledge. The brain knows it but won’t share with the body. That’s when repetition and practice comes in. Sometimes it pays to just shut the brain down and rep it out for a while. Practice, practice, practice until the body begins to fatigue. At the point you don’t have the strength to cheat your way through the movement anymore, the body takes what it remembers from the instructions and starts to connect them to the real world movement.

 

A lot of times we don’t want to do something until we know how to do it “right.” I think we get lost in that. At a certain point, we just have to perform and allow the body to find its own path to technical proficiency.

 

Lesson 2: A 20 minute jog isn’t always just a 20 minute jog, especially when there’s a 50# sandbag involved!

 

Great job everybody.

 

Don’t forget, 50% off sale on 1-on-1 and small group training runs through today! Email or contact me to get in on it.

Thursday Recap

Friday, March 25th, 2011

Smallish classes today, but tons of extremely high quality work. Not an ounce of quit to be found. Hell yes.

The other side of that goodness was that we were able to spend a little more time one on one. That’s a fantastic thing when everyone is a receptive as the classes were today.


1st Lesson: We started this one Tuesday and followed up on it today. Rotation around the spine. Juan Carlos Santana, industry lecturer, educator and innovator, lists 4 central pillars of human movement. Locomotion, level change, push/pull & rotation. It’s the last one that gets left out day after day, program after program. I spend a significant amount of time looking at this because there are very few things that we do in the day that aren’t effected by our ability to and STABILITY in rotation. Rotation around occurs when walking, lifting something with one arm, reaching with one hand…it’s all over the place. Now think about how much of your training time is spent working rotationally.

My point exactly.


2nd Lesson: Shock Absorption. The kettlebell work really shows this extremely clearly. When you’ve got an external weight traveling towards your body, look at how you can recruit as many parts of your body as possible to help mitigate that energy. the more shock and vibration you feel in your body, the more of that energy is absorbed forcefully into your bones. We’d much rather see that absorbed by the soft, pliable, elastic muscles and tendons. So, maybe it’s coming up on the toes to help slow the kettle as it settles into rack. Maybe it’s a matter of shrugging your shoulder blade (shoulder girdle) back to create a little more play so you can decelerate that bell as it comes down from the snatch position. The point remains, use as much of your body as possible to help with the movements. That way you get more work done while each muscle works less, lasts longer and accomplishes more work!


Here’s the two blog links I mentioned.

John Wild Buckley and the Orange Kettlebell Club. Oh so worth a read. Add it to your reader if you use one. http://orangekettlebellclub.net/

Jenn Place Triathlon Coach.  http://jenplace.blogspot.com/


For those not in class, don’t forget about the spring 50% off training special. Visit my Packages and Programs page for details.

Tuesday Recap

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

Honolulu kettlebells personal training

Well, it was a day that met only half its potential. that has nothing to do with the class participants and everything to do with the weather. Whatcha going to do?

 

So…Lesson 1: Yes, I was having the time of my life out there. So much awesomeness I just couldn’t keep it in. You guys did awesome and it turned out to be such a fun class.

 

Lesson 2: The central component of today was the partner ball throw. Most important thing there, just like we saw later in the evening with the box jump, is shock absorption. If you feel like you’re taking that ball pretty hard on each catch, or if you feel like you’re landing hard with each jump…you are. The more shock and vibration you feel in your body, the more of that energy your joints are absorbing. So, find how to mitigate that.

  • In the case of the ball throw, don’t step into it. As the ball is coming towards you, extent your hands towards it. Begin to slow it as it comes into your body. Then shift back in the direction of the ball’s trajectory. This gives you room and time to slow the ball without the traumatic impact. Now as far as the Ronni approach to throwing your body into the air À la patriot intercept missiles…I can only marvel and applaud.
  • In the case of the box jumps, if you’re landing loudly, well, that means you’re taking the impact into your knees, ankles and hips. Land on your toes, roll to your heels and allow your knees and hips to go soft with the landing. Your body is one massive shock absorber meant to protect your neck and cranium from harm. Let it function that way.
  • By the way…did anyone notice how the UH crowd immediately to the lower step for the box jumps, leaving everyone else to the higher one…I’m just saying.

 

Don’t forget: Red Cross benefit class on Saturday. If you can’t come PLEASE, PLEASE tell your friends. Details here.

Also, free 3 hour kettlebell technique workshop and meetup. There’s a barbecue afterwards. Details on both can be found here. RSVP is a must. Again, tell your friends, come on out and we’ll have a blast.

Last but not least, flash mobs meet fitness in Flash Fit. FOllow us on twitter for our pop up training sessions and fitness meetings. Free and open to the public. Events start in about a week.

Find us on facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/MOVE-Fitness-and-Training/122344234504553

Also, follow us on Twitter @MOVETraining