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Old Wed, Aug-15-01, 06:21
fern2340's Avatar
fern2340 fern2340 is offline
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Default Take Your Workout Outside!

I found this article interesting. I can just imagine walking down the street and seeing some one off to the side of the road in the grass doing all kinds of pushups and situps and lunges! It may look silly but hey, if it works!


Take Your Workout Outside!
by Jonny Bowden, M.A., C.N., C.N.S.

With spring weather coming, there's absolutely no reason to confine your workouts to the gym. With all the high-tech advances in running and climbing and biking machines, we tend to forget that the real thing lies right outside our front door, and at a substantially lower cost than a gym membership. Your own body weight provides more than enough resistance for a good strength-training program, and with a little ingenuity and imagination, you can fashion dozens of workouts at any level of difficulty, from beginner to boot camp. Outdoor training is especially suited to circuit and interval training -- you can vary intensity at will simply by alternating between running and walking, going faster or slower, or choosing a steeper or more level terrain. You can easily make your own circuit by walking (or running) for a bit then stopping to do any of a dozen 'improv' exercises that require little more than your own body weight and perhaps a park bench or a tree. Then resume walking! (or running) till you get to the next pit stop, where you perform the next exercise in the circuit.

Here's a sample circuit workout for the intermediate level. You can make it easier by either extending the walking time between exercises, doing fewer pit-stop exercises or doing fewer reps of the exercises themselves. If you're an advanced exerciser and up to the challenge, making it more difficult is a cinch: Faster runs between pit stops, extra sets and reps during. The time spent walking (or running) between pit stops is given just for the sake of example. You can -- and should -- adjust it to your own needs.

Warm-up: Walk 5 minutes

First aerobic period: 5 minutes brisk walk or slow jog
Pit stop: Walking lunges. Step forward, extending your right leg in front of you. Bend your knees, and lower your body toward the floor between the back and front legs. The back leg will bend and the back heel will come off the floor. The front leg will be bent to a right angle, with the knee never going in front of the ankle, remaining directly in line with the ankle. Come up and switch legs, bringing the left leg forward, and repeat. Do 10 'switches.'

Second aerobic period: 5 minutes brisk walk or jog
Pit stop: Jumps. Take a stance as if you were about to dive into a pool. Crouch down slightly, put both hands behind you, and then, in this 'half-squat' position, 'dive' forward as far as you can by pushing off on your feet and thrusting your arms forward. Try to land with a soft impact by bending your knees. Then immediately take two small jumps back. Repeat the sequence 6 times.

Third aerobic period: 5 minutes brisk walk or jog
Pit stop: Push-ups. You can do them any of a number of ways, depending on your fitness level -- the 'assisted' version on your knees or the regular one using the whole body weight. Beginners can keep the feet on the ground and push up from the seat part of a park bench, keeping the body at an angle to the ground. The steeper the angle, the easier it is; you can make it even easier by standing a couple of feet away from a tree, leaning your upper body against it and pushing off. Return the upper body till it's touching the tree, and repeat.

Reps: as many as you can.

Fourth aerobic period: 5 minutes brisk walk or jog
Pit stop: Tricep dips. Sit on a park bench, legs extended, feet on the ground, hands at your sides grasping the edge of the bench, palms facing behind you. Slide your butt off the bench and lower your body towards the ground by bending the elbows. Stop lowering your body when your shoulders get just above your elbows, and then bring yourself up again by straightening the arms. Keep your back perpendicular to the ground. The closer you bring your feet in (and the more the knees are bent) the easier the exercise. Ten reps.

Fifth aerobic period: 5 minutes brisk walk or jog, slowing down the last couple of minutes to bring the heart rate down.

Finish up with a set of abdominal curls and some light stretching, and walk home.

Working outdoors not only lets you train both anaerobic and aerobic energy systems, it gives you the added benefit of exposure to sunlight. That produces vitamin D in the body, vitally important for bone health, and has the added advantage of raising serotonin levels (nature's own 'natural' Prozac.).

Now you know why it's so hard to stay down in the dumps in the bright spring and summer months.
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