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  1. #46
    We did quite a bit of Crossfit in BRC. If you push yourself it is a great, relatively short workout.


  2. #47
    Quote Originally Posted by Gunner 0313 View Post
    A huge factor in all of this is nutrition. You can workout all you want but if you're not eating right, it's kind of pointless, IMO.
    Yeah, that's a good point, a very good point. Here is a link to one good article on eating healthy... http://library.crossfit.com/free/pdf...ue21_May04.pdf


  3. #48
    Quote Originally Posted by SSgt Petzold View Post
    Marine Corps Times just did a cover about crossfit...
    Good article...http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news...ssfit_062208w/

    CrossFit: The workout sweeping the fleet



    <HR style="COLOR: #d1d1e1" SIZE=1><!-- / icon and title --><!-- message -->QUANTICO, Va. — Special Warfare Operator 1st Class (SEAL) Andy Stumpf always needs to be in shape.

    But before he took an AK47 round to the hip during a tour in Iraq, he thought his conventional regimen of weight training and running was the key to fitness.

    The injury prompted the San Diego-based sailor to try a different kind of workout, one that was sweeping through the military community and would prove to be a blessing as he worked to rejoin his comrades.

    Stumpf found CrossFit — and six months after he was shot, he was back on active duty.

    Now, he’s the owner of CrossFit Coronado in San Diego, where he trains a handful of his fellow SEALs, as well civilians looking for a different style of workout.

    “Before, I thought the key to really getting fit was to add more training volume,” Stumpf said. “Run, run, run, to get good at going long. But you layer that extra training volume on top and you’re breaking your body down.

    “What CrossFit has taught me is that randomized, functional movement is how you get fit.”

    The CrossFit concept
    CrossFit boasts that its specialty is not specializing.

    The fitness program attempts to be as inclusive as possible and gears its regimen to be open to participants ranging from elite athletes to homemakers. It’s especially popular with police training academies and special operations units. But the straightforward concept has drawn interest from many looking for a fresh approach to fitness.

    It’s made up of several dozen individual exercises and movements that, when combined, form the CrossFit system. Some of these exercises will be familiar to many people with a few hours in the gym under their belts: clean, jerk, pull-up and squat.

    However, other parts of the regimen stray from standard gym orthodoxy and have names to reflect as much: hollow rock, power snatch and the “hot chick muscle up,” basically a combination pull-up and dip, using a pair of Olympic-style rings.

    CrossFit has become a global phenomenon, reflected by clubs springing up worldwide. But it has fairly humble beginnings, said founder Greg Glassman, who’s spent decades working as a personal trainer and now trains law enforcement personnel nationwide.

    He said the program is about 20 years old and was slowly spreading through the California fitness community before a confluence of two events in 2003 launched CrossFit forward.

    “When we launched the Web site and war broke out, people took fitness much more seriously, and the information was available all over the place,” he said.

    CrossFit’s popularity is a mix of two major factors — variety and simplicity, Glassman said, adding, “We all come to the table with limited time, energy and capacity, and I want the most rate of return for that investment.”

    He designed the CrossFit system from three exercise disciplines: gymnastics, traditional cardio workouts and Olympic-style weightlifting.

    “The blended capacity in all three domains was a better fitness than being a master at any of the three,” he said. “The key is doing a multitude of different tasks. That’s the Holy Grail of fitness.”

    He’s created an Internet-based “Workout of the Day,” which provides participants with an easy-to-follow model for CrossFit workouts, available free at http://www.crossfit.com. The “WOD” is often clear-cut and can be completed in 45 minutes or less, sometimes in 20 minutes.

    But it’s the combination of movements, and an unforgiving intensity, that makes CrossFit work.

    Getting CrossFit
    On a recent afternoon in Northern Virginia, a mix of officers and enlisted Marines converge on a patch of concrete tucked between a basketball court and some utility trailers at Marine Corps Base Quantico and begin stretching under the midday sun, in preparation for a workout that will stress the mind as much as the muscles.

    Today’s workout is the pistol squat — a one-legged body-weight squat that challenges leg strength and balance — preceded by stretching, a short run and a set of broad jumps.

    CrossFit is all about varied routines and high-intensity functional movement. That translates to a disdain for monotony, a focus on speed and a constant eye toward exercises that incorporate everyday functions. For Marine 1st Lt. Geraldine Carey, it’s a welcome retreat from the boredom of the traditional workout.

    “It’s not like going to the gym, where Monday’s workout is Monday’s workout and Tuesday’s workout is Tuesday’s workout, and you keep doing the same things week in and week out,” she said. “It’s different every day, so it’s hard to get bored.”

    But most critical to the Marines on hand is the importance of camaraderie over competition.

    No one pulls out a tape measure to gauge bicep growth. There’s no list of top performers etched on a dry-erase board to remind participants of their superiority — or inferiority.

    “It’s all about community and being noncompetitive,” said Marine Capt. Jose Vengoechea, 31, one of three instructors on hand during the advanced session workout. “No one is competing against anybody but themselves.”

    Leading by example
    Forty minutes before the CrossFit Quantico crew is drenched in sweat, Marine Maj. Andrew Thompson is alone with only a medicine ball and a pull-up bar.

    The 35-year-old former Naval Academy football player has substituted the traditional workout regimen of running and weight training — his mantra for years — with this new-age blend of three old-school disciplines.

    Thompson typifies the CrossFit philosophy, making up for missing the previous day’s session with a basic but brutal workout: 15 pull-ups, 30 push-ups and 45 body-weight squats. Repeat as many times as possible in 20 minutes.

    “I’m smoked. I mean, really smoked,” he said after completing the grueling session.

    Thompson employed the CrossFit system while deployed in Kuwait and has endured weather of all types at Quantico to keep on track.

    “We worked out of a trash pile and used whatever we could get our hands on,” Thompson said. “Cinder blocks, steel pipes, bricks.”

    Not long after recovering from his own session, Thompson is pacing between the Marines, encouraging them with a mix of positive reinforcement and practical teaching. After that, he said, the participants take care of the rest.

    “Marines like to be challenged. The sessions are very, very difficult. There’s no doubt about that,” he said. “Participating in a group setting also helps. Collective suffering has a tendency to bring people together.”

    More than anything, the program is attractive in its ability to prepare Marines for the rigors of combat.

    “In combat, second place doesn’t get to go home. If I’m not prepared enough to support the mission or my fellow Marine, that’s going to jeopardize that mission,” he said.

    That’s where Thompson’s West Coast counterpart comes in.

    Marine Lt. Col. Dan Wilson is the commanding officer of Infantry Training Battalion at School of Infantry-West, Camp Pendleton, Calif. At 47, Wilson has to work harder than the younger Marines to keep fit, and he contends that CrossFit has helped tremendously in that effort.

    Wilson was introduced to the program by a fellow Marine and was rewarded with an eight-point improvement in his semiannual physical fitness exam after a nine-week introductory session last fall. Since then, he’s been preaching the CrossFit scripture to whoever will listen.

    He’s also forged a strong friendship with Glassman, the CrossFit founder.

    Their bond, and Glassman’s unabashed love of the Corps’ culture, resulted in Glassman donating the equipment from the original CrossFit gym in Santa Cruz, Calif., to the Marines at Pendleton.

    “We did a final workout in the old gym, and then we loaded up the gear into a tractor-trailer and brought it down here to create the CrossFit warehouse at Camp Pendleton,” he said.

    Wilson stressed that he has not made the CrossFit program mandatory for his Marines, but he added that four of his five company commanders are involved in the system and teaching it to their troops.

    “The company commanders have embraced it as a substitute for PT,” he said.

    Wilson hasn’t built CrossFit into the school’s curriculum, but he finds Marines gravitating toward the program.

    “Say we are out at the range and we have some down time,” Wilson said. “Instead of just sitting on their hands, they’ll do sprints from one end to the other and develop an on-the-spot CrossFit program.”

    Why CrossFit fits
    Glassman said the Corps has been the quickest branch of the military to adopt CrossFit into its fitness program. There is a CrossFit gym on or near practically every Marine Corps base in the country, and even one serving troops based in Okinawa, Japan.

    CrossFit has a dedicated following at a host of military installations, including Fort Bragg, N.C., home to the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division, and Fort Drum, N.Y., home to the Army’s 10th Mountain Division. The CrossFit Web site also lists clubs at Ramstein Air Base, Germany, as well as Stumpf’s Coronado facility.

    “Just wanted to drop you a line from Afghanistan,” reads one testimonial posted to the CrossFit Web site, from an Army major. “I was introduced to CrossFit at Fort Bragg after Army Special Operations Command incorporated CrossFit into their [Headquarters and Headquarters Company] gym. I was immediately hooked. After arriving in Afghanistan, I heard that two of the generals here love the concept and the exercises and are working on building a ‘garage gym’ and filling it with CrossFit ‘tools.’”



  4. #49
    Quote Originally Posted by NoRemorse View Post
    They just use high quality vests so I bought the one they rated very highly. Can't remember what it's called now.

    Swimming is great; kills me like no other. Great for the lungs too.

    Perform better . com has all kinds of weighted vests and other unconventional fitness equpment. There are alot of Functional training aids. Also look up www.burnwithkearns.com he is a fitness trainer with excercises that will push you ,make you stronger but with less of a chance of injury .


  5. #50
    I like performbetter but they charge too much for some of the trash they sell.


  6. #51
    This past week I've been using a rowing machine. Excellent workout ! If I was close to a large body of water I really think I would consider buying a scull.


  7. #52
    Ya, I hear ya -- rowing is another exercise that's a good way to hit area's you don't normally hit. Great shoulder, lat, and upper quad work

    Speaking of water - I've been doing a lot of swimming lately, weird routines, I love the pool.

    I'm getting serious about doing a mini-triathlon, then I'll be hooked, and end up doing a regular one, and someday I could see myself doing Iron Man on the Big Island of Hawaii.

    Crawl, walk, run....


  8. #53
    I've recently been hooked on swimming also. Sucks, this week the pool has been closed for cleaning. I definitely would like to get into the mini-triathlon too. I need to run the Marine Corps Marathon first.

    Hey Wook you're a MA guy right ? What's your take on all of this crap for Kennedy ?


  9. #54
    Quote Originally Posted by Gunner 0313 View Post
    I've recently been hooked on swimming also. Sucks, this week the pool has been closed for cleaning. I definitely would like to get into the mini-triathlon too. I need to run the Marine Corps Marathon first.

    Hey Wook you're a MA guy right ? What's your take on all of this crap for Kennedy ?
    Try a "Sprint" Triathlon, see how you do, I know I would be wobbling in the run.


  10. #55
    Quote Originally Posted by Gunner 0313 View Post
    Hey Wook you're a MA guy right ? What's your take on all of this crap for Kennedy ?

    I'm ova it, I'm a republican, he can rot in hell for what he did to that girl is what I think....


  11. #56
    oh, wait... the media forgot about that! damn... too late.


  12. #57
    I'm done with running on a treadmill, it totally fvcks up my road running.


  13. #58
    Quote Originally Posted by Gunner 0313 View Post
    I'm done with running on a treadmill, it totally fvcks up my road running.
    I hear ya, treadmills for me are a LAST resort. I'd rather do and hour of flutter kicks and hello dollies then run on a treadmill.

    BTW - did you hear what happened to Mike Tyson's daughter on treadmill, bad juju.


  14. #59
    Quote Originally Posted by thewookie View Post
    BTW - did you hear what happened to Mike Tyson's daughter on treadmill, bad juju.
    Yea that was jacked up. I've seen people stumble on them before and it's pretty fvckin hilarious.


  15. #60
    Wookie,

    I've actually been training for a Sprint Triathlon myself.

    I can't remember how long the swim is at the moment, but it's 12 mile bike ride and the 3 mile run.

    I'm pretty sure anyways.

    Either way, like Squishy said, check that out.


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