Ocean Earth & Air
Posts tagged "workouts"

riiaeatsright:

Originally from The Greatist
Who needs a gym when there’s the living room floor? Bodyweight exercises are a simple, effective way to improve balance, flexibility, and strength without machinery or extra equipment. From legs and shoulders to chest and abs, we’ve covered every part of the body that can get stronger with body resistance alone.
1. Inchworm: Stand up tall with the legs straight, and do like Lil’ Jon and let those fingertips hit the floor. Keeping the legs straight (but not locked!), slowly lower the torso toward the floor, and then walk the hands forward. Once in a push-up position, start taking tiny steps so the feet meet the hands. Continue bugging out for 4-6 reps.
2. Tuck Jump: Standing with the knees slightly bent, jump up as high as possible (pretend Jeremy Lin is watching!) and bring the knees in toward the chest while extending the arms straight out. Land with the knees slightly bent and quickly jump (on it) again!
3. Bear Crawl: Embrace that inner grizzly. Starting on the hands and knees, rise up onto the toes, tighten the core, and slowly reach forward with the right arm and right knee, followed by the left side. Continue the crawl for 8-10 reps (or until you scare your roommates off). 
4. Plyometric Push-Up: Ready to catch some air? Start on a well-padded surface and complete a traditional push-up. Then, in an explosive motion, push up hard enough to come off the floor (and hang ten for a second!). Once back on solid ground, immediately head into the next repetition.
5. Stair Climb with Bicep Curl: Turn those stairs into a cardio machine — no magic wand necessary. Grab some dumbbells (or household objects!) and briskly walk up and down the stairway while simultaneously doing bicep curls to work the whole body.
6. Mountain Climber: Starting on your hands and knees, bring the left foot forward directly under the chest while straightening the right leg. Keeping the hands on the ground and core tight, jump and switch legs. The left leg should now be extended behind the body with the right knee forward. Next up? Everest.
7. Prone Walkout: Beginning on all fours with the core engaged, slowly walk the hands forward, staying on the toes but not moving them forward. Next, gradually walk the hands backwards to the starting position, maintain stability and balance. (This dance comes next.)
8. Burpees: One of the most effective full-body exercises around, this one starts out in a low squat position with hands on the floor. Next, kick the feet back to a push-up position, complete one push-up, then immediately return the feet to the squat position. Leap up as high as possible before squatting and moving back into the push-up portion of the show.
9. Plank: Nope, we’re (thankfully) not walking the plank. Lie face down with forearms on the floor and hands clasped. Extend the legs behind the body and rise up on the toes. Keeping the back straight, tighten the core and hold the position for 30-60 seconds (or as long as you can hang).
10. Plank-to-Push-Up: Starting in a plank position, place down one hand at a time to lift up into a push-up position, with the back straight and the core engaged. Then move one arm at a time back into the plank position (forearms on the ground). Repeat, alternating the arm that makes the first move.
Read the rest here!

riiaeatsright:

Originally from The Greatist

Who needs a gym when there’s the living room floor? Bodyweight exercises are a simple, effective way to improve balance, flexibility, and strength without machinery or extra equipment. From legs and shoulders to chest and abs, we’ve covered every part of the body that can get stronger with body resistance alone.

1. Inchworm: Stand up tall with the legs straight, and do like Lil’ Jon and let those fingertips hit the floor. Keeping the legs straight (but not locked!), slowly lower the torso toward the floor, and then walk the hands forward. Once in a push-up position, start taking tiny steps so the feet meet the hands. Continue bugging out for 4-6 reps.

2. Tuck Jump: Standing with the knees slightly bent, jump up as high as possible (pretend Jeremy Lin is watching!) and bring the knees in toward the chest while extending the arms straight out. Land with the knees slightly bent and quickly jump (on it) again!

3. Bear Crawl: Embrace that inner grizzly. Starting on the hands and knees, rise up onto the toes, tighten the core, and slowly reach forward with the right arm and right knee, followed by the left side. Continue the crawl for 8-10 reps (or until you scare your roommates off). 

4. Plyometric Push-Up: Ready to catch some air? Start on a well-padded surface and complete a traditional push-up. Then, in an explosive motion, push up hard enough to come off the floor (and hang ten for a second!). Once back on solid ground, immediately head into the next repetition.

5. Stair Climb with Bicep Curl: Turn those stairs into a cardio machine — no magic wand necessary. Grab some dumbbells (or household objects!) and briskly walk up and down the stairway while simultaneously doing bicep curls to work the whole body.

6. Mountain Climber: Starting on your hands and knees, bring the left foot forward directly under the chest while straightening the right leg. Keeping the hands on the ground and core tight, jump and switch legs. The left leg should now be extended behind the body with the right knee forward. Next up? Everest.

7. Prone Walkout: Beginning on all fours with the core engaged, slowly walk the hands forward, staying on the toes but not moving them forward. Next, gradually walk the hands backwards to the starting position, maintain stability and balance. (This dance comes next.)

8. Burpees: One of the most effective full-body exercises around, this one starts out in a low squat position with hands on the floor. Next, kick the feet back to a push-up position, complete one push-up, then immediately return the feet to the squat position. Leap up as high as possible before squatting and moving back into the push-up portion of the show.

9. Plank: Nope, we’re (thankfully) not walking the plank. Lie face down with forearms on the floor and hands clasped. Extend the legs behind the body and rise up on the toes. Keeping the back straight, tighten the core and hold the position for 30-60 seconds (or as long as you can hang).

10. Plank-to-Push-Up: Starting in a plank position, place down one hand at a time to lift up into a push-up position, with the back straight and the core engaged. Then move one arm at a time back into the plank position (forearms on the ground). Repeat, alternating the arm that makes the first move.

Read the rest here!


Tone It Up! Tuesday

Bikini Bootcamp Workout

Tone It Up! Tuesday

Bikini Bootcamp Workout



Tone It Up Tuesday! 
04/24/2012

Beach Ball Workout. 
3 sets of 10 reps for each move.

Tone It Up Tuesday!
04/24/2012

Beach Ball Workout.
3 sets of 10 reps for each move.



fitvillains:

BURPEE MADNESS & Total Body Murder
This was my workout yesterday and WOW. Wow. It was seriously tough.
Normally soreness takes 24 hours to ‘set’ in, but this little combo has me feeling the burn early. I woke up this morning feeling it EVERYWHERE.
Yes. :)
Challenge: try it! It’s tough, but do-able. You can modify any of the moves to suit your level/needs.: step back instead of jumping for the burpees, use body weight for the squats, do modified pushups, and do step-ups/squats for the box jumps.

Advanced: fewer rounds, higher reps.
Beginner: more rounds, lower reps.

*I used 15lb dumbbells for the squats. Weights are optional though.
Round Options
3 rounds of 50 reps each
5 rounds of 30 reps each 
1 round of 50, then 5 rounds of 20
10 rounds of 15 reps each
15 rounds of 10 reps each
KILL IT. :) Let me know how it goes!

fitvillains:

BURPEE MADNESS & Total Body Murder

This was my workout yesterday and WOW. Wow. It was seriously tough.

Normally soreness takes 24 hours to ‘set’ in, but this little combo has me feeling the burn early. I woke up this morning feeling it EVERYWHERE.

Yes. :)

Challenge: try it! It’s tough, but do-able. You can modify any of the moves to suit your level/needs.: step back instead of jumping for the burpees, use body weight for the squats, do modified pushups, and do step-ups/squats for the box jumps.

Advanced: fewer rounds, higher reps.

Beginner: more rounds, lower reps.

*I used 15lb dumbbells for the squats. Weights are optional though.

Round Options

  • 3 rounds of 50 reps each
  • 5 rounds of 30 reps each 
  • 1 round of 50, then 5 rounds of 20
  • 10 rounds of 15 reps each
  • 15 rounds of 10 reps each

KILL IT. :) Let me know how it goes!


fitvillains:

Rise & Grind! A ‘No Think’ Workout

This workout is an easy, no thinking required circuit: perfect for those of you nursing hangovers today. No need to rush it, or even to push hard: it can be as easy as you need it to be. It may even turn into a warm up for something more intense. You…


fitvillains:

Weekend Workout: Spring Leaning!
Get ‘er done! Expect to sweat.

fitvillains:

Weekend Workout: Spring Leaning!

Get ‘er done! Expect to sweat.


Weekend Workout: Dirty Dozen 3 - Bad ‘Ass’ Bootcamp.

fitvillains:

Who’s ready to get down & DIRTY?

Dirty Dozen 3 is designed to keep your heart pumping while targeting your entire body. It’s intense: PUSH yourself to do as many rounds as you can.

It’s also a bad ASS challenge: this workout is heavy on the booty! Make sure to stretch well afterwards & take breaks when you need to!

You do NOT need weights for any of these exercises. Intermediate & Advanced exercisers may want to add 5-20lb dumbbells to make the moves more challenging. Start low in your first round, then add more weight if desired. Read notes for how to suit the exercises to your level.

Time: 30 Minutes

Warm Up: Run in place, squat, jumping jacks, dance -  ANYTHING. Move for 5 minutes before you start. Cool down with a march in place before stretching.

You’ll need: A mat, a timer, dumbbells, a chair/bench, a towel and a KILLER attitude!

Goal: Complete as many rounds of these exercises as possible in 30 minutes.

12 exercises, 12 reps each. No breaks scheduled in between, but take them if you need it. *The shorter your breaks, the better your time. 

Read More


fitvillains:

Today’s Workout: The Perfect 10! 
10 moves, 10 reps, max rounds in 30 minutes. Read the instructions & modifications before starting.
PUSHUP BONUS!

Are you doing the 1000 Pushup challenge? Use the bonus instructions below to boost your numbers! You’ll get a sick workout while getting closer to your goal. (If you’re doing pushups with the burpee, count those too!) 
Pushup Challenge BONUS.
START the workout with 20 pushups. 
Do 5 pushups (ANY variation) after each and every move (even the T-Pushups). 
Finish the workout with 20 pushups. 
3 rounds = 220 pushups. Not bad!

KILL IT!

fitvillains:

Today’s Workout: The Perfect 10!

10 moves, 10 reps, max rounds in 30 minutes. Read the instructions & modifications before starting.

PUSHUP BONUS!

Are you doing the 1000 Pushup challenge? Use the bonus instructions below to boost your numbers! You’ll get a sick workout while getting closer to your goal. (If you’re doing pushups with the burpee, count those too!)

Pushup Challenge BONUS.

  • START the workout with 20 pushups. 
  • Do 5 pushups (ANY variation) after each and every move (even the T-Pushups). 
  • Finish the workout with 20 pushups.

3 rounds = 220 pushups. Not bad!

KILL IT!


Tone It Up’s Printable Workout Routines *Updated 04/17/2012**

It’s Tone It Up Tuesday! And the first new workout in the 2012 Spring Into Bikini Season Challenge!

The new Under the Sea workout from Tone It Up!


beccasfitlife:

cleaningout:

So I did this today at the gym and it got my HR up HIGH! If you’re anything like me you hate the treadmill, and hate running even more. This is fast enough to keep you occupied mentally, challenging enough for ALL runners, and it WORKS!
Pick a pace that is a quick jog - I did 5.2 mph
Start with incline on zero. Run for 40 seconds, jump off for 20 seconds
During those 20 seconds increase your incline by 1%
Continue to do this until you’re at 10-15% incline - depending on your fitness level
Now decrease the incline by 1% at each rest interval
Great way to push yourself if you don’t particularly like sprints!

This looks awesome :)

beccasfitlife:

cleaningout:

So I did this today at the gym and it got my HR up HIGH! If you’re anything like me you hate the treadmill, and hate running even more. This is fast enough to keep you occupied mentally, challenging enough for ALL runners, and it WORKS!

Pick a pace that is a quick jog - I did 5.2 mph

Start with incline on zero. Run for 40 seconds, jump off for 20 seconds

During those 20 seconds increase your incline by 1%

Continue to do this until you’re at 10-15% incline - depending on your fitness level

Now decrease the incline by 1% at each rest interval

Great way to push yourself if you don’t particularly like sprints!

This looks awesome :)


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