Personal Training In The Outdoors (Parks, Gardens, Playgrounds)
As with in home training, outdoor training can be done with minimal equipment provided your personal trainer is experienced and versatile enough. Using the different terrains and fixtures like benches, tables and playground (if any), your trainer should not have any problems designing workouts that is not monotonous and keeps things fresh.
First thing that comes to mind with the mention of personal training would bring images of a gym setting with exercise machines and the trainer guiding you through each and every unit of it. This is, if you’ve read my other post(s), unnecessary. Though not optimal, it is not a must.
Consider weighing out the options of having an equipped gym but crowded during peak hours as opposed to having a big open space outdoors with just a simple resistance tubing/band. I’d choose the latter for fresh air, greenery and most importantly… personal space! (again, it depends on how well your personal trainer mix things up every now and then)
With resistance tubing/band coupled with your own bodyweight and outdoor fixtures/terrains, you are set to go. All the basic 7 movements can still be performed with ease and you don’t need no fancy equipment (or sharing sweaty benches)
7 Basic movements :
- Quad dominant exercises - you don’t need machines
- Hip dominant exercises - you don’t need machines, resistance bands would be useful
- Horizontal Pulling exercises - you don’t need machines, resistance bands would be useful
- Horizontal Pushing exercises - you don’t need machines
- Vertical Pulling exercises - you don’t need machines, resistance bands would be useful
- Vertical Pushing exercises - you don’t need machines, resistance bands would be useful
- Core Exercises - you don’t need machines
With resistance bands, any fixture can be looped around at different heights. And you can do both upper body pulling and pushing movements. Not to mention lower body quad and hip dominant exercises. The options are endless.
And the advantage of having a big outdoor space is you can do sprint intervals without banging into others. Try this the next time you enter a gym. Sprint across the gym 50 metres and then walk back to starting point. Repeat 5 to 6 times. All this without being obstructed by other members (or vice versa) Well, you get what I mean.
Yes, yes. We can do sprints on the treadmill but the impact it has on your joints, if not on your shins, is not worth the pain. Not to mention the member jogging on the treadmill next to you looking at you funny as you keep stomping on it.
So the verdict is out. You don’t need a gym to get a total body, fat blasting workout!
PS: If you intend to hire a trainer, get this checklist for a good head start: How To Choose A Personal Trainer
- Written by Han Ayden on March 8, 2008 at 10:34 am
- Category: Outdoor Personal Training
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