Huge list of Body Weight Training books
This list is courtesy of http://bar-barians.forumotions.net/t4039-calisthetic-books
Bodyweight Exercise Revolution by Adam Steer (digitial product)
Tacfit Commando by Scott Sonnon (digital product)
Tacfit Warrior by Scott Sonnon (digital product)
Tactical Gymnastics by Scott Sonnon (digital product)
No Gym Necessary by Virgil Aponte (digital product)
The Muscle Experiment by Mike Thiga (digital product)
Solitary Fitness by Charles Bronson
Convict Conditioning by Paul Wade
The Weightless Workout by Health for Life
Hardcore Fitness by Steve Hansen
Never Gymless by Ross Enamait
Gymless by Alistair Ramsay (digital product)
Dinosaur Bodyweight Training by Brooks Kubik
Building The Gymnastic Body by Christopher Sommer
7 Weeks to 100 Push-Ups by Steve Speirs
7 Weeks To 50 Pull-Ups by Brett Stewart
You Are Your Own Gym By Mark Lauren
Bodyweight Exercises For Extraordinary Strength by Brad Johnson
The Power of Push-Ups by Rodney C. Womack III
Animal Workouts by David Nordmark
Natural Fitness by David Nordmark
The Ultimate Guide To Push-Ups by David Nordmark
The Naked Warrior by Pavel Tsatsouline
Weight-Free Workout by Men’s Health Magazine
The Essence of Bodyweight Training by Juan Carlos Santana
Max Capacity Training by Samy Peyret
Body Sculpting Bodyweight Exercises for Women by Eddie Baran
Turbulence Training by Craig Ballantyne (multiple digital products)
Monkey Fit: 21 Functional Bodyweight Drills & Exercises by Tim Jones
Grinder Strength Pull-Ups by Brad McLeod (digital product)
Fitness On A Swing Set by Karen M. Goeller
Hand-Balancing for Muscular Development by Bill Hinbern
The Ultimate Guide To Handstand Push-Ups by Christopher Logan
Maximum Muscular Fitness by Dan Riley
The Gravity Advantage by Paul Zaichik
The Gravity Advantage Max by Paul Zaichik
The Power of One by Paul Zaichik
Ultimate Wrestling Power by Steve Preston (digital product)
Workout Without Weights by Eddie Lomax (digital product)
Parallettes One (P1) by Ryan Hurst & Gold Medal Bodies (digital product)
Rings One (R1) by Ryan Hurst & Gold Medal Bodies (digital product)
Lean Hybrid Muscle- Bodyweight Edition by Elliot Hulse (digital product)
Final Phase Fat Loss- Bodyweight Edition by Adam Steer (digital product)
Primal Blueprint Fitness by Mark Sisson (digital product)
Combat Conditioning by Matt Furey
Working Out Without Weights by Chuck Gaylord
NHB Strength Training by Lloyd Irving
Wildman Training Manual & Course by John Grube
The Body Weight Solution by Tim Bell (digital product)
The Silverback Program by Tim Bell (digital product)
The Bodyweight Blueprint for Fat Loss by Adam Steer (digital product)
Ultimate Gymless Workout by Eddie Lomax (digital product)
Lightning Speed Fitness by Roger Haeske (digital product)
Death, Taxes, & Push-Ups by Ted Skup
Fit by Nature by John Colver
The Navy Seal Workout by Mark De Lisle
The Backyard Workout by Rhadi Ferguson (digital product)
The Bodyweight Blitz by Brian & Shawn Fitzmaurice (digital product)
TBK Fitness Program Tamir Katz
Lose The Weights! by Erik Boudreau
Gym-Free and Ripped by Nathan Kendrick
Bodyweight Power by Bryce Lane
Fitness Secrets of the Road Ninja by Bryce Lane
Bodyweight Bodybuilding Secrets by Zach Even-Esh (digital product)
Zen Martinoli’s 5 Minute Fitness by Zen Martinoli
Convict Conditioning 2 by Paul Wade
A Mighty River of Steel by Bryce Lane
Bodyweight Blast X by Ryan Cooper (digital product)
Overcoming Gravity by Steven Low
Felon Fitness by William Kroger & Trey Teufel
Free Machine Workout Push-Up Report by Stan Hersk (digital product)
7 Weeks To getting Ripped by Brett Stewart
The Complete Guide to Navy SEAL Fitness by Stew Smith
The Special Ops Workout by Stew Smith & Mike Mejia
Hillfit by Chris Highcock
The Official Guide To Mastering Handstand & Handstand Push-Ups by HIT Richards
A Home made functional gym
I have trained with conventional weights – barbells, dumbbells & machines at a gym for over 27 years. A year or so back I got into kettlebells & have trained mostly with those in the past 12 months. I have also done extensive weighted vest training in the past couple of years.
Recently I have been looking at diversifying my functional strength training. What I deeply miss from the conventional weights are the 3 basic lifts, squat, deadlift & bench having gotten my bench up to 400 lbs without a gym with barbells or a press machine how can you duplicate this?
Well this has led me to a few ideas for gear I will be setting up here at home with minimal costs.
First up is Sandbags…
Lets look at the “bulgarian bag” first. To buy a quality leather bag from suples will set you back a few hundred. If you are overseas like me it could cost you up to $1000 – clearly out of the question.
here is the site http://www.suples.com/
As you can see these are very well crafted and attractive but also extremely expensive.
Well the very simple solution is to make one from a car inner tube.
Now I wont go into the details here on how to make one – its all over the net already. There are knock off brands that are much cheaper than suples & chinese brands are available in real leather too.
Next up are actual sandbags. The beauty of sandbags is that you can use them for most exercises you can use a barbell for, including squats, deadlifts & benches. Plus a whole lot more of course.
The best thing to do is to go down to army surplus & pick up some heavy canvas bags. Fill these with a liner plastic garbage bag then fill multiple smaller freezer bags with the actual sand. Only fill them to 75% so the sand can still squish & move around. Seal it all up with duct tape. You can also use steel shot if you want an extra heavy sandbag.
Rosstraining.com has a great & cheap course on sandbag training.
With sandbags you can have a tonne of weight to train with for $100 worth of army surplus gear.
Next I’ll talk about weight vests briefly. I do not recommend training with a pack or making your own vest. The whole point of weight vest training is that it is ergonomic.
The problem for those of us outside the US is the cost of shipping a super heavy vest. For my MIR 140 lb vest it would have cost nearly $1000 to ship the thing here. I bought it without weight for $89.
I am buying $280 worth of steel bar which when cut down will fit perfectly into the vest to the full 140 lb weight. So a major saving.
next KEGS. Yep beer kegs filled with water, gravel or sand. Buy them of an auction site or from a local supplier.
You also want to google for home made suspension trainer. There are multiple sites & videos showing how to make these.
Finally the dragging sled.
Basically a heavy tire will do but the important thing is the harness. There are several configurations for harnessing. There are different options for the actual sled too.
Just have a good google & you will find a variation to suit you.
I personally will just use a tire but may have several configurations for the harness to maximize functionality.
So there we have it – a total functional gym for next to nothing. Hundreds of pounds of weight.
200 lb kettlebells
Wow man I want to get myself a 200 pounder. Problem for me is living in New Zealand the shipping is diabolical.
It will easily cost more than the kettlebell. Options are to import one and pay many hundreds if not a grand, make one from steel rebar & gypsum alpha plaster, make one from cast lead & a hollow kettlebell.
Here are a couple of suppliers in the USA:
http://www.jackeeboyz.com/products/IN-STORE-PICKUP/MONSTER-KETTLE-BELL-200LB-MKB200.html
… and Ader kettlebells
http://store.kettlebellinc.com/SearchResults.asp?searching=Y&sort=1&cat=20&show=30&page=3
and here are a few of the things you can do with a 200 lb Kettlebell…
OK here’s an UPDATE:
These Ader 203 lb KB’s are $490 online
http://www.topipad.asia/B0011EMVOC/reviews.html
God only knows about the shipping cost.
But I am in luck – an Australian outfit sells an 80 KG kettlebell for AU $290.00 I will need to organize shipping myself
I’m gunna do it.
There is an article on T-Nation discussing the heavy swing VS the deadlift
I strongly urge you to read the T-Nation article as it give actual torque / Force values – heaps of info on the heavy swing
… from that article – turn a dumbell into a KB swing device
This takes the cake …
A primo Kettlebell super set routine
Here is what I am doing today:
Super Set
10 one arm snatches – single KB
20 two arm cleans – double KB
70 one arm swings – single KB
Use as heavier weight as you can and still complete it. These three are done one after the other, no or little rest.
I am using 26 KG kettlebells. Do the whole super set “FIVE TIMES”.
Dont do it one after the other – take a break in between super sets – as long as you want. This will minimize fatigue & hand damage and keep your metabolism up all day.
Use heavy weights.
To minimize hand damage, trim callus the day before, use powder, use gloves, duct tape, or boxers wraps after cycle two.
Rather than increasing reps or cycles, or doing the whole five cycles in one go – increase the weight as your priority.
Bodyweight training videos
These Barstarzz guys have some good vids up on youtube, check out the DVD http://www.barstarzz.com/portfolio/barstarzz-instructional/
You can also check out dragondoor who have a few body weight books out now & steve cotter also has some videos at shihan.com
My current supplement regimen
Here is a pic of the supplements I currently use…
In the foreground is a packet of tribulus from purebulk.com – this will last me for years (until it expires).
Above that are two packets of pine pollen bought from China off ebay. Next to those is a packet of nettle root from ebay.
Then the containers at the rear from the left are Vitamin C, Two containers of acetyl-L-carnitine from nutrabio.com that will last until 2015, a container of Beta Glucan from purebulk, Two year supply of Creatine from nutrabio, multi vitamin, grape seed extract & finally two bottles of colostrum which is abundant locally.
Here’s why I take this stuff:
Pine Pollen
Nettle Root
Tribulus
These are basically my Pro Testosterone & Anti Estrogenic stack.
Colostrum
Contains Igf Insulin like growth factor & I like to let these melt under my tongue.
Vitamin C
Multi Vitamin
Grape extract
Contains resveratrol and quercetin for mitochondria production, general health
Beta Glucan
I take this exclusively to boost my immune system, the colostrum also has immunological compounds as does the multi vitamin.
Creatine Monohydrate
Well you all know what that’s for. Interestingly the Pine Pollen is a complete protein. Creatine contains three amino acids.
Acetyl-L-Carnitine
This stuff is great for the liver and can actually cure NASH – non alcoholic liver syndrome or fatty liver. My liver blood profile is usually out a bit so I take this stuff. Combined with the green tea and creatine it is also a great brain tonic. Pine Pollen is also good for the liver.
I also drink lots of green tea and oolong tea everyday. I cant take all of the supplements in the world but that is why I take what I take.
Here are a couple of Kettlebell tips for you…
Here are a couple of Kettlebell tips for you…
One concerns push-pull training. Basically when performing an exercise such as the over head press you want to counter that with a pulling exercise such as the pullup hanging from a bar.
Neglecting to do so overtime will reduce the gains from the exercise by weakening the joint and muscular balance. This in turn affects the crucial nervous connection that fires the muscles.
Always balance your workouts on the day with push-pull. Another good example is super setting heavy bench press with heavy lat pull downs. This is how I built my muscular back – always pinching the shoulder blades through the entire bench press. I got up to 400 lbs on the bench machine and over 250 lbs on the lat pull down.
Without the counter balance push-pull I would not have achieved such heavy weight. I have taken a break from this super set for some months which is good from a long term perspective. Right now my bench will be much less than 400 for reps but I will return to the training eventually and get it above that level.
My second tip refers to Kettlebells and saving a bit of cash. Here in New Zealand my new kettlebells cost me about $100 each. But as you can see from the photo, simply duct taping a 2 KG plate to the base allows you to increment the weight without buying a new KB.
I would think you can add 1, 2 or 3 2kg plates in this way giving you a maximum 6 additional KG’s which means you can miss out a weight level for your next kettlebell purchase.
Say you have a pair of 24’s like I have. You can add weight making them 26, 28 & 30 KG’s. Then buy a 32 KG pair when you are ready – not needing to buy a 28 KG pair. Hence $200 saved. The 2 KG increment is much more comfortable than 4KG too.
Duct tape is so handy.
More Kettlebell Photos
Here I am with my 90 lb kettlebell having cleaned it into the rack position…
I love lifting the heavy bell and can clean it OK but am still unable to press the 40 kgs overhead. Some work with 24 kg turkish get ups should enable me to press and snatch the 90 pounder after some months.
Here are a few pics with the 40 lb weight vest and two 50 lb kettlebells…
Here I am completing an overhead press with the two 50 pounders…
This is the tricep move for the shrug – you can also bend over at the waist and do it as a row
A Double Kettlebell Workout
Decided to do a quick session today with two 24KG kettlebells.
I do quite a lot of double presses and cleans as I want to get good at long cycle – it will take me 3 years I’m sure.
I also like to throw in some easy shrugs…
When doing these you can hit the triceps by bending the elbows back.
Here I am cleaning the bells …
…and in the rack
A 90 minute weight vest hike in Auckland City
I live in Auckland New Zealand. A city of 1.5 million. Probably I will leave soon as the economy is getting worse.
Today I went on my usual weight vest route. I walk down to the water front, past the ports to Tamaki Drive.
From there I will often take a 3-5 or even 6 hour hike along the water front.
Here is the view outside my apartment block. That’s Queen street – main street Auckland.
Here’s me in my 18 kg weight vest setting off on a short 90 minute hike.
A view of downtown Auckland.
It normally takes an hour to walk to this spot and I consider it usually to be the “start” – either of a run to the beach way around the bays or a long grueling weight vest hike. My vest hikes I usually begin at 4 or 5 am when there is nobody around and it is cooler.
As you can see there are thousands of rocks and boulders down here – often I will do a stone lifting session.
A 90 minute hike is fairly painless. Generally the pain & fatigue kick in around the 3 hour mark. Anything over that like 5-6 hours is hell. I dont take breaks longer that 10-15 minutes on my hikes. Always with a minimum 40 lb vest.