Youth Class!?

WOD:   7/07/16

5 rounds for time of:
Run 400 meters
30 Double­-unders
30 Push press 75/55 lbs. 

 

 

Youth Class?

With so many of our CrossFit Train members having families and one of our primary focuses being to build a family within our box we are considering adding a youth class to our schedule. This class would be run by Coach Swartz (Iron Beaver Weightlifting coach) and would be offered 2-4 days a week. This class would not replace any of the current class options. It would occur at the same time as the main class. 

We would be offering this class with the goal of helping to teach the kids how to perform basic body weight and barbell exercises along with giving them an additional outlet for activity during their off seasons if they play sports or during their breaks from school if they don’t play sports. We hope that this class will better prepare the kids for sports or other physical activities that they will do later. This class would not be a CrossFit class.

If you have been attending the 5:30pm or 6:30pm classes you would have seen Coach Swartz teaching a class similar to the class that we would be offering. The class the Coach Swartz does currently at the 5:30pm time this summer is for 14+ year olds and is a strength and conditioning class for kids who play sports.

This class would be something that could be attended by youth between the ages of 10-14 years old. 

We are asking all the CrossFit Train families to take a short survey to see if this is a class that our Train families might be interested in and what days and times best suit them. 

Follow the link to take our survey; 

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/6PNNT8P

 

If you have any further questions about the youth camp or about the strength and conditioning camp that Coach Swartz offers feel free to E-mail him at ironbeaverweightlifting@gmail.com

 

 

Christopher R. Swartz B.S, C.S.C.S, USAW Club Coach
Iron Beaver Weightlifting-
Head Weightlifting Coach
Ph: (541) 285-3155
ironbeaverweightlifting@gmail.com
ironbeaverweightlifting.com

 

Derek Eason
Nutrition

WOD:   7/06/16

Establish a 2 rep Max Front Squat

3 rounds for time of:
12 Front Squats 135/95-lbs.
12 Burpee Pul-ups
 

 

 

Nutrition matters, and it matters a lot. You cannot out exercise a bad diet, and you cannot under-eat and expect to perform. Here is a great article from CrossFit Impulse answering some Frequently Asked Nutrition Questions. Read up and eat up!

 

1. What should I eat?

First, transition to eating quality foods that our bodies are made to eat. This is the tough part for most people because grains, bread, and other processed carbohydrates are not in this group. Shop the perimeter of the grocery store for lean meats, fruits and vegetables, nuts, and seeds. This article on basic nutrition will explain everything clearly.  We don’t recommend you worry about completely eliminating anything from your diet at first. Small, frequent, and sustained changes are the key to success in nutrition.

2. I’m eating quality foods. What now?

Next, we recommend eating those quality foods in proportions that will fuel your athletic activity and provide hormonal balance. The best way we have found to achieve this is the Zone Diet. The Zone Diet prescribes 40% carbs, 30% protein, and 30% fat for every meal. It also prescribes that you eat several small meals throughout the day. You can read our definitive guide to the Zone diet here.

3. My husband/wife will never go for this. What should I do?

This isn’t a nutrition question, but rather a question of leadership. First, sticking to any nutrition plan will be very difficult if your spouse isn’t on board. The simple task of preparing two different meals for two people is by itself contentious. Furthermore, when your spouse sees you making good choices he/she may question or ridicule your decisions due to feelings of guilty or inadequacy. Your spouse may also think that you are shoving a diet onto them because you are unhappy with them. These are difficult barriers, even if you do everything correctly.  It’s important for loved ones to know that your desire is simply to improve your health and fitness. If after addressing these issues you still arrive at an impass then you may simply have different goals than your spouse or have a much greater desire to achieve them.

4. What about my kids?

Feed them the same quality foods, but don’t worry about regimenting total volume of food for a growing child. Just make sure they eat real food (see Question #1) and get some protein, fat, and quality carbs (fruits and vegetables) at every meal. If you think they’ll protest when you serve them grilled chicken and vegetables rather than chicken McNuggets and macaroni and cheese, then we suggest you be a leader and stand your ground on what’s best for your child–not what satiates their desire or temper tantrum at that moment. Sometimes being a leader is tough. I promise, they’ll eventually get hungry enough to eat what you serve. Gerber wasn’t around 100 years ago, but humans were, and somehow we survived.

 

5. How do I cook all my favorite pastas, casseroles, and desserts and still follow a healthy diet?

 

You don’t. Eating healthy is a lifestyle change. Many things from your old lifestyle simply do not fit in your new lifestyle of healthy eating. But you don’t have to give up anything completely. Everyone let’s loose and has a cheat meal or dessert from time to time. But what you shouldn’t do is go crazy trying to modify all your favorite high-carb meals into something healthy, because it just doesn’t work. The underlying issue is breaking the emotional connection to food. Food is fuel. Just eat it and get on with life. Food is not a way to achieve happiness. Happiness is what happens in life when you’re not eating. If you get emotional fulfillment and gratification from food then it’s evidence of a hole in your life that you’re trying to fill. As a healthy way to set and achieve goals and spend time with like-minded people, CrossFit is part of what will fill that hole. But you have to start by realizing the situation and accepting that if you want to change then you’ve got to change. Your old dietary habits will just give you your old results.

6. How do I eat out?

Making healthy choices at a restaurant isn’t difficult. Plan your meal around your protein source. You want a quality portion of protein about the size of the palm of your hand. Then choose healthy carb options to match.  Fruits and vegetables are great choices. For example, a 6 oz steak with a side of broccoli is an excellent choice. At a Mexican restaurant you might like fajita skirt steak with some rice and guacamole. Christina wrote some excellent advice on how to make healthy choices at restaurants in her article “Restaurants, Decisions, and Zoning…Oh My.” You can also check out our article on the Top 10 Zone Friendly Meals in Huntsville, Alabama.

7. What about alcohol?

Obviously, alcohol is very bad when used to excess. However, casual use can still fit into a healthy lifestyle. How much is too much? Only you can really decide. Most CrossFit athletes I know consume alcohol occasionally. I also know successful athletes that have beer every evening. And many other successful athletes completely abstain from alcohol. Overall, just make sure your alcohol use is for recreation, not dependency, and then fit it into your nutrition and training plan. Alcohol also affects your sleep, recovery, and body composition, so it’s always an area to examine if you’re not achieving your goals.

8. Do you recommend any supplements?

A couple supplements can definitely help you make faster improvement in your strength and body composition. But before we talk about them, read this and believe it: If your diet is crap, then you will get the most benefit by fixing your diet before you ever take a supplement. If your diet is crap, then no supplement can help you. If your diet is crap, no supplement will make you look “ripped.” Before you take supplements, fix your diet. With that out of the way, we recommend fish oil and creatine to pretty much anyone with a pulse. You may think creatine is just for bodybuilders or meatheads, but that’s just conventional wisdom talking. Science tells us that creatine is the single most effective, safest, and most thoroughly researched supplement in history–and it’s good for everyone. It will enhance your strength development with zero negative side effects. Creatine has even been shown to improve mental function in the eldery. Creatine monohydrate is one of the cheapest supplements available. It is so easy and so good for you, there’s no excuse not to take it. Seriously, buy some creatine monohydrate and start taking it every day. The second supplement that is a clear win on all fronts is fish oil, which we’ll talk about below.

9. What is fish oil?

The short story is that your body needs Omega 3 fatty acids for all of life’s important functions: thinking, tissue repair, everything. The human diet 40,000 years ago provided us with plenty of Omega 3s. Our modern diet provides us with very little, even when eating healthy as CrossFitters do. Fish oil is the single best way to get the Omega 3s that your body needs. We’ve written a complete resource called “Why Fish Oil?” that will explain the nitty gritty facts behind why we use it and how we use it. Give it a read for the full story. The short story is that fish oil is the single easiest step you can take towards a solid CrossFit diet.

10. What should I eat before a workout?

 

These last two topics are minor details that we recommend you don’t worry about until you have all your other nutrition decisions correct. If you are worried about pre and post-workout nutrition and timing but you’re still having a slice of banana bread and saltine crackers for lunch then you’re completely putting the cart before the horse. Get the basics right first and then let the details follow.  So on to the answer…For optimum performance, in the 24 hours prior to a workout you should eat Zone proportion meals from clean food sources, just as we recommend you eat every day. The only real question is what volume of food should you eat prior to a workout, and the answer is unique to every athlete. Almost nobody prefers eating immediately prior to a workout, in the 30 minutes or less before 3, 2, 1, GO!  Most athletes eat an hour or more prior to the workout. Some athletes find they must fast longer prior to the WOD in order to avoid nausea. However, your performance will suffer if you don’t consume some fuel before the WOD, so make sure you’ve eaten a quality meal sometime in the 1-3 hours prior. Only experimentation and finding what works for you will yield the answer.

 

11. What should I eat after a workout?

I get the feeling that many people think they can find the magic bullet here, and somehow by drinking the perfect blended concoction of unicorn tongue and Cinnamon Toast Crunch right after a workout they can ignore nutrition the other 23 hours of the day. Just like in most of life, results aren’t achieved through one masterfully planned and incredibly executed event, but rather through an endless string of small but intelligent decisions all day, every day.

The objective of post-workout nutrition is to optimize recovery by replenishing glycogen stores and providing protein to begin tissue repair. This improves the results of your next workout, decreases hunger throughout your day, and improves body composition. The two things you absolutely need after your workout are

  1. Fast absorbing carbohydrate (fruits, berries, sweet potatoes, rice, even sugar)
  2. Fast absorbing protein (whey protein or egg protein is preferable)

One easy way to get both of these components is through a post-workout shake using a protein powder like Progenex Recovery. Many companies make great post-workout products. Progenex is a very popular brand that is effective and tastes great. For this reason, we stock and sell Progenex at CrossFit Impulse. We want to make it easy for you to get proper post-workout nutrition, because that will amplify your results. For an average sized man your post-workout shake should contain at least 21 grams of protein and 36 grams of carbohydrate. Smaller or larger athletes can scale those numbers accordingly. You also may have to mix different products to get that particular carb and protein mix. For example, Progenex Recovery would need carbohydrate added from another source to achieve that mix.

Much like pre-workout nutrition, take these guidelines, experiment, and find what works for you. And remember that post-workout meals are crossing the t’s and dotting the i’s on an already solid nutrition plan. They aren’t the focus of a solid nutrition plan.
 

 

 

Source:    http://crossfitimpulse.com/nutrition/

Derek Eason
REST

WOD:   7/05/16

 

Double "Nate"
Complete as many rounds in twenty minutes as you can of:
4 Muscle-ups
8 Handstand Push-ups
16 Kettlebell swings 70/53-lbs.

 

 

 

Rest!!

I know we all love Crossfit and try to come in every single day even when are bodies are telling us we shouldn’t. I always catch myself saying that today I will take the day off from the gym and just relax and let my body heal. Then like normal I feel guilty about missing out on seeing everyone in the gym and thinking I just missed a great workout. We need to avoid this situation at all costs. It’s essential to take a day off and rest your body from these brutal workouts. Rest days are just as much as part of training as anything else. You need to let your muscles recover in order to see the results you are looking for. It’s different for everyone someone might take a rest day every other day or go two days on one day off it all depends on the person and what your body can handle. Find what works for you and stick with it! 

Here is a great article from box life magazine about the difference between active recovery days and rest days : http://boxlifemagazine.com/active-recovery-the-difference-between-rest-days-and-recovery-days/

 

 

Written by Jesse Gunnell

Derek Eason
Happy Fourth of July!

There are no classes today July 4th.

Go out and Celebrate our Great Nation!

 

Tuesday July 5th will be back to a  normal schedule and full day of classes!

 

Derek Eason
Mary XXX

No classes Monday, July 4th.

All other classes are normal.

Yoga with Sadie Today at 10am, Free for members, $5 for non-members.
 

 

WOD:   7/03/16
 

“Mary XXX”
Complete as much as possible in 20 minutes of:
10 handstand push-ups
20 single-leg squats, alternating
30 pull-ups
15 handstand push-ups
30 single-leg squats, alternating
45 pull-ups
20 handstand push-ups
40 single-leg squats, alternating
60 pull-ups
25 handstand push-ups
50 single-leg squats, alternating
75 pull-ups
30 handstand push-ups
60 single-leg squats, alternating
90 pull-ups

*With a partner, share reps and scales as needed.

 

 

 

Derek Eason
Capoot

No classes Monday, July 4th.

All other classes are normal.

Yoga with Sadie Sunday at 10am, Free for members, $5 for non-members.

 

 

WOD:   7/02/16
 

“Capoot”
For time:
100 push-ups
Run 800 meters
75 push-ups
Run 1,200 meters
50 push-ups
Run 1,600 meters
25 push-ups
Run 2,000 meters

*With a partner, share reps as needed.

*Run in 400m relays.

 

 

Derek Eason
Have a great 4th of July Weekend!!!

No classes Monday, July 4th.

All other classes are normal.

Yoga with Sadie Sunday at 10am, Free for members, $5 for non-members.

 

 

WOD:   7/01/16

Establish a 5RM Hang Power Snatch
 

Five rounds for time of:
135/95 lb. Deadlift, 9 reps
135/95 lb. Hang power snatch, 6 reps
135/95 lb. Overhead squat, 3 reps

 

 

 

Derek Eason
Mobilizing!

No classes Monday, July 4th.

All other classes are normal.

Yoga with Sadie Sunday at 10am, Free for members, $5 for non-members.

 

If you are interested in Chris Swartz' Youth Class, follow the link to take the survey; https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/6PNNT8P

 

WOD:   6/30/16

Push Press 5-5-5-5-5 reps

3 rounds for time of:
Run 400 meters
30 squats
115/75-lb. push press, 20 reps

 

 


Mobilizing Post WOD and Kelly Starrett

After you finish a workout, what do you do? For the majority of the people in the gym they get in their car and drive home. That may not seem like such a bad thing, I mean you killed a brutal workout and most definitely got fitter doing so, but what if I told you all that work you did was basically for naught. What really happens when you drive home from working out is you are putting your entire body into a horribly compromised position from head to toe. Most likely your shoulders are hunched forward and you neck is craned forward as well, your femurs are jutting into you hip sockets and you have lost all traces of stacking your spinal vertebrae on top of one another, keeping that nice straight back we always talk about. When this happens post WOD, the muscles that compose your body cool down and laminate together in that compromised position, curious now as to why your body may hurt so bad after you get out of the car? Thankfully there is a solution to this problem. Mobilization post WOD. After you finish your workout spend ten, twenty, heck even thirty minutes if you have the time and patience rolling out with a foam roller, taking a lacrosse ball and mashing groups of muscles. Not only will doing this help lessen that feeling of tightness and soreness the following days but it will also greatly increase your range of motion if you do this daily. Also, if you don’t already know who Kelly Starrett is, I highly recommend you go check out his YouTube channel at  

https://www.youtube.com/user/sanfranciscocrossfit

Starrett is a guru when it comes to mobilization and on his channel you can find insane amounts of techniques that can help anything from pain in your foot when running to not being able to lockout anything overhead. Go give him a look and remember, MOBILIZE!!!

 

Written By Austin Gray

Derek Eason
Youth Class with Chris Swartz

WOD:   6/29/16

EMOTM for 30 minutes:
1: Deadlift 3 reps
2: Max reps Burpees
3: Rest

*Score is your heaviest weight lifted and your number of cumulative burpees.

 

 

 

Youth Class?

 

With so many of our CrossFit Train members having families and one of our primary focuses is to build a family within our box we are considering adding a youth class to our schedule. This class would be run by Coach Swartz (Iron Beaver Weightlifting coach) and would be offered 2-4 days a week.

We would be offering this class with the goal of helping to teach the kids how to perform basic body weight and barbell exercises along with giving them an additional outlet for activity during their off seasons if they play sports or during their breaks from school if they don’t play sports. We hope that this class will better prepare the kids for sports or other physical activities that they will do later.

If you have been attending the 5:30pm or 6:30pm classes you would have seen Coach Swartz teaching a class similar to the class that we would be offering. The class the Coach Swartz does currently at the 5:30pm time this summer is for 14+ year olds and is a strength and conditioning class for kids who play sports.

 This class would be something that could be attended by youth between the ages of 10-14 years old.

We are asking all the CrossFit Train families to take a short survey to see if this is a class that our Train families might be interested in and what days and times best suit them.

 

Follow the link to take our survey; https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/6PNNT8P

 

 

 If you have any further questions about the youth camp or about the strength and conditioning camp that Coach Swartz offers feel free to E-mail him at ironbeaverweightlifting@gmail.com.

Derek Eason
Time to Read!

WOD:   6/28/16

EMOTM for 15 minutes:
Back Squat, 3 reps

"Annie"
50-40-30-20 and 10 rep rounds of:
Double-unders
Sit-ups

*Get out you notebooks, we have done this one before! Beat your old time!

 

 

If you haven’t heard of the Crossfit Journal by now, you should have! We have had some blogs in the past talk about it, and how it is a great source for just about anything you can think of Crossfit. There as an article posted not too long ago titled “The Glassman Chipper” which reflects back on a bunch of great articles published from way back in 2002 or so. Everyone is worth a read and will help you expand your knowledge. You can find them all here: http://journal.crossfit.com/2016/05/the-glassman-chipper.tpl 

 

Photo taken from the CrossFit Journal

 

By Sean Mackey

 

 

Derek Eason