Handstand Walking
Choose one of the following scaling options and spend 12 minutes developing your hand balancing:
A) Hand Walking (free or 2′ from wall)
B) Wall Inverted Hip Shifts with Hand Release (from a kick up)
C) Box Piked Hip Shifts with Hand Release
D) Floor Piked Hip Shifts with Hand Release
__________________
For Time:
50 Double-Unders
50 Pull-Ups
50 Double-Unders
50 Burpees
50 Double-Unders
50 Squats
50 Double-Unders
50 AbMat Sit-Ups
50 Double-Unders
Aim to stay below redline on this chipper. Break the sets up as needed to stay fresh throughout. Smooth and steady is the goal.
Remember summer? Dan G. and Greg C. do
Editor’s Note: Tomorrow we’ll be posting the template for the upcoming group programming cycle, which will be quite different from the way we’ve organized mesocycles in the past. Our basic programming philosophy will, however, remain the same. Now’s a good time to revisit it! The article below was orginally posted on 6.10.2014. Enjoy!
The Underlying Philosophy Behind Programming at CFSBK
By Chris Fox
At CFSBK, we program for long-term health and fitness utilizing strength training, Olympic lifting, gymnastics, and mostly CrossFit-style couplet and triplet conditioning work. While some days look a bit different, a routine day at CrossFit South Brooklyn looks like this: DROMs, Warm Ups, Lifting, WOD prep, followed by a WOD. Let’s look at some of the reasons why we structure and program this way in terms of what each segment offers.
DROMs: A general, light, dynamic warm up of joints and soft tissue will get your heart rate up a bit and help you enter a training mindset. It starts to get the sleep out of your eyes or the emails in your inbox out of your head. It also offers time for the QOD [LINK], which can lighten the mood and let you get to know a bit about the people you’ll be working hard with.
Warm Ups: You need to be warmed up properly to move well and help prevent injury. Standardized warm ups move you through a wide range of motion, get you sweaty, and give you an opportunity to develop some strength in basic gymnastics and barbell movements you’ll regularly see in classes. Focused barbell drills review the positions and intentions of the lift you’ll be working on that day. We structure the drills so that you also get warm as you’re doing them.
Lifts: You need to be stronger, as strength is the physical adaptation with the greatest carryover to the rest of your training and to life in general. You may have noticed that we often squat twice each week. We’ve been programming this way for years and for good reason. I can’t say it any better than Mark Rippetoe so here’s a quote from the man himself:
“There is simply no other exercise, and certainly no machine, that provides the level of central nervous activity, improved balance and coordination, skeletal loading and bone density enhancement, muscular stimulation and growth, connective tissue stress and strength, psychological demand and toughness, and overall systemic conditioning than the correctly performed full squat.”
We agree.
The Olympic lifts train power, strength, coordination, flexibility, and overall athleticism. If you can throw a heavy weight overhead, catch it in a rock bottom overhead squat, then stand it up (PR bar slam optional), almost all of the other things we do will be easier. As far as the other lifts go, the bench is the best upper body strength developer and is simply fun. The press is another great upper body strength developer—it keeps the shoulder girdle healthy and works the muscles that stabilize your trunk extremely well. Every few cycles we’ll program an upper body gymnastics movement as a strength developer, as this allows us to have some fun and vary the stimulus a bit. The deadlift will get your back stronger like no other exercise can, and it’s almost always the lift where you’ll be able to move the most weight, automatically making it pretty cool. The average lifter should be able to deadlift more than they can squat. If that’s not the case for you, we recommend coming in on days when we’re pulling weights off the floor.
WOD Prep and WOD: We discuss the intent of the WOD at the whiteboard, along with scaling options and strategies. The WOD is where we get our conditioning and develop the ability to work at high intensities for longer than a set of squats can take us. As stated above, we use mostly mixed modal couplets and triplets. Our conditioning tends to range from short, high intensity three- to seven-minute efforts, to medium intensity eight- 15-minute efforts on most days, with a lower intensity 20-minute-plus WOD thrown in once a week or so.
Even when the total time is above 15 minutes, we’ll often use interval work so that intensity stays high, given that high intensity (anaerobic) training has positive carryovers to low intensity (aerobic) training and offers other benefits. High intensity training can develop and preserve muscle mass, whereas long slow distance training can cause you to lose it if used exclusively. High intensity training creates EPOC (Excess Post-Exercise Oxygen Consumption), which sets your metabolism up to burn slightly more fat after exercise compared to endurance-type training—a boon if you’re looking to lose extra fat. Plus it’s time effective. If you can get the same or better benefit metabolically with shorter high intensity training, then the only reason to do the long slow stuff is if you don’t want to work that hard.
Consider that maybe you don’t need more “cardio,” but actually need to work harder. I’d argue that hard work will also make you stronger in non-physical ways. We throw something like “Murph” at you a few times each year since we know you secretly love it and it’s cool to see that you haven’t lost your ability to go that long in spite of all your gainz. If we programmed hero type WODs all the time however, we’d likely have an oft-injured population with a narrow scope of fitness. Time and intensity have an inverse relationship in that the longer you work, the lower the intensity must be. By intensity, I mean power output. I know a marathon can be an intense experience, but you’re not working as hard on those miles as you would be while doing 800m repeats. Furthermore, the longer you go, the more reps you’re going to be doing and the more fatigued you’ll be. You don’t move better on the 69th deadlift compared to the 9th, trust me. Remember: we’re programming for our general population to be fit for the long term—not to crush a week’s worth of hero WODs followed by six weeks of PT.
Cool Down: This portion is largely up to you, but you really don’t need us to babysit while you run, row an easy 1000 meters, or spend some quality time with a foam roller.
To wrap up, CFSBK’s programming is designed to give you the most training value. We do these things because they are effective, not because they are in vogue or even because our members demand that we do things a certain way. We’ve withstood a few silly fitness trends in favor of what science and experience says works and will continue to do so, evolving as we learn. Training here is hard, it’s consistent, and it isn’t always exciting or sexy, but it works. We’re lucky to have so many of you who seem to agree and are willing to put in the hard work!
What, in your opinion, was the most difficult workout of this Crush Week?
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Yesterday’s Whiteboard: Partner WOD
Donald J. Trump State Park Atlas Obscura
Streetcar Desired The Awl
Noah says
AG
A.
Rope Climb Practice
B.
E2MOM for 10 Min
4 Strict/Weighted Chins
8 Ring/Matador/Bench Dips
12 Squat to Pistol
C.
AMRAP 4 Min
10 Lateral/Wide Pushups
10 Box Jumps
10 Narrow Pushups
10 Box Jumps
10 Plyo Pushups
10 Box Jumps
Rest 2 Min and Repeat
Lauren says
Looking forward to seeing the new programming structure.
Yesterday's workout with Snisky
23:27
I really liked the hang clean thruster combo. I don't like thrusters, but moving through these at a manageable weight felt good. We scaled to 73# and I was able to do them all unbroken.
The rows were tough as usual. Stayed under 2:20 and tried to push for under 2:10 on the last 100m but didn't have much gas yesterday.
On a plane to Tahoe — I plan to be refreshed and quit whining about being cold and tired when I return.
Brad D says
8am with the Foxes, and Peter, and Latasha, and Denise… and that was all.
Handstand Practice: Did a few freestanding handstand holds to warm up – 10-15 seconds each. Then tried to best my 24ft handstand walk PR by going for 32ft. Made it on the first attempt! Tried for my stretch goal of 50ft, and was in really good shape but lost the lean with about 12ft to go. I'm calling that one a 36ft PR. Good day upside down.
WOD: 19:10 Rx. Pullups are not firing on all cylinders right now. Today was a wakeup call for the open. I need to spend time getting these back into shape. Other than that things were smooth. I probably over-paced the burpees for fear of blowing up and not being able to get through the double unders right afterwards. Should have pushed those a bit more.
Charlie says
10am with Fox and Katie
Handstand stuff was kinda fun except I was confused as to why I wasn't able to do shoulder taps at all because I was doing them in 10's in AG two weeks ago and then Alsm reminded me that those were from wall walks so it was way easier! Took a couple of steps on my hands.
WOD in 16:16- scaled to 30 x pull-ups because they were happening in singles. Thanks Katie for great coaching in a somewhat crowded 608 🙂
Fox says
Noon class
16:37
If anyone took my pull ups or my conditioning by mistake please leave it at front desk for me.
David Osorio says
Top Secret post Intro Class WOD club with Greg after his FD shift and Natalie and Yanni who came over because Brooklyn Boulders flooded and their climbing session got cut short
12:00 to warm-up
Today's Metcon in 11:43 as Rx'd
Had two goals going into this, do the pull-ups in big aggressive chunks to get ahead of the pack and then make the rest hurt as much as fucking possible. 😛
Did the pull-ups in 25-10-5 and then kept jumping on for some double and triples as fast as I could
Tripped up twice on the jump rope, otherwise unbroken.
David Osorio says
Also Morrison was by far the worst workout of crush week. I did about 8:00 slower than I anticipated and was crushed by it. On the positive side, I wasn't the least bit sore from it as I expected to be given the 150 wall balls. So.. silver lining?
Latasha Burnett says
8:00 am with the Fox duo
I don't remember what my time was for this wod…I know it was 22mins and some change though. I did jumping pull ups, which are not as easy as you would think, and DU attempts. It was also the second day this week that I had to do 50 Burpees. I don't know who's in charge of programming…but 50 burpees twice in the same week is just WRONG! lol.
It's been an interesting crush week to say the least. All of the wods were fun and challenging EXCEPT for Morrison. That one was just cruel and I hope to not see it again anytime soon. Can't wait to see what the new training cycle looks like!
Latasha Burnett says
@ Coach Fox
I didn't find your pull ups or your conditioning…but If I do, you will not be getting them back…lol.
lady fox says
15:09 rx'd.
-pull-ups butterflied throughout in sets of 5 until the last 10 or so where they became 3's and change. burpees were so slow and I didn't want to move any faster. Squats and sit-ups were surprisingly tougher than expected. Took me at least 10 seconds to do my very last du. Took it for granted and kept tripping up.
Also, loved the handwalking practice today!
Jenny m says
OG
Bench 102x3x2. Plus 102 for 1 with a pause since I haven't been practicing that since I started training bench again this month.
today's WOD RXd in 16:55. Those pull-ups took me over 5 minutes. yikes. Overall I liked this one!
Morrison was definitely the toughest.. Although I didn't do Thursday's WOD.
André says
OG
Bench 225x2x2 – Haven't benched since the end of the last Starting Strength cycle and wanted to see if I lost much. I am down some but still up from before Starting Strength.
WOD RX'd in 28:54 – The first 50 double unders were done in under a minute and then after that I was not able to string more than 10 together. I suck at pull-ups. They were done in sets of 2 and took about 7 minutes. Burpees in sets of 5, squats in sets of 10 and sit ups 40+10.
Morrison by far was the worst workout of the week!!!
I am super excited about the upcoming cycle as I have been checking with anticipation on the blog all week and the note about it being not being "normal" has me even more antsy.
ariel c says
oh man im nervous about the new cycle.
i dont like change.
André says
I am not going to sleep until after the cycle is posted!