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Mike Garner PT 4 “When the going gets tough” April 21, 2011

Posted by leadingedgefitness in Personal Training, weight loss.
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When the going gets tough… The tough get going.

Well its been to tough week for all 3 competitors. Mike weight is up at 101.6. Number one weight is up at 83. Client X dropped 0.2kg.

I was disappointed along with Mike at the weight increase knowing he had eaten and drunk very healthy over the weekend. When the scales of justice are against you just got to have faith in the training and keep chipping away at it.

Number 1 was very honest in the fact their week and weekend was very stress and a lot of unhealthy eating and drinking was done.

Client X was slightly disappointed but I feel the progress is steady.

The Positives from the week

Mikes running is improving thanks to his new running shoes, Increased fitness and a reduction in smoking. We are running 4 mins and walking 1 min at 8.25kmph which is a big improvement. We started 3 weeks ago 2mins run and 1 min walking at 7.12kmph.

Number 1 is running and training more

Client X  is running more and hasn’t missed any sessions since we start at Sea Point 🙂

Challenges for the coming week for all Three

The easter weekend is here and the easter bunny is approaching. Only 1 or 2 sessions with me as I’m on holiday until thursday. I’m pretty sure all 3 will carry on training and have an active week-end planned.

Did anyone stop the two 80’s/90’s songs hidden in the post… Answers in comment box please

Happy Easter

Swiss Ball Workout April 18, 2011

Posted by leadingedgefitness in Functional Training, paul hammacott, Personal Training, training, Uncategorized, weight loss.
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Swiss ball workout to workthe core and tone… ENJOY

Warm up x 2 (30secs):

  1. Ball rotation
  2. Stepback and press
  3. Wide leg woodchop
  4. Power taps
  5. Squat (arms straight above the head. Do not bend)
  6. Star jumps with forward press

Main Workout (Supersets) x 3 15rep range

  1. One arm chest press + One arm Row (Swiss Ball)
  2. One leg seated single arm Bicep Curl + One leg seated single arm Tricep Extension (Swiss Ball)
  3.  Seated One arm One leg shoulder press + Kneeling on ball or standing on floor single arm side Raise (Swiss ball)
  4. Leg Extension + Leg Curl (Swiss Ball)
  5. Single arm Incline front fly + Single arm rear fly (Swiss ball)
  6. Sit up + Back Extention (Swiss ball)

Cool down and Stretch

EASY 🙂

Focus, Commitment and Hard work April 18, 2011

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The weights for 10% body weight drop are not in yet so I am going to take this opportunity to re post my about me page… Just incase over the years people have got confused with my rants about Power balance, all the quick fix and fad diets stuff that people believe will be the next best thing for them. So here it is, written in 2004 for my first ever website. The years have changed and the training is alway improving but the core beliefs that I base my training on remain the same…

With over eight years experience as a personal trainer and over 20 years of training experience I have seen a lot of different training techniques. Some very good, some just poor.

There are millions of web pages and hundreds of fitness magazines explaining to you what you should or shouldn’t be doing. As a trainer I even struggle to keep up with the latest fitness crazes and gimmicks. Plus you know the products that you use with good intention for a few weeks then just store them in the spare room to hang washing on without achieving the goal you had with using the machine.

Then a few months and a few extra kilos down the line the next all singing, all dancing fitness product comes out and the cycle starts again… Sound familiar?

My training style will get you to your goal which you will be able to maintain. It is not a quick fix gimmick.  It does, however, require focus, commitment and hard work. My training method consists of correctional exercise through stretching and functional training to help improve posture and prevent injury as your training progresses. Also I will use a number of classic tried and tested exercises to help you to your goal.

Endurance athletes will do all the above and also a number of cardiovascular workouts. As a runner, cyclist and climber I have suffered from a number of injuries which could have easily been avoided if I knew the risks to my posture with poor training and over dominant muscle groups.  This training method will make sure you build the strength and endurance you need and reduce the risk of injury due to poor training.

I’m a personal trainer in Claremont, Cape Town. Recently I moved to South Africa with my wife and son from the UK. Where I have been in the fitness industry personal training for 8 years. I have been involved with a variety of sports and endurance activities for many years. I particularly love road cycling, rock climbing, mountain biking, hiking and running. I have climbed and cycled throughout Europe, South East Asia, Australia and South Africa over the last 20 years. I enjoy passing on the skills I have learnt to help others attain their personal fitness and training goals.

I hold a diploma in Personal Training from YMCA London together with a PREMIER Resisted Movement Training (RMT) certification. In addition I have completed a certification in Vibrotraining (level 1 and 2).

Mikes Training PT 3 “Number 1 and Client X” April 11, 2011

Posted by leadingedgefitness in Personal Training, Running, training, weight loss.
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12 Days into the Challenge and two other clients (Who shall remain nameless) have joined in. So to make it all fair we have decided that the winner will be the 1st to drop 10% in bodyweight (July 4th Deadline). The two runners-up will have the pleasure of taking out the winner and Trainer(Win win for me) for a nice little meal somewhere.

The Challenger’s

Mike G: Male, Smoker, Average diet, Heavy drinker (soon to change… What this space) Running and muscular endurance training. Starting weight 100Kg

Number 1: Female, Non Smoker, Healthy diet, Light drinker (or Lightweight) Running and toning exercises. Starting weight 81.8Kg

Client X: Female, Non Smoker, Average diet, Moderate Drinker (So Client X says) Running and muscular endurance training. Starting weight 66.5Kg

Weight will be updated on Friday after a full week of training.

If I was a betting man I know who my money will be on to win this challenge 🙂

Mike started trail running last week and our first outing we covered 4.66km in 38.18mins at a avg speed of 7.29km/h (Charts and graphs for weight and runs coming soon)… Watch this space…

One last thing… If you want Mike to pose for his before and after shots in his BATMAN boxers please post a comment…

Mike Training PT 2 “35 Bottles of Beer” April 6, 2011

Posted by leadingedgefitness in Personal Training, training, Uncategorized, weight loss.
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As the title suggests Mikes first weekend of taking things
easy when it comes to Alcohol ended up with 35 bottles of beer and an unknown
amount of wine.  Weight on Monday 4th
April was 100.9kg. Not the result we were looking for. Hopefully that is the
last of the binge drinking weekends. Else as a Trainer I’m going to start
looking very bad with Mike’s results going in the wrong direction.

Mikes Goal is to reach 90kg at the moment we are 0.9Kg in the wrong direction

This week’s training will be 3 sessions with me and 2
Pilates sessions.

Session 1

Medicine ball drills and pad work to warm up

Single arm press on Swiss ball

Press ups (Feet on Swiss ball)

Crunches

Bent over row

Swiss ball Lat roll out

Side plank

Squats

Bicep curls

Triceps Extension

15 reps each with 3 sets

2ND Session was cancelled due to work
commitments.

Mike said he will work the punch bag… If I don’t witness
it doesn’t count. The Scales of Justice never lie so I will have to wait for
the weigh in.

Session 3

Will be a run keeping the heart rate at steady state… Let’s hope work doesn’t get in the way…

PowerBalance January 26, 2011

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Well after a year of making sure my clients didn’t buy the bracelet. The Australians Sports institute has finally done some research to prove it was a big marketing scam… Only took 3 years for people to figure that out. They should have asked me when I fist saw the “Selling” tests. It is still nice to know that there are no shortcuts to great health

CV Floor Workout July 7, 2010

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Circuit Training Workout. Each exercise is done for 30sec beginner 45sec intermediate 60sec for Advanced. Repeat 3 times. 

1. Goblet Squat

2. T- Press

3. Snowboarder

4. Lower back Stretch to Tricep Pushup

5. Crunches on Swiss/Gym Ball

6. Lunge and Rotate

7. Plank with 1 Arm dumbbell row

8. Skipping

9. Superman Extensions

10. Bicycle Sit ups

ENJOY 🙂

Heart Rate Zones… FAT BURNING or WASTING TIME April 8, 2010

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Please read if you are one of the many people who use the FAT BURNING settting on cardio machines…

Written by: Ashley Kipp, CTS Expert Coach, USAC Cycling Expert Coach

For the past few years, in the world’s obsession with weight loss and fitness, we’ve all been bombarded with the message that low intensity, longer duration training sessions are the only way to go. The media touts that lower-intensity workouts are the best way to reach the “fat burning zone” and to achieve the weight loss goals for which many of us strive. Training too hard, they claim, will take you beyond fat burning…but where will it take you?

As health conscious individuals, it is important for us to realize that our goals in fitness should be much more dynamic than merely weight loss. We are training for overall health and to be the very best that we can be. Exercise is not just a way to burn calories, it is the path to becoming more fit, and one of the positive benefits of developing your aerobic engine is increasing your capacity for burning fat.

Increased aerobic fitness will help you achieve the lean body you’re striving for by increasing the work you can do while still burning a mixture of carbohydrate and fat. The aerobic engine is the only one of your energy systems that can burn fat, and using it at the upper end of it capacity burns both fat and a lot of total calories. Athletes training for performance goals, rather than merely for weight loss, generally work far above the touted “fat burning zone,” because that’s what’s necessary to actually cause significant physiological adaptations. One of the positive side effects is that their training intensity allows them to burn a heck of a lot more calories in relatively shorter periods of time than someone slogging away at the gym on the Stairmaster barely moving for 90 minutes. Consistent and intense training sessions, balanced with appropriate amounts of recovery of course, have brought them to where they are. Training above the “fat burning zone” provides the stimulus that trains the aerobic system to work longer at a higher level, using a mixture of carbohydrate and fat for fuel. Training hard enough, while still relying on the aerobic system for endurance allows for increased mitochondrial mass, increased enzyme activity, and increased capillary density around the muscle fibers, which also all lead to more efficient fat burning…another plus to being an active individual!

It is true that relatively more fat than carbohydrate is burned at lower intensities. In fact, sitting on the couch at home and watching TV is one of the best “fat burning” exercises out there! That’s all that you’re burning…granted it may be very little…due to the fact that your muscles are requiring little to no fuel. It is also certainly true that higher intensity workouts (those above 85% of VO2 Max) require primarily muscle glycogen (carbohydrate) for fuel. The fat burning process cannot be relied on for high intensity efforts, as the oxidation process of fat is too slow to provide the quick bursts of energy needed for intervals and sprints. Like Goldilocks found with the bears’ beds and porridge, somewhere in the middle is the best place to be. Exercising at very low intensities means having to run, ride or swim for hours in order to do enough work to make a difference. Training too hard burns a lot of energy, but most of it is carbohydrate and the accumulation of lactic acid stops you from maintaining the intensity level very long. Between these two extremes lies the moderately-high intensities you can sustain by using the full capacity of the aerobic system, with a little contribution from the anaerobic system thrown in to supply an extra kick.

The bottom line is that as athletes we need to train in order to develop our aerobic engines, not merely to burn calories. That will just be an added benefit. So next time you decide to go for a long jog, an afternoon bike ride, or even head to the gym for a session on the cardio machines, try stepping up the pace some. You’ll benefit in many more ways than one.

Leading Edge Fitness Cape Town April 7, 2010

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I have relocated from the UK to South Africa. Now I am running my Personal Training business in Claremont Cape Town from a private studio. Contact me on 079 173 6414 for more details.

Weekly Training Diary September 4, 2007

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Sorry for the delay in updating the blog. With the bank holiday and a busy workload last week I didn’t get time. I am not going to write part 4 of the functional training this week as I am short of time. If you have any question regarding the last 3 parts feel free to post a question. I am here to help 🙂 Here are my workouts for last week:

28th,29th,30th and 31st: One hour each day cardio training on bike 120-130 Heart rate

1st: 10km run (1st one since the triathlon!)

2nd: 103km ride around Heartfordshire 🙂

Happy Training,

Paul