I haven't really been canoeing much in the last few years but I have, for the first time in my life (47), gotten serious about weight lifting. I'm no gym bro and you wouldn't know it to look at me but I've put on a fair bit of muscle in the last 2 years.
I don't take it too seriously but I try to lift 3-4 times per week. I don't really enjoy it all that much so I keep the sessions short (30 minutes) which is easy since I work out at home. My main movements are pull ups, bench press, overhead press, pull overs, lat raises, a few varieties of rows, belt squat, leg press, and romanian deadlifts. I'll usually pick 3 exercises per session and do 3 sets of each in a circuit.
What prompted this post tonight was I picked up one of my canoes to load it on top of my car and my immediate thought when I picked it up was, "Wow, this canoe is a lot lighter than I remember."
So other than lifting canoes and portaging does anyone else have a weightlifting routine that improves their canoeing experience? I would guess rowing movements that work the upper back and lateral raises for the shoulders would help with paddling. At least for injury prevention if nothing else.
Alan
I don't take it too seriously but I try to lift 3-4 times per week. I don't really enjoy it all that much so I keep the sessions short (30 minutes) which is easy since I work out at home. My main movements are pull ups, bench press, overhead press, pull overs, lat raises, a few varieties of rows, belt squat, leg press, and romanian deadlifts. I'll usually pick 3 exercises per session and do 3 sets of each in a circuit.
What prompted this post tonight was I picked up one of my canoes to load it on top of my car and my immediate thought when I picked it up was, "Wow, this canoe is a lot lighter than I remember."
So other than lifting canoes and portaging does anyone else have a weightlifting routine that improves their canoeing experience? I would guess rowing movements that work the upper back and lateral raises for the shoulders would help with paddling. At least for injury prevention if nothing else.
Alan