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Do you even lift bro?  

61 members have voted

  1. 1. How often do you exercise?

    • never
    • daily, cardio based
    • daily, weighlifting based
    • every other day, cardio based
    • every other day, weighlifting based
  2. 2. Do you think regular exercise would benefit the average arb worker?



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Posted
Don, do you get many fine tippy reductions? If you do how do you manage?
 
I'm 5'8 and weight about as much as I imagine one of your shites do. I can see the benefits of being a unit for the takedown side of things but I reckon it'd get in the way in the tippy stuff of crawling through dense spindly hedges.
 

Hey joe my size is a disadvantage in everything other than big saws in the tree and cutting and holding big buts which to be honest is something I try stay away from prefer rigging I no wear stated my size was better for tree work I said even though I am heavy I still get it done in a timely fashion often allot faster than smaller lads I have found I read the tree cos of my size and usr my energy efficiently not scurrying up and down needlessly use good rigging big bits and try and stay away from tip pruning [emoji6]

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Posted
12 hours ago, Stephen Blair said:

There's no doubt being strong helps.
I'm needing to do some training, haven't in nearly 5 years now and really feeling it. More for my balance , I'm a lot clumsier just in the last 6 months .
If you don't use it you loose it. My reactions are slow too.

Taekwon-Do sort that out for you!

Posted

I trained in the gym around the same time i started tree work 2005. Got to 17st last year, was not good for anything but throwing weights around. Now trimmed down to 12 and a half stone, up from 12 stone in July. Went through a cutting phase which gave abs :O. But maintaining 12.7-13 stone over winter.

 

Being over weight and climbing is bad for the joints, i learned that being as big as you can naturally with a sub 10% body fat is good all round. Go to lean and your mood changes and always being hungry is bad for climbing.

 

Also try and train jiu jitsu and mma but work is busy so that's a chore.

 

I do think strengthening the muscles will aid in the prevention of injuries, assuming you put your ego down before entering the gym. Tho managing energy levels for the gym and doing tree work is an ongoing learning curve with age added into the mix.

  • Like 1
Posted
44 minutes ago, THtreeservices said:

Got to 17st last year, was not good for anything but throwing weights around. Now trimmed down to 12 and a half stone, up from 12 stone in July

Thats bloody good going!  

  • Like 1
Posted
I trained in the gym around the same time i started tree work 2005. Got to 17st last year, was not good for anything but throwing weights around. Now trimmed down to 12 and a half stone, up from 12 stone in July. Went through a cutting phase which gave abs :o. But maintaining 12.7-13 stone over winter.
 
Being over weight and climbing is bad for the joints, i learned that being as big as you can naturally with a sub 10% body fat is good all round. Go to lean and your mood changes and always being hungry is bad for climbing.
 
Also try and train jiu jitsu and mma but work is busy so that's a chore.
 
I do think strengthening the muscles will aid in the prevention of injuries, assuming you put your ego down before entering the gym. Tho managing energy levels for the gym and doing tree work is an ongoing learning curve with age added into the mix.

Love this why does everyone go on about if you like lifting heavy weights it's all about ego how sad I have been into strength sports since I was 13 and it's been my only other interest than tree climbing since the same age when I decided what I wanted to for a living if it was running and trying to be the best runner I could be and achieve good track times would that be ego driven or just a love for a sport
  • Like 2
Posted

Frankly if yr using the right kit- doing the proper cuts , rigging properly -why on earth do we still think you have to be Mike Tyson in this job ? If I had to lift 20 tonne of logs - I just get a Forwarder to do it !!!! Work smart ! K

  • Like 3
  • 2 months later...
Posted
12 weeks back into lifting after 9 years off and having a blast. I've more of less completely eliminated my leg and back pain (something for which I've had all manner of treatment, including surgery, physiotherapy and very strong pain killers) which has given me a quality of life I didn't think I'd ever get again. 
 
From a lifting point of view, progress has been quite rapid due to the fact that regaining strength and size is quicker than gaining it the first time around. Up nearly 10kg from 12 weeks ago and I'm progressing with my lifts each week. I'm also surprising myself with what I can do. I genuinely didn't think I'd be able to squat due to leg pain. Yesterday, I spent 25 minutes squatting, which felt great. I practiced technique, mostly stayed light but went up with singles up to 90kg (which felt very easy, but having not had a bar on my back for nearly a decade, I thought it best to stop there).
 
Trap bar deadlift is also something I'm going to do regularly. When I lifted in my younger days, I went up to 260kg on deads, but my form was always pants. The trap bar allows much better leg involvement and I can keep my legs straight. 5x115kg was easy enough but everything aches profusely this morning!
 
Anyway, as I said in the other thread about back pain in which I talked about weightlifting, don't see it as something that inevitably ends up with you muscle bound and a beefcake. It's just a good part of keeping you fit and well and strong in later life. You'll only get big if you eat accordingly. Stretching has it's place, but is no substitute. Throughout my adult life I've been able to place my palms flat on the floor (not just touch my toes) and I've had chronic and debilitating back pain for most of it. 


Good on you[emoji1303]. I always feel much happier/positive when I train.

I’ve not been at the gym in 6 months but you have inspired me to go tonight. Cheers
Posted

turned 35 this year - had a break from going to gym. got the pissed ripped out of me for not being able to lift a decent sized log over a wall by december - now back to the gym- Agree that when in my 20's the job was my gym, smoked like chimmney and drank like a fish and still was able to go hard at it on the job. Started being serious about training when i hit 30. 

Training mostly depends on the work. had a cushy line clearance gig, was in the gym 5 days a week and swimming once or twice.   Mid November last year i was training jujitsu twice a week if i was lucky as it was super busy time.  Now the ideal is lift twice a week, train jujitsu twice a week (hard on the shoulders but i do love a good scrap), swim once or twice a week and 10 - 40 minutes yoga everyday, Get out for a hike when i can.  This equates to about 1.5 hours training a day. Its a hard routine to keep up when the work starts piling in but now its the quite part of the year so got a couple of months to get on it. Trying to admit to myself that i need to factor in more and longer recovery time is bit tricky as i still consider myself invincible - limping and sore but otherwise invincible. 

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