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Simply Interval - more info
Gin live cues this workout and has Mandi "the modifier"
to show easier /different variations or options.
Music - a brand new video track
compilation by cardiomixes.com called "Techno
Step".
DVD Chaptering
Play All
Pre-Class Guidelines
Warm-Up
Workout
Cool Down
Cycles 1 - 8 chaptered with cycle names indicated.
You can hit menu to return and select specific cycles at any
time. From those selection points, the workout will continue
to play.
The Interval Workout
There are 8 cycles - first one is longer with an optional
bonus 30 seconds for an early glycogen burn. No weights are
used in this all out cardio workout - the only "strength"
like cycle is a tough 3 press lunge with scissors. Even the
super-fit will find this difficult to perform for the full
minute.
As the workout progresses to the peak of the workout, the
movement patterns simplify and recovery periods shorten. At
the end of one peak cycle, Gin throws in a bonus 30 seconds
of plunges for the more advanced exerciser. On the downhill
side, the combos include more movement patterns as the overall
workout effort starts to decrease.
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Simply
Interval DVD - $19.95 |
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Pre-release question - from our forums
The interval workout is just what I was looking for! I've
hit a plateau and from all the articles I've been reading,
interval training will shock the body to move in the right
direction. I am assuming that there is weight training, with
intervals in between? If so................sounds perfect!
Can't wait. I watch everyday with my credit card in hand! You
guys are the BOMB!
Dawn
This is not what most consider to be "interval" training
- alternating cardio with weights. True, such a workout alternates "anaerobic" training
with "aerobic" training - but the harder effort is
usually the "aerobic" cardio part of the cycle and
the easier rest effort tends to be the "anaerobic" strength
portion of the cycle.
With pure cardio intervals, the all out work efforts should
take you beyond "steady state"
aerobic training into the cardio anaerobic levels of interval
or "intensity" training. With perceived exertion,
rpe of 7 is the top of aerobic zone - 8 is the the threshold
- and above at 9 and 10 are the anaerobic training levels.
The recovery part of the cycle then takes you to the low end
of the aerobic zone. So the hard effort is anaerobic and the
easy effort is aerobic.
With a circuit type interval - alternating cardio with strength,
it's difficult to overload a muscle to fatigue in a short amount
of time in order to burn the glycogen stored in the muscle.
When you push yourself to "sucking wind" in this
type of interval, you burn the glycogen during the hardest
cardio effort (anaerobic), and then recover with oxygen (aerobic).
These alternating bouts (think sprints) will push your cardiovascular
system beyond it's adapted state and you'll get fitter faster.
So THIS interval workout CAN take you beyond a plateau.
There is only one cycle that is "strength" like
in Simply Interval - the 3 press lunges. Most will find this
to be the hardest of all the cycles. Executing this cycle all
out will leave your legs feeling like they've turned to concrete
- that's a sign of fatigue due to lactate buildup and indicative
of true anaerobic effort!
When all out effort is applied to the work portion of the
cycle, the demand for oxygen to the muscles should be so intense
that it becomes hard to think. For this reason, the peak of
the interval workout reduces the complexity of the patterns
to enable you to work without a lot of blood going to the brain.
Also, as fatigue builds, you are less likely to stumble with
more repetitive movements.
But the primary key in reaching peak effort in true interval
training is to REST prior to the next cycle's work effort.
Simply Interval offers an "active rest" option for
participants who have a high level of fitness. But if you think
about intervals as "sprints" - most sprinters do
not "run" in between their short sprints, they walk
and rest in order to recover.
A common mistake made is working at too high of a level during
the rest portion of the cycle. This can result in difficulty
pushing beyond the threshold and working only at the top of
your aerobic zone. If that's the case, the workout will end
up being just a "steady state" workout and you'll
feel like you should have gone longer - and with an aerobic
workout, you should feel a need to go longer.
But, if you DO apply all out effort in the work cycles, there's
no need to go longer than this workout. Once you are confident
with the patterns and can work them without thinking, you should
be able to push your max VO2 to reap the full benefits of interval
training.
And finally, according to the oft-quoted Laval Study, there's
a side benefit that's referred to as the "afterburn" associated
with interval training. Once you've burned the stored glycogen
in the anaerobic work efforts, all you have post workout to
burn is stored fat.
You can get that benefit from serious anaerobic weight training
- to fatigue. But unless you are just starting out and minimally
fit, pumping 10 pound dumbbells in between aerobic step segments
will only take you so far.
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