Focus on lifting and lowering the hips and chest at the same rate. Activate your glutes and muscles around your shoulders to achieve this hip/chest lift, while keeping the low back muscles relaxed. Here we show the more challenging, single leg version. Click below the video to see a simpler modification.
by Carrie Lane, Director of Sport Performance Remember those crab walk races you had when you were kids? Our Crab Position Hip Lift exercise is bringing that back-- but without the awkward racing you had to do. As we get older, we often neglect the backside, but these muscles are crucial for movement, posture, and muscular balance. This exercise is another good one to add to your general strength (bodyweight) circuits. Focus on lifting and lowering the hips and chest at the same rate. Activate your glutes and muscles around your shoulders to achieve this hip/chest lift, while keeping the low back muscles relaxed. Here we show the more challenging, single leg version. Click below the video to see a simpler modification.
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By Carrie Lane, Director of Sport Performance![]() As an alpinist, you train to conserve as much energy as possible. A culmination of wasted movement can mean failure as you gain altitude or descend ahead of looming weather. Of course, you need the lung power to get through those long days at altitude. But you also need strength to keep you moving efficiently and with little wasted effort. Strength training should therefore be an integral part of your alpine training plan, but your routine should also be efficient enough to get you in and out of a weight room fairly quickly. Designing a plan that offers the most benefit to your mountaineering objectives can be overwhelming. Lets start with strengthening your torso and hips, since those areas are the foundation for stability, strength, and efficiency in most of your body's movement patterns. |
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