Starting this Thursday on 1/13 we will start a 0830am class with Mark B. every Tuesday and Thursday! No more Wednesday 8am class. Come learn how to be a ninja from Mr. Cobra Kai himself!
Mark showing the chain who is boss:
Community. Coaching. Caring. Since 2009.
So many of you have reached (or are close to reaching) 250 WOD’s here in the box! That is an exclusive club and something we think you should be proud of. We have a 100th WOD Club already complete with a T-Shirt that you earn the right to purchase and wear ($15 – pictured below). If you have recently achieved 100 WOD’s and want a shirt then let us know as we have many different sizes in stock. The 250 T is the one way of wearing your accomplishment proudly.
If you have logged 250 WOD’s at SnoRidge CF then you can buy a distinctive T shirt that loudly says “KICKASS-TASTIC” (not literally but figuratively). Women’s will be Orchid Purple with light colored ink and Men’s will be Red with black ink. Both shirts are an American Apparel 50/50 blend.
If you have earned (or are getting close i.e. 200 plus) and want either of these shirts then please POST to comments with your size please so we can include in our order! Order is going in this Wednesday.
250th WOD Club T ($15):
100th WOD Club T ($15):
We are also working on a long sleeve thermal for men and women in a Squatch-free “100 Words of Fitness” design. Will have SnoRidge CrossFit down one sleeve, a small SRCF logo on the front, and the 100 Words definition on the back (“100 Words” are on the top right of our site). Stay tuned.
Nutrition Tips From Your Fellow Coaches:
Mark B. shared his meal prep today: “Eating paleo takes too much time”
10 minutes in the am before work. Threw together am entire days worth of food. This is a typical day for me. I ate breakfast at home, and this will take me through the day at work and through the night at the fire station.
Top container is 4 eggs mixed with some salsa. Bottom container is 6oz. Of ground turkey mixed with a salad mix from Costco, some brussel sprouts, and topped with some guac and salsa. Shake is a scoop and a half of protein powder, 1 spoonful of cocoa powder, and 2 spoonfulls of coconut milk. A bag of macadamia nuts and some fish oil pills.
Disclaimer: I know the shake is not paleo. I use it as a post WOD recovery since I cannot stomach chicken or sweet potatoes after a hard WOD. I use a pure whey protein powder that has minimal ingredients.
For Time:
1000m Row
50 Thrusters (45#/33#)
30 Pull-ups
Results
Compare to Previous Results
Brad pulls and the women do thrusters:
Today was paleo-tastic! We had a pretty impressive crowd for the Nutrition and Performance Challenge and it looks like roughly 25 of you are in for the Challenge. If you missed taking your pics, weigh-in’s or completing “Jackie” you have Monday ONLY to make it up.
The next 6 weeks will be worthwhile. Complete your food logs, be strict, make healthy choices, read the info we gave out, ask questions, share recipes, and see it through! You can do anything you put your mind to, so don’t undo all the hard work you put in the gym everyday. The payoff is hey-uge and includes feeling great, getting leaner, and “re-setting” your metabolism! Remember: don’t think you are alone, look around the gym and you’ll see there are plenty of people in here to help.
Read Rob’s post on CrossFit Dad: Starting to Eat Paleo Tips
Various Info and Resources:
Post WOD 5k run:
Winter Weather Policy: IF we get significant snowfall this coming week (or in general), please expect the 6am Classes to be cancelled. This is for the safety of everyone as the plowing up here doesn’t typically get into full swing early in the AM.
21, 15, 9 reps of each for Time:
Burpees
Kettlebell Swings (53#/35#)
Box Jumps (24″/20″)
Results
Jeremy and his Friday 6pm crew:
“Stop the Slop” Nutrition and Performance Challenge kicks off tomorrow at 9am!
Reposting from this past Sunday:
We are kicking off our Nutrition and Performance Challenge this Saturday on Jan. 8. It will run 6 weeks long until Feb. 19. This is not only a nutrition challenge but also a performance challenge. This is open to everyone in the box and we highly encourage you to participate.
Nutrition is the foundation of a solid fitness program and overall good health. You put the effort into your workout, put that into what you eat and watch how dramatic the results can be. While we encourage you to try a strict Paleo or Whole30 approach (as it will have the best results), we also realize some may not quite be there. For those “kinda motivated” individuals we want you to participate and still emphasize good choices and real food so you can see and feel the difference. You have the rest of the week to get ready or even get started! Think Paleo and not “Faileo”! (borrowed that term from Imperial CF)
A word on the Performance Challenge. The emphasis of “Stop the Slop” goes beyond what we choose to eat. It also encompasses how we workout and how we recover. 1st: Stop looking at the clock! Slow it down and set your feet, your back and your hands to do what you have been trained to do correctly. 2nd: Forget what the person next to you can lift and focus on what you can lift correctly. 3rd: Recover the right way. In addition to proper nutrition, stretch and get more sleep.
From little to no sleep or crappy reps with bad form, it’s all slop that we can do without. So for the next 6 weeks we will be even more vigilant as your coaches on demanding good reps and technique. This is for the collective good! When you are working out however, police yourself. When you short a squat, snag a double-under, half-ass a wall ball or push-up, don’t quite get your chin over that bar, or do the box jump “tango toe tap on the edge” thing, don’t count it. Do it over. Keeping those hips closed on an overhead squat? Push press look like you have been hanging out at the globo-gym again with the meatheads? How about the rounded back deadlift or reverse curl clean? Slow it down and do it right. That is why we train. It will pay off immensely. It will make your fitter, more efficient, and overall drive better results. Which is what we all want right?
Details below:
Kick-off Schedule:
Notes:
CrossFit Basic gets some good press in the Seattle Times: “Express fitness routines can trim holiday pounds from busy people”
WTF? Cell Phone Step-ups and Mobility WOD?
Caption these photos:
Strength WOD:
Resting 60 Seconds Between Sets
Deadlift 2/2/2/2/2/2/2/2/2/2
Check Out WOD Immediately After:
“Ab-Dominator”
2 Rounds for Time:
20 Toes-to-Bar
20 AbMat Sit-ups
20 Overhead Sit-ups (35#/15#)
Results
View this photo
View this photo
Today I thought I would write about workout programming for the box and how I go about it. This was something I thought about after watching a recent video on the main site. Programming is tons of fun as well as tons of work. It may seem like it’s as simple as throwing stuff together and then writing it on the whiteboard, and while that can produce a good workout now and then it isn’t the recipe for long term success or effectiveness. Purpose is important and periodization can play a role. Identifying, training and improving weaknesses while building on strengths is vital. Changing workout formats and introducing new skills and challenges keeps it fun and raises the bar. Making it fun is the overall goal (in a sick CrossFit kind of way), because it has to be fun or leave you with a sense of being challenged to make you feel like the WOD was a worthy accomplishment on your path to fitness.
Each week I sit down on Sunday evenings and fully plan out the WOD’s for the next week. This cycle usually means I throw several extra WOD’s into the hopper that carry over to roughly 2 weeks worth of programming at a time. Looking at the past month to see what we have been training, and keeping an eye on the month(s) ahead; my goals are to keep it constantly varied with a constant swing between push/pull, squat/overhead, as well as across both time and modal domains. I look to balance weightlifting, gymnastics, and cardio-respiratory endurance activities across short, medium, and long time-frame WOD’s. I search out gym-wide weaknesses and formulate a plan to address them, or begin teaching and practicing movements that are building blocks to more advanced movements. Another area to consider is building strength as it is vital to getting fitter. Increased strength and muscle mass are key to avoiding the old folks home and essential to living as we were meant to, which is ready and able to tackle the unknown. Putting in Benchmark and Hero WOD’s or ones that we have done previously are important as tests and make it “CrossFit”. On top of all that I consider how we keep a balance across the basic fundamentals and advanced skills while also working on ways to ensure individual progress is being made across all of you athletes who have different fitness levels and goals.
Michelle helps me as my sounding board every week (and as the voice of reason) and I also get inputs from some of our fellow coaches, other boxes or look through the archives of CrossFit.com. The WOD’s from .com are always hard. Usually they are deceiving and the simplest ones are the ones that either catch my eye, or make me want to try them to see why they must be so challenging. For the WOD’s we program in our gym I try to at least either have done them in the past, recently done them a few days prior with myself or other coaches, or trust that they are good because of the source (like CrossFit.com or another box we respect – which are many). Michelle regularly follows our programming. For me, it is my personal policy to do or have previously done at least 3 out of every 5 WOD’s each week (not counting a rest day, we program six). This leaves me a couple days to fit in other new or different WOD’s to add to the mix, address my own weaknesses or learn new skills.
This is one of the most challenging yet fun parts of it (besides coaching of course). The immense pride and satisfaction Michelle and I get from seeing all of you splayed out on the floor in sweaty heaps unable to talk after a WOD lets us know we did our job! Just kidding. The real satisfaction is seeing each of you hit new PR’s, learn new movements, get a heavier lift, or nail the form and technique of something that has been building on itself week after week. Most importantly watching each of you realize your goals, lose weight, run races or fit in new clothes is the icing on the cake. Seeing the community we have built in the gym jump in and teach one another something as simple as a pass through to explaining the age-old question “What’s a thruster?” means WOD after WOD that it’s working. Is it perfect? No. Can it be? Probably not. Will we try to make it better each and every week with sound and solid programming? Yes. That is because as in the WOD itself where each day the question is “what do I have to give?”, so it is when I sit down at the computer on Sunday and ask “what do I have in store to get our people fitter?”.
Insights into how programming is done for the main site from CrossFit.com: Tony Budding reviews the last WOD cycle – video [wmv] [mov]
Notes:
Who’s interested in a 0830 class either 1 or 2 times per week? So far we have one vote for it and a possible 2nd. We want to offer the class time with Mark if it works for you. Post to comments.
4 Rounds of 3 Minutes Each Round to Complete:
500m Row
Max Reps of Double-Unders in remaining time
* Rest 3 minutes before next round
Score total number of Double-Unders
Results
Nan Rows 500:
We have been meaning to get a Rowing Clinic on the books with Lucy (a former competitive rower for those who don’t know) for all of you. Rest assured it’s coming and likely will need to wait until we are in the new space – which will be soon!
Until then focus on these tips from Lucy that you can incorporate into your warm-up:
1. Hands only (fast hands, keeping them straight/cog level)
2. Hands and lean only (no break in legs)
3. All of the above and quarter slide (small crack in knees)
4. All of the above and half slide
5. All of the above and three quarter slide
6. Full slide
7. Work your way back down to hands only to finish
“Also, doing 500m with feet ‘not’ strapped in. This gets you to focus on core stability and you can’t rush the slide at all or you will fall off! Great for those slide rushers!”
In addition to those tips, go to the Concept 2 site and watch “what right looks like” in the Proper Rowing Technique video. This breaks down very clearly and quickly the two phases of “Drive” and “Recovery” and the two positions of “Catch” and “Finish”.
Donny Double-Under:
Notes:
Don’t forget Saturday is the Stop the Slop Nutrition and Performance Challenge Kick-off at 9am! Following that the Sat. WOD will start at 10:15am.
Nutrition Discussion with Todd Widman (from CrossFit Headquarters Training and Certification Staff): This highly informative and valuable discussion on nutrition will be open to all at Imperial CrossFit on Jan. 25. A few of us are planning to go so let your coaches know if you are interested. I have heard him give this talk twice and plan to make it a third time. I always learn something new and come away motivated to dial it in a little more.
AMRAP (As Many Rounds As Possible) for 20 Minutes:
5 Chest-to-Bar Pull-ups
10 Ring Dips
15 Overhead Squats (95#/65#)
Results
Quote of the day: “CrossFit. Because life isn’t 3 sets of 10.” ~ South Tahoe CrossFit
Today’s WOD was a recent workout from CrossFit.com that resembled a heavy version of the benchmark girl “Cindy“.
Stop the Slop Challenge: Chest-to-Bar standard today was chest contacts bar around the mid-chest or nipple level. Reps that touch the collar bone do not count. Any reps that contacts mid-chest to below nipple is C2B-tastic!
Coaching Tip: Ovehead Squat Position
When performing the Overhead Squat focus on pushing up on the barbell directly overhead and slightly behind the ears while rotating the armpits and lats “forward” (shown by Lindsay below). Turning the armpits forward and pressing up will prevent the shoulder from a potentially dangerous impingement position. This is often visible when the armpits are facing “down” to the floor.
Notes:
Effective immediately: No more 8am Class on Wednesdays! If you are wanting to see a 0830am class either once or twice during the week post to comments. We can make that happen!
Update on the 2011 CF Games: Sectionals, Regionals, Masters, and Affiliate Team Competitions
With a continuously running clock perform 2 Wall Balls the first minute, 4 Wall Balls the second minute, 6 the third minute, and so on, continuing to add 2 each minute until you cannot complete the required number of reps in the given minute.
Score total rounds and reps in the last round completed.
Results
Today’s emphasis on “Above the Line” clearly in play:
Yesterday we announced the Nutrition and Performance “Stop the Slop” Challenge. Sign up this week prior to the kick off on Saturday at 9am. If you are jumping in and need some insights into how to revamp your habits at the “Gro-Sto” for food shopping check out Whole9‘s tips in their latest blog post. “Paleo Poor: Your Guide to the Grocery Store“
Random:
Announcing some new ways to pay:
Classes:
Starting this Friday we will add a weekly 6pm class on Fridays with Jeremy D. This will not change Moe’s regular 5pm schedule.
Wed. 8am class this week: Post to comments if you are planning to come otherwise it is cancelled.
Notes:
Congrats to Rona who got her first kipping handstand push-up today! Also welcome to Josh, Mollie, Amy, and Penny who just started or are about to complete Elements. Be sure to introduce yourself when you see them for the WOD.
Video highlights from the Mt. Rainier Strongest Man and Woman 5 at Rainier CrossFit back in November (Mark put this video together from Pat’s footage):
“Stop the Slop Challenge”: Who’s IN?
It’s time. Actually it’s overdue. We are kicking off our Nutrition and Performance Challenge this Saturday on Jan. 8. It will run 6 weeks long until Feb. 19. This is not only a nutrition challenge but also a performance challenge. This is open to everyone in the box and we highly encourage you to participate.
Nutrition is the foundation of a solid fitness program and overall good health. You put the effort into your workout, put that into what you eat and watch how dramatic the results can be. While we encourage you to try a strict Paleo or Whole30 approach (as it will have the best results), we also realize some may not quite be there. For those “kinda motivated” individuals we want you to participate and still emphasize good choices and real food so you can see and feel the difference. You have the rest of the week to get ready or even get started! Think Paleo and not “Faileo”! (borrowed that term from Imperial CF)
A word on the Performance Challenge. The emphasis of “Stop the Slop” goes beyond what we choose to eat. It also encompasses how we workout and how we recover. 1st: Stop looking at the clock! Slow it down and set your feet, your back and your hands to do what you have been trained to do correctly. 2nd: Forget what the person next to you can lift and focus on what you can lift correctly. 3rd: Recover the right way. In addition to proper nutrition, stretch and get more sleep.
From little to no sleep or crappy reps with bad form, it’s all slop that we can do without. So for the next 6 weeks we will be even more vigilant as your coaches on demanding good reps and technique. This is for the collective good! When you are working out however, police yourself. When you short a squat, snag a double-under, half-ass a wall ball or push-up, don’t quite get your chin over that bar, or do the box jump “tango toe tap on the edge” thing, don’t count it. Do it over. Keeping those hips closed on an overhead squat? Push press look like you have been hanging out at the globo-gym again with the meatheads? How about the rounded back deadlift or reverse curl clean? Slow it down and do it right. That is why we train. It will pay off immensely. It will make your fitter, more efficient, and overall drive better results. Which is what we all want right?
Details below:
Kick-off Schedule:
Matt is fired up for the Stop the Slop Challenge!