niedziela, 2 czerwca 2013

Boot camp



How to measure your fitness?


We spend so much time concentrating on what types of exercise we do, that we don’t consider how effective measuring our fitness can be. Fitness assessments can be regarded as a great motivating tool to help us reach our goals.
If you don’t have access to trained staff with their fancy tools and machines at your fitness centre don’t worry, you can evaluate your muscular strength and endurance, flexibility, and cardiovascular endurance your own way! Boot camp!

For your cardiovascular fitness, a basic walking or running test can be used. Also known as the Cooper Test, this test is used widely among runners. The test is designed to identify how far you can walk or run for the duration of the test (12minutes). After a 5 minute warm up, using a flat gradient either on a track or a treadmill, the participant should walk or run at as fast a pace as you can sustain. Record the data and compare to the values below. Compare to previous attempts to identify personal improvement:

o    1.46 miles (2.35km) or more = excellent
o    1.33 to 1.45 miles (2.14 to 2.33km) = good
o    1.32 to 1.26 miles (2.12 to 2.03km) = fair
o    1.25 miles (2.01km) or less = poor


Testing your core strength is a great way to measure your core stability in your trunk. The Plank will tell you whether you have any core strength! If you can hold the position (but not your breath!) for more than one minute, then you are strong to the core. A time of 30 to 60 seconds is average, while less than 30 seconds means that you need to work on it more. Get Planking and see if you can improve your time at every attempt!!


Counting the number of beats of your resting heart rate (RHR) is a useful way of indicating your fitness progress. It should reduce as your aerobic fitness improves. Your resting heart rate represents the number of times your heart beats each minute when you are at rest. A lower RHR tends to correspond with higher aerobic fitness (for example, cyclist Lance Armstrong’s RHR was allegedly only 32 beats per minute at the peak of his fitness).
To measure your RHR, place two fingers on your wrist, below the thumb, to locate the radial pulse, and then count the number of beats you feel in 60 seconds. Do this first thing in the morning before you get up or eat/drink anything or do any exercise.



o    60 or less = good
o    61 to 80 = average
o    81 to 100 = high, but still considered acceptable
o    101 or more = abnormally high (not good!)

Your resting heart rate is a useful marker of your fitness progress, as it will drop as you get fitter.

To assess leg strength and endurance a very simple way to do this is the Wall sit test. This exercise test – in which you sit on an ‘invisible chair’ against a wall until your thighs tighten – gives a good idea of your lower-body strength.
Find a wall space, lean your back against it and shuffle your feet forward. Slide your back down the wall until your knee and hip joints are at a right angle (90degrees), and then start your stopwatch. Hold the position as long as you can bear – breathing freely.


o    76 seconds or more for men / 46 seconds or more for women = very good
o    58 to 75 seconds for men / 36 to 45 seconds for women = average
o    57 to 30 seconds for men / 35 to 20 seconds for women = below average
o    30 seconds or less for men / 20 seconds or less for women = poor


Do this test in front of the TV to distract away from any pain! Repeat this test once a week and see if your leg strength has improved!



To assess upper body muscular endurance Push-ups are a great indicator of your upper body strength and the progress of your muscle building exercise. Technically, this test measures muscular endurance rather than pure strength, as it is based on how many you can do in a fixed period of time rather than how much weight you can lift. Push-ups challenge the chest, shoulder and upper arm muscles – and require good core stability.


o    0 or more for men / 25 or more for women = excellent
o    25 to 29 for men / 20 to 24 for women = good
o    20 to 24 for men / 15 to 19 for women = not bad
o    19 or less for men / 14 or less for women = needs work!