Posts Tagged ‘press’

Couplet x3

4/3/12

 

One of the reasons to shop Organic

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Upcoming Events:

  • April 4th- FREE Yoga class- 6:30pm

This will kick off our Yoga program, Laura offered to do a free class again for this Wednesday. We will be offering classes onWednesday night at 6:30pm and Sunday at 8:30am starting the first week in April.  Yoga classes will cost $12 per class or $80 for the month ($10 per class). These classes are open to gym members and non gym members, invite your friends!

  • April 28th- FREE POSE Running Clinic
      Kick off the spring and your endurance goals with learning how to run POSE and having your running critiqued.  This clinic is free to all gym members and $50 for non members.  There will be a 6 week POSE running course to follow the running clinic, more info to come!
      This is a charity throwdown for one of Cory’s good friend’s Daughter.  You can read the brief synopsis of her story by clicking on the link above. If you have any interest in competing please click on the link above and contact Shoreline CrossFit, also spread the word around the gym and hopefully we can send a group of athletes down.  There are scaled options for the workouts so don’t be intimidated.  If you have no interest in competing, but would still like to help you can also make donations.

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Joint Mobility and Warm Up

WOD

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Fitness:

A1) Press: 5@31×1- 5 Sets, rest 1 min

A2) Ring Row: 5 @ 22×2- 5 sets, rest 1 min

B) Box Dips: 15@ 32×1 – 3 sets, rest 2 min between sets

C)

3x

3 Split squats per leg

6 Strict Push ups

Rest 3 min

3x

90 Singles

15 KB Swings 16/12kg

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Fitness:

A1) DB Press: 5 @ 31×1 – 3 sets, rest 1 min

A2) Strict Pull Ups (chin breaks vertical plane of bar): 10 @ 31×1- 3 sets, rest 1 min

B) Ring Dips: 10@ 31×1 – 3 sets, rest 2 min

C)

3x

3 Pistols Per Leg

6 HSPU

rest 3 min

3x

30 Doubles/ double attempts

15 KB Swings 2/1

Rest 6 Min

3x

8 Knees to elbows

16 box jumps 24/20

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Competitors:

A1) DB Press: 5 @ 31×1 – 3 sets, rest 1:30 min

A2) Weighted Strict Pull Ups (chin breaks vertical plane of bar): 5 @ 31×1- 3 sets, rest 1:30 min

B) Weighted Ring Dips: 5@ 31×1 – 3 sets, rest 2 min

C)

3x

3 Pistols Per Leg

6 HSPU

rest 3 min

3x

30 Doubles

15 KB Swings 2/1.5

Rest 6 Min

3x

8 Toes to Bar

16 box jumps 30/24

D) Endurance WOD

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 Endurance Team:
SD/Comp:  8x 1min hard / 1 min jogging rest
MD:          10x 1min hard / 1min jogging rest
LD:           12x 1min hard / 1min jogging rest
Cover as much distance as possible during hard minutes.  Rest is jogging!

Back to WORK

3/23/12

 

 

 

 

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Schedule Annoucement:

Saturday:

NO KIDS CLASS this week

Endurance Practice: 9am

Class: 9 am

Competition Class: 10 am

Sunday:

10 and 11 am

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Upcoming Events:

  • March 28th- FREE Yoga class- 6:30pm
       This will kick off our Yoga program. We will be offering classes onWednesday night at 6:30pm and Sunday at 8:30am starting the first week in April.  Yoga classes will cost $12 per class or $80 for the month ($10 per class). These classes are open to gym members and non gym members, invite your friends!
  • March 31st- Box Party- 1pm to whenever
       This is just a barbecue and an awesome opportunity for everyone to get together and have a good time.  We will be eating, drinking, and playing games.  Hopefully everyone can make it !
  • April 28th- FREE POSE Running Clinic
      Kick off the spring and your endurance goals with learning how to run POSE and having your running critiqued.  This clinic is free to all gym members and $50 for non members.  There will be a 6 week POSE running course to follow the running clinic, more info to come!

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New Products:

Stronger Faster Healthier

  • Recovery:Sometimes after a workout, you feel like you’ve recovered but at the cellular level you haven’t fully recovered yet.  This formula re-energizes your cells by increasing your ATP levels (Adenosine Triphospate- the energy powerhouse of the cell).Within an hour after the workout, mix yourself up a dose of Recovery Formula. Then, either eat real meal or take another dose about two hours later. The purpose is to re-energize your tired muscles and help them recover, protect against joint injury and decrease the negative effects of free radical oxidants.Recovery is 2/3 whey concentrate derived from a grass fed, free range cows, which are never treated with antibiotics or bovine growth hormones and 1/3 essential amino acids for recovery.
    These are the added ingredients and what they do:

    • Multi-component mixture of co-enzyme Q10, ribose and carnitine increases mitochondria productivity and maximizes cell energy
    • Amino acids build muscles naturally
    • Creatine boosts energy
    • Glutamine helps with muscle recovery and maintenance
    • Glucosamine HCL* and chondroitin sulfate controls inflammation and promotes joint health
    • Carnitine stimulates mitochondria for rapid energy production
    • Leucine and isoleucine promote muscle volume and strength
    • Ribose rapidly re-builds cell energy stores
    • Taurine improves your metabolic state and energizes your body

Whey protein is a pure, natural, high quality protein from cow’s milk.  Our whey protein is derived from a grass fed, free range cows, which are never treated with antibiotics or bovine growth hormones.  It is a rich source of the essential amino acids needed on a daily basis by the body.

Our proteins hydrate well in water and are absorbed very well by your body. All whey proteins differ in lactose content, fats and calcium and Pure Whey has low lactose content (averaging about 1.8%); is low in cholesterol; and high in free calcium.

It is an excellent protein choice for all ages including children and provides a number of benefits in areas including sports nutrition, weight management, immune support, bone health, and general wellness.

If you are concerned about your child’s food choices, Pure Whey, with 92% protein content is an excellent choice to help kids grow up healthy.

Fortified Formula™ is a whey protein formula derived from a grass fed, free range cows, which are never treated with antibiotics or bovine growth hormones.  This formula is designed for muscle building, strength building and bulking.  Fortified is a safe, all-natural mass builder.  Our formula enhances muscle development by enhancing all-naturally the release of growth hormones.

Fortified Formula™ will also decrease your hunger and increase your energy.

These are the added ingredients and what they do:

  • Phenylalanine and tyrosine release your body’s own non-steroid, anabolic agent (growth hormone) for muscle growth
  • Leucine and isoleucine, key BCAAs increase muscle volume and strength.
  • Low glycemic index cherry powder for sustained energy.
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Joint Mobility and Warm Up

WOD

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Fitness:

A1) Press- 5 @31×1- 3 sets, using 45/55/65%- rest 1 min

A2) Lunge- 10 per side @ 31×1- 3 sets- rest 1 min

B) Find a workable Power Clean and Jerk within 10 min

C) 3 Clean and Jerks, Sprint to grass and back (finish this within 1 min) rest 2:30 x4

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Performance:

A1) Press- 5 @31×1- 3 sets, using 45/55/65%- rest 1 min

A2) Split Squat w/ weight- 8 per side @ 31×1- 3 sets- rest 1 min

B) Build up to a heavy Squat Clean and Jerk in 10 min

C) Using 90% of that Clean and Jerk, perform the following

3 clean and jerks, Sprint to grass and back (finish this within 1 min) rest 2:30 x4

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Competitors:

A1) Bench- 5 @31×1- 3 sets, using 45/55/65%- rest 1 min

A2) Pistols- 10 per side- rest 1 min

B) Build up to a 1 RM Squat Clean and Jerk in 10 min

C) Using 90% of that Clean and Jerk, perform the following

3 clean and jerks, Sprint to grass and back (finish this within 1 min) rest 2:30 x4

D) Dips- AMRAP @ 31×1 Rest 90 sec- 2 sets

Heart Beat

3/19/12

6 am Swingers

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Will Eating Red Meat Kill You?

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Joint Mobility and Warm Up

WOD

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Fitness:

A) Push Press: 5@ 21×1 – 3 sets

B)

4x 1 min per station

Burpees

Single Unders

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Performance:

A) Push Jerk: 3 @11×1- 3-4 sets, rest 120 seconds between sets

B)

4x 1 min per station

Burpees

Double Unders/ Double under attempts

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Competitors:

A) Press: 5@ 30×1- 3 sets using 45/55/65%

B) Push Jerk: 3 @11×1- 3-4 sets, rest 120 seconds between sets

C) Heart Beat

4x 1 min per station

Burpees

Double Unders

Damn Russians

3/16/12

Who's trying it?

 

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Schedule Annoucement:

Saturday:

CrossFit Kids: 8:30am

Endurance Practice: 9am

Class: 9 am

Competition Class: 10 am

Sunday:

10 and 11 am

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Parking Announcement:

We are not allowed to park more than 5 cars in the front of the building.  If there are 5 cars parked in front of the building, please park behind the building along the grass (not right behind the doors).  Thanks.

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Joint Mobility and Warm Up

WOD

Part A:

Press:

5×75%/ 3×85%/ AMRAP w/ 95%

Part B:

3x

15 Box Jumps

7 Toes to Bar

Run 400 Meters

 

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Competitors:

A: Bench: 5×75%/ 3×85%/ AMRAP w/ 95%

B: Weighted Dips: 5/31×1/ 3-4

( 5 reps x 3 seconds on the way down, one second in the bottom, explode up, one second on top- for 3-4 sets. If your arms are smoked after 3 sets stop there, if you can do one more set then go for it). Get used to this tempo work and way of writting, everything will be like this soon.

C: WOD from above

Run to that Snatch

3/13/12

 

Do Perfect Foods Exist?

perfectfood

Today’s post touches on a concept that many of us have pondered: the perfect food. That is, does such a thing even exist? What with phytates, lectins, easily-absorbed fat-soluble vitamins, allergenic proteins, and all the rest, it sometimes seems like every good food has a crippling downside. If you read too many health and nutrition blogs that delve into these relatively arcane topics (my own not necessarily excluded!), it often feels like you can’t eat anything at all without risking some horrible illness, deficiency, or excess.

The following is an excerpt from a longer email in which a reader expressed concern over the apparent scarcity of “perfect foods.”:

Dear Mark,

I’m getting very frustrated. I don’t know if it’s a case of over researching things, but I’m beginning to feel that there are very few perfect foods. That there is something bad in everything. Beef, pork, and fish have creatine. Nuts, grains, seeds, and legumes have phytates. What are we supposed to do, just live on veggies, chicken, and eggs? How is it that Grok got enough magnesium, not too much phytates, etc, etc?

Brad

No food is perfect. You are correct. But you are incorrect to despair over this unavoidable, inescapable reality. For one, you have to eat something. You can’t live on sunlight and water (although both are vital to health). Two, just because a food contains something “bad” doesn’t mean the food itself is “bad.” To show this, I thought it’d be fun to put together a list of the “downsides” of undoubtedly Primal foods that most of us probably consume on a regular basis. Within many of these Primal darlings lurks a dark side, a “negative” nutritive trait that threatens to topple its favored status… but are you going to stop eating these foods just because they aren’t “perfect”?

Liver – Awesome superfood nature’s-vitamin status aside, it has a “problem.” It’s high in retinol, which is the animal form of vitamin A and the most easily-absorbed. Too little dietary retinol is bad for testosterone production, vision, bone metabolism, and gene transcription, but too much dietary retinol can lead to hypervitaminosis A, especially with insufficient vitamin D. Explorers who ate polar bear liver, which contains upwards of 15,000 IUs retinol per gram (an insanely high concentration), have been sickened and even killed from hypervitaminosis A (PDF).

Red meat – Protein, loads of healthy fats, plenty of zinc, what’s not to love? Well, for those with hemachromatosis – excessive iron absorption – the iron content of red meat can be problematic.

Eggs - Eggs are great. They are bite-sized, easily-transportable, delicious repositories of everything you need to build a fully grown chicken, but they also contain potentially gut-irritating proteins (mostly in the egg white) that can exacerbate autoimmune conditions. Lysozyme appears to be the most problematic of these egg proteins, and it’s found in large amounts in the white.

Butter – Good old butter. You’ve yet to fail anyone. Except for that guy with an intense casein intolerance.

Ghee – That means ghee is all clear, right? All of the good fat, none of the offensive proteins. Maybe not. An older study from 1987 found that ghee had a significant amount of oxidized cholesterol, presumably due to the clarification process (which involves heat). That sounds bad. So ghee’s bad, right? Maybe not (again). It turns out that the ghee from the 1987 study was “heated in an electric oven in a stainless steel mug at 120 degrees C for 50 hours.” So, while some ghee has “bad” qualities, some does not, and it all depends on how the ghee was produced.

Shellfish – Delicious, nutritious, briny, mineral-replete though they may be, shellfish can be highly allergenic in certain people. Also, because you’re eating the entire animal, including that animal’s last meal, often raw, there is an elevated risk of getting sick. Norwalk virus (not serious), vibro (pretty serious), and various shellfish toxins are all potential complications. I love raw oysters, mind you. I’m just putting this out there.

Brazil nuts – I recently mentioned these as a great source of selenium. And they are. But they’re also pretty high in phytic acid and radium.

Spinach – I love spinach, always have. It’s a great source of magnesium, calcium, manganese, vitamin K… and oxalates. Yes, oxalates – those tiny organic crystals that compose the most common type of kidney stone – are found in spinach (as well as other leafy greens). 100 grams of spinach contain 750 mg of oxalates. And though dietary oxalate has never been conclusively or strongly linked to the development of kidney stones, the theoretical risk remains.

Dark chocolate – It’s evidently a big favorite among my readers, and it has tons of benefits, but it’s also high in phytic acid, and some sources may be high in cadmium and/or mycotoxins (like aflatoxin).

Bacon – I don’t think listing the benefits is necessary here, so I won’t. How about the negatives? Pork fed on corn and soy (which even organic pigs usually eat) display high levels of omega-6 fats in their tissues, while pork fed on coconuts display almost none. If you’re eating bacon (almost all fat) from pigs fed mostly corn and soy, you’re likely consuming a fair bit of omega-6 (same goes for any high-fat pork product, really, as well as poultry). Oh, and don’t burn that bacon, or subject it to high heat for very long unless you love eating carcinogenic nitrosamines with your eggs!

Cruciferous vegetables – I just posted an article extolling the virtues of sulfur-rich cruciferous veggies, but they can also act as goitrogenic inhibitors of thyroid function. Goitrogens interfere with iodine uptake by the thyroid, so excessive intake of cabbage, cauliflower, and other cruciferous vegetables might necessitate a bit more iodine in the diet.

My point, after all this, is not to keep you from eating these foods. It’s to show that there are no perfect foods and that there’s nothing wrong with that. Every food, even the “good” ones, has something that someone can legitimately complain about. Does that mean you can’t eat these foods, or even that you should always keep the vitamin A content of grass-fed beef liver or the possibility that your square of dark chocolate could contain cadmium in the back of your mind? No; it would drive you insane and cause unnecessary stress.

I simply wanted to show the inherent silliness of worrying about “perfect foods.” Every food has something “wrong” with it. As I’ve always said, it’s not just about the constituent parts that compose a food. The individual components don’t always tell the whole story. Whole foods do tell that story, though. You simply have to eat them to figure it out.
Read more: http://www.marksdailyapple.com/do-perfect-foods-exist/#ixzz1ovwfsmIh

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Joint Mobility and Warm Up

WOD

Part A:

Squat Snatch: 2-2-2-1-1

Part B:

5x

Run 400 meters

5 Snatches 115/75

10 Chest to Bar Pull Ups

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Competitors:

Competitors:

A: Snatch: 3/3/2/2/1

This does not mean 3 or 2 unbroken, but a weight that is lighter than you could hit with about 5 seconds between reps. Work up to a heavy single, no heavier than 85%

B: Press: 5×75%/3×85%/AMRAP w/95%/15×60% – Tempo 3010 ( 3 sec press, no rest on top, 1 second down, no rest on bottom)

C: 2 Rounds of WOD from above

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Endurance:

SD            10x 50m hills, running back down for rest

MD            15 hills

LD            20 hills

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