Main > The Courtyard

Combat Of The Thirty video

<< < (4/8) > >>

Thorsteinn:
Me vs my mom at May Coronet last year.

http://www.youtube.com/user/Aeschine#p/u/62/gojSBD_euKc

I will be adding splint migration period greaves and arms, an aventail, and a byrnie. I feel I will get better for this (Look good. Feel good. Fight good). We have a guy up here who will be a top end fighter soon enough named Alesz who fights in full plate from head to toe. The reason he does so well is fit of kit. He makes everything but his helm and has talent so everything he does fits him and is mounted properly.

Perhaps the fit of the kit was messing with you to? In plate, more than any other armour, proper fit matters so very much.

-Ivan

Sir Edward:

--- Quote from: James Anderson III on 2012-01-11, 00:30:52 ---The biggest hurdle for me is that I'm a fat computer programmer with previous separate injuries to both of my knees & my back/hips (hospital trip strapped to a backboard on that one....), as well as being stuck with a less-than-average cardiac & respiratory system since I was little (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pectus_excavatum) - and breathing and a strong heart are two rather important things for wearing and moving quickly in armor. :) I'd have to get myself into substantially better shape before I could be much of anything but a slowly moving (but nicely armored!) pell. I do plan to address some needed weight loss this year; I was rather winded after a few unarmored bouts with Sir Nathan a couple months ago.

--- End quote ---

I totally understand, believe me. I don't have a congenital condition or old injuries stopping me, except an old knee injury that I have to be very careful about. But I suffer from the "sedentary computer guy" problem, pretty badly.

The nice thing about doing the WMA/HEMA thing is that most of what we're doing is unarmored combat, with protective gear. You don't need to work up to it the way you do with armor, and in fact, you learn to fight efficiently and not use excessive energy. The biggest lesson for me was just to simply relax. If you get too tense or overly enthusiastic, you just get tired faster.

Also, I can't stress how useful cardio exercise is. I've been away from it for several months, so my endurance is all gone... but what I was doing was about 25 minutes on a stationary bike, 2 or 3 times a week. And these were high-intensity rides. I'd push the heart rate up to 150 for the whole time, and try to out-do the previous calories/speed/distance each time.  Suddenly a two minute sword-fight would be just fine, instead of making me want to fall over and pass out. :)

I'm back to that "just let me die" level of fatigue, so I need to start hitting the gym again too.

Sir William:
I think most of us Gen X'rs might suffer from 'sedentary computer guy' syndrome to varying degrees...except maybe Sir Brian who seems to be pretty active compared to me anyway.  ;)

Learning to relax is probably the greatest lesson I took away with me after our impromptu fencing bouts, the second one being cardio is of course, key.  It is amazing how quickly you can lose the benefit, even if you do it often...walk away for a while and it tells.

Sir Edward, have a care at pushing your heart rate to the max...it isn't always a benefit.  Two years ago, one of the members of my gym, Doug, who was a staunch cardio guy- 4 to 5 times a week, this guy would spend 30 minutes on a stair stepper, 30 on a treadmill- but it wasn't a casual type of workout...he hit it hard, on both machines, nearly every day.  Doug was 46 when he suffered his first cardiac episode; he was drenched in sweat, I walked by to change up in the locker room.  I come out, and Doug's laid out on the floor, with the stair stepper on top of him.  I pulled it off him and his eyes were gone, not there, as he struggled for breath, then stopped breathing altogether.  Someone dropped  down to give him CPR and I called out the cadence...he'd breathe by himself or a few moments, but then stop again.  EMS got there pretty quick but before they did, I learned some critical lessons.

1.  The auto-defib machine is exactly that- once you hook up the electrodes, step back.  Nearly got myself and the woman compressing his chest a nice zap...I don't know that it'd be enough to harm but better safe than sorry, right?
2.  Going and staying at max heart rate for any length of time on a regular basis can do harm, especially as you get older.  It turns out Doug was simply pushing himself too hard...had he been doing it on his home gym who knows what the turnout would've been?

I saw him last year...he was thinner, said he was still doing cardio but not at that level and seemed to be in good health and spirits.  65% of max heartrate for fat burning, 80% for cardio- stick with it.

One of the best fat-burner things I do is to set the incline as high as it can go on a treadmill, grab a couple of 5lb weights and walk uphill for 20 or so minutes at 3 or so mph...doesn't sound like much, but I guarantee 5 minutes in you're going to start feeling if not already.  I've toppled all the big muscly guys with this exercise...one monster who likes to tell people just how strong he is dropped his weights (he decided to go with 20lbs in each hand) less than 5 minutes in and was holding on to the top of the machine about halfway through.  He refuses to do it ever again.  lol

Ian:
Well, fat burning and cardio are two very different things.  Maximum fat burn will not yield maximum performance of the heart and lungs.  Traditional fitness ideas state that long, low intensity activity (i.e. a 60 minute jog) is more effective at burning fat than a 35 minute high intensity activity.  This is because you have to burn through your carbohydrate stores before the body begins to burn its fat stores.  Carbs are the body's primary energy source, fat being a secondary long term source, so you're body will use carbs for the initial part of any aerobic activity before it turns to its fat stores to use as energy.

One way 'around' the long sessions of boring exercise is to use high intensity interval training.  The constant up and down of your heart rate is proven to more effectively increase heart/lung performance as well as burn fat, in a lot less time. 

One thing a lot of people who lead sedentary life styles don't want to hear is that, you really need to do resistance training too.  Building muscle not only burns fat when you're exercising, but people with increased muscle mass burn more fat while resting as well.  The last key is of course nutrition, which is not only the most important aspect, but the most difficult for most people to adjust to.  And old saying is abs are made in the kitchen, not in the gym.

If you want something structured I recommend a program like P90X.  It's very adjustable to different fitness levels, covers all aspects of fitness (Resistance / Cardio / Nutrition) and if you do the work, and follow the program you will get results.  I've done both P90X and Insanity and got in better shape with those programs than any other previous program I've done (being in the military I've been exposed to a lot and have also used traditional gyms).  I do not recommend Insanity for someone who is not already in GOOD shape.  P90X however is friendly to beginners and pros alike, and if you're serious about getting in shape AND becoming healthier, I can't recommend it enough.

And when it comes down to it, I think fitness is an incredibly important aspect to ANY martial activity.  It will make you faster, stronger, more competitive, and it will ward off injury in both the long and short-term.  I don't mean to indite the entire WMA / SCA crowd out there, but let's face it, the overwhelming majority are not exactly in tip top shape, and then complain about chronic injury and why they have to quit heavy list on the AA... take your fitness seriously, and this will not be you!  Look at the off-the-shelf sizes for re-enactment clothing!  They don't exactly cater to people with lean athletic builds.... lots of XXL's out there.  Knights were surely not slovenly and out of shape in real life!  Their lives depended on their physical conditioning.

oh, and by the way, I spend a LOT of time playing computer games!  ;D but I also challenge myself to continually improve my fitness level

SirNathanQ:
I hate to use myself as an example, especially because Ian's probably in exponentially better shape than me, but lots of computer games and sedinatry can work with being fit.
I usually get about 45min to an hour of exercise about 5 days a week, and do well. Especially considered I have the metabolism of a 50 year old man.
My problem is food. Always the darn food  :o

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

[*] Previous page

Go to full version