Posts tagged ‘workout’

June 22, 2009

A Few Things I Learned this Weekend

1) Champagne bubbles are not good for Monday morning 7am sprints. Not the 400M ones, not the 200M ones, and not even the 35M ones.

2) If champagne bubbles are still in your system 2 days later, you had too much champagne at the wedding.

3) True, deep forgiveness is really hard. But really worth it.

4) My dad is awesome.

5) Don’t eat grains. Once you stop eating them, you’ll stop wanting them.

6) Trust these guys on food: Robb Wolf & Mark Sisson

7) CrossFit isn’t for everyone. But everyone should try it. This Saturday, in fact, at 8:30am Under the Bridge.

8) Being able to do a real pull-up is effing awesome.

In summary: Weddings are–and being a Maid of Honor is–awesome. My date was incredibly sweet and patient with the MoH. Drinking too much is not awesome. Eating healthy begets eating healthy. And working out with a fun community is much better/easier/more effective than working out alone.

June 13, 2009

Sizzlin’ Summer Sampler – Free CrossFit, Yoga, and Cardio Kickboxing

Sizzlin’ Summer Sampler

Sunday, June 14th at 10am
lululemon back parking lot

Wear athletic shoes, bring a yoga mat, bring hydration……and get your booty on down to the Sizzlin’ Summer Sampler with our stellar Ambassadors: David Garza (Cardio Kickboxing), Sanieh (Yoga) and Carey Kepler (CrossFit). You’ll get a 20 minute sample of their areas of expertise, which equals 1 BIG, BALANCED WORKOUT with your local celebrities. SWEAT LOCAL!!

May 28, 2009

So much free CrossFit!

Many of you have written in asking for info on the next free CrossFit workouts, so behold–three of ‘em this weekend:

UTB (Under the Bridge): Free Community Workout

Saturday, May 30th 8:30am – 9:30am @ Town Lake, under the bridge, on the Hike & Bike Trail
This workout is similar to a CrossFit Central boot camp. Expect body weight resistance exercises, med ball work, and other explosive interval training.

Throwdown in the Park Free Community Workout

Saturday, May 30th 9:45am @ Auditorium Shores

This Saturday Westlake Crossfit, Crossfit Texas and Crossfit Austin will host a free community workout. This fun and exciting workout is designed for all fitness levels , so be sure and bring family and friends

Women-Only Kettlebell Workout

Sunday, May 31st 10am @ lululemon (or the parking lot behind lululemon athletica)

Ladies, come and get fit with Carey Kepler of Crossfit Central in her Kettlebell class. The Kettlebell is a traditional Russian cast iron weight looking somewhat like a cannonball with a handle. Kettlebell workouts are intended to increase strength, endurance, agility and balance, challenging both the muscular and cardiovascular system with dynamic, total-body movements. Let this lululemon Ambassador rock your Sunday!

Crazy Fun Idea! I think this Saturday calls for a special sort of double-under: a double-under-the-bridge workout for anyone crazy enough to do Central’s workout from 8:30-9:30 under the Mopac bridge, then run to Westlake/Texas/Austin’s workout near the S. First bridge from 9:45-10:45, then back to the cars at the Mopac bridge. Let’s do it! (Oh, and then I’ll play a football game.)

May 22, 2009

Hoover Ball

Kick off the summer (and Memorial Day Weekend) with a CrossFit Central Hooverball BBQ!

5-9pm at Northwest Park (Map)

They’re providing the MEAT, you BYOB and your favorite side dish, dessert, or snack to share (serving size 15-20 people) … doesn’t have to be Zone/Paleo–everyone gets cheat days!

What is Hooverball? Like volleyball on a sand court but we’ll be throwing a med ball over the net instead.

If you’re intimidated by CrossFit, this is a perfect way to meet some cool people without having to tackle a sick workout… :-)

May 14, 2009

Interview with: the fellas of CrossFit Austin

As CrossFit blows up and takes Austin–and me–by storm, I thought I’d sit down with the fellas that got me hooked and let them talk about the sport they’ve built their life around. I say life because roommates Wes Kimball and Boone Putney share a lot—they met through a shared best friend, were co-Best-Man in that friend’s wedding, live together, and opened a six-month-old CrossFit gym in South Austin together. We sat down in Novemberish of last year; their gym opened December 6. I haven’t had a chance to sit down with them again, but this is timeless info on what in the heck CrossFit is. Here are the deets:

Me: What is CrossFit?
Wes: CrossFit is a relatively new fitness movement. It’s a combination of three main pillars: it’s all functional movement, it’s all constantly varied, and it’s all done at a very high intensity.
When I say functional movement, it’s gonna be anything that you can use for independent living and natural motor patterns in your body. We use a lot of gymnastics skills, Olympic lifting, dumbbell lifting, mono-structural movement—what most people would call cardio—running, biking, rowing, things like that.
The constantly varied part is that every time we do a workout, it’s gonna be different. It’s going to be different exercises, different style of exercises, different tempo, so you’re never going to see the same workout within the same week much less the same month.
The intensity aspect of it: we do everything for time, so not only are you competing against yourself, and you’re competing against other people at the gym, but you’re competing against the clock.
Boone: The way I explain it and the way it differentiates itself from other methods is motivation. I think motivation is key in CrossFit; it’s centered around a community. There’s a big community aspect to it, everybody encouraging each other on. Time is another thing that differentiates us. You go in at such high intensity, like Wes says, and always competing against the clock. You’re looking at ten to twenty minutes for a workout, the high intensity part. It’s short and sweet but you definitely feel it, it’s no walk in the park.

Me: How did each of you get started with CrossFit?
Boone: I went up to see Wes in Chicago, and at that point I was working out six, seven days a week. I thought I was in great shape. And then he took me to a gym, to one of the official CrossFit workouts. I was not in great shape, I came to find out. It felt great afterwards but I thought I was going to die during it. And after that I was sore for days. It opened my eyes and made me start doing it on my own.
Wes: I’ve been CrossFitting for about two years now. When I moved to Chicago, I got into a great affiliate up there, Windy City CrossFit, and the community there was just amazing. Not only did I get in the best shape of my life and be at a physical point in my life that I’ve never been at before, but I gained 40 friends automatically, all my friends up there were my CrossFit community.

Me: How do you guys know each other?
Boone: Basically his best friend moved to Round Rock and became my best friend, and they went to Texas A&M together, so we crossed paths in college. Once Wes moved to Austin after he graduated, we’d hang out quite a bit, then he moved away and I cried myself to sleep every night for awhile.
Wes: We were co-best men in the friend’s wedding.
Boone: He was the Best Man, I was assistant to the Best Man.
Wes: That is correct.

Me: Were you worried about starting a business with a friend?
Boone: The thing I like about Wes is that he gets along with everybody, first of all, and he loves CrossFit more than humanly possible. This guy is walking CrossFit incarnate. I love how fired up he is about it, that’s how I am too, but he’s much better about letting the whole world see how much he loves it. With those two being his super strong points and his background in fitness and sports and my background in business, it’s a good synergy of our strengths.
Wes: Boone says I get along with everybody, but this guy has got more friends in Austin, Texas than I’ve ever seen. There was never any hesitation, doing the gym with somebody, Boone was the perfect fit. He’s a great business man, a phenomenal athlete, disciplined in his fitness, we get along well. (My note: Gross, they love each other so much. Don’t they EVER fight?!)

Wes & Boone

Those are some handsome CrossFitters!

Me: Is there a clear division of labor?
Boone: Not really, there’s a priority, I guess. He’s the lead trainer, and I’m there in a supporting role. For the business side of things, accounting or website technical stuff, I take the lead. He does, we call it box lifting, he can move technical boxes.
Wes: Boone is what we call the e-machine.
Boone: Until we found out it was a cheap brand of PC, now we’re not using that term.
Wes: Obviously Boone has a ton of experience and knowledge on the e-business side of things, which is a huge aspect of the business of CrossFit and affiliates, he does the technical stuff, if there’s something I can help him with—type something up on Word and send it over—he’ll make it look nice. I do the programming and I take the lead on the training aspect of it because that’s where my expertise is.
Boone: Every other business I’ve started, there have been clear business agreements. But I knew with Wes that we both cared so much about what we were doing that we’d just work as hard as we could and we didn’t have to worry. Which has worked out really well.

Me: What’s the gym like?
Boone: It’s a perfect spot for what we’re looking for, we looked all over Austin before we found this place. It’s brand new, big open space, perfect for what we’re looking for. We’re going to have a 40-foot pullup bar from one side to the other so we can have 15 people doing pull-ups at once, which is going to be awesome. To watch, it’ll probably be brutal for the people doing it!

Me: Can all ages do CrossFit?
Boone: The main people that come out are 20 to 30 year old young professionals, but across the board everybody benefits from it.
Wes: We say that our needs as people don’t differ by type. Everybody can do these workouts, it’s more a matter of scaling to your fitness level. Is somebody that’s 75 going to do the same things that you or I or Boone is going to do as far as weight and reps? No, of course not, but we all need to squat, we all need to get up off the couch. That’s where the functionality comes in, it really is applicable to every population.
Boone: That’s a big thing, people look at the website and they’re scared because they see these crazy workouts, and they’re afraid they’re not going to be able to do it. But that’s what we’re here for, to help you take it to a level you can do and grow with it.

Me: How do you come up with workouts?
Wes: A lot of it looks random, but we’re looking at different styles of exercise, different metabolic pathways that we want to train each and every week. We use different tools and plug those into different places. We post the Workout of the Day on our website and you take the workout and do it on your own.

Me: Does the “recession” scare you?
Boone: Now is probably not an ideal time to start a business with the recession and all, but people are always going to need to be in good shape. If you look at the nation as a whole, the trend is starting to change, people are starting to put a lot more emphasis on fitness. The times are coming, I mean, we’ve had a great reception in the Austin area.Austin’s a great city for fitness. It’s a great time to throw something down south, there’s a huge need for CrossFit in the area and people have been loving it. We’re confident. Positive.

Me: What’s a gym membership cost?
Boone: Memberships start at $150/month. A lot of people get sticker shock when they see that, because they’re used 24 Hour Fitness where it’s $30, $40, $50 dollars a month. But if you look at what you’re getting, this is pretty much unlimited personal training. If you do personal training somewhere else its 50 up to 150 dollars an hour, we’re looking at: if you come 3 times a week, 4 weeks a month, you’re looking at $600-$1200 somewhere else. So $150 dollars is a small price to pay. We offer first class free, so anybody can try it, no obligation, and see if you like it. If you do it and think it’s worth 150 dollars, we’d love to have you, if not, our feelings aren’t going to be hurt.
Wes: We do that first class because we want people to come try it out and be exposed to it, because we think this is the premier way to train and be fit. We wouldn’t be doing it if we didn’t believe in it 100%.

Me: What’s the format like?
Wes: Class-like format, it’s a group setting. Group warmup, go through a skill session. We’ll be teaching a lot of the movements, because they aren’t commonly done, people don’t know how to do them correctly.
Boone: The funny thing is, they’re natural movements, but just the way we live, sitting in front of a computer all day, the body gets away from that, so we try to take it back to natural movement that’s healthy for the body.
Wes: Right, so then we go into the workout as a group, there’s always going to be—we’re going to be there pushing and supporting you—but the beauty of it is everybody else around you. It feels back like football in college or high school, that team aspect. Just like on a team, when your teammates are around you and they’re pushing it, you wanna do that much more. You wanna do that much better. You want to perform for everybody in the group and within the CrossFit community.
There are 4 evening classes a night, starting at 4:30. In the morning it’s more up in the air, we’re looking at doing more of an open-gym style where people can come in. We’ll still be there, but you can come and go.

Me: What are your future plans?
Boone: We’re considering boot camp for the future, we’re trying to focus on the gym right now and make that a success first, then we definitely have plans for doing boot camp.
Wes: I think every day Boone and I tell each other something, “oh we should do this!” We’re trying to take everything one step at a time. I’d love a CrossFit Kids program. I think one untapped community is sports and performance in high schools. The bootcamp is definitely on the docket, living in such a nice city year round like this, people want to be outside. Right now it’s just focused on getting this gym off the ground.

Me: Do you guys worry about your youth affecting starting a business?
Boone: I quit my “real job” two years ago and started my first business. I don’t think there’s any right age to start businesses, if you look at the super wealthy people, I’ve read a bunch of their biographies, they all started their first businesses when they were ten, twelve years old out of their house with their parents helping them. So I’m actually behind the curve!
I love it, it’s not for everybody, but when I see something like this where you can help people out and see that you’re actually making a difference, that’s the best part. You hear somebody say how their body has changed or how great they feel about themselves, it’s awesome. You don’t get that working in a cubicle.
Wes: I’ve never been one to shy away from risks. I spent four years in college preparing to be a football coach, and then I moved to Paris for three months and was a bike tour guide over there, then I moved back here and went to Chicago, managed a Segway tour company, so it’s just kind of a natural thing for me. Maybe it’s lack of intelligence on my part, when I see something I’d like to do and I enjoy, I just go for it.
Boone: That’s the best part, so many people are miserable out there and just staying with the status quo. Finding something that we like and making a life out of it, I don’t see much risk in that. It’s just money really, but money will happen, there’s always jobs out there. I’d rather be happy with just a little bit on the table.
Wes: We’re pursuing excellence with what we do, we believe in what we do. My belief is that if we pursue that excellence and do everything with that air of excellence to it, then the money aspect will follow suit.

Me: You guys live together too?
Boone: Yeah, we do pretty much hang out 24 hours a day. We haven’t killed each other yet so things can only get smoother as the business stabilizes! We’ve knocked out pretty much all our major goals for having the gym open, we’ve made a ton of progress. We’re well ahead of where we thought we’d be. We’ve been really lucky and had so much help from so many people.

Check them out online: CrossFit Austin or hit their gym at Slaughter & 35ish: 8708 South Congress, 78745

Disclaimer: You guys know I love CrossFit, and I must reveal that I don’t work out at CrossFit Austin’s gym–it’s too far from my house. I work out at CrossFit Central, and I love the community Central has built. I’m doing the Spartan 300 Challenge, and it’s ridiculous (awesome). CrossFit Austin is definitely developing the same kind of strong community down south. And I still try to do everything I can with CrossFit Austin, including Murph Day!

April 21, 2009

Earth Day!

In an effort to prep you for Earth Day tomorrow (Wednesday), here’s a rundown of the places that are offering giveaways, celebrations, and a free workout:

  • H-E-B or Central Market: Swap five plastic bags for a reusable one at any H-E-B or Central Market. H-E-B says it aims to bring in 1.5 million plastic bags by giving away 300,000 reusable bags from 3 to 7 pm. Offer limited to one bag per customer.
  • lululemon (6th & Lamar): First 30 guests to bring in their lululemon bag on Wednesday (Earth Day) will receive a surprise.
  • Whole Foods Downtown: CrossFit with Carey Kepler presented by lululemon. CrossFit (by CrossFit Central) on the rooftop patio from 6:30-7:30pm, wear sneakers and prepare to get worked out–and totally inspired by Carey’s buff bod.

  • Vegetarian Earth Day Birth Day: Meet at Butler Park with the fountains by The Long Center. The view from the top of this hill is beautiful, bring a blanket, a picnic, Bring your own food for this picnic, there will be birthday cake and bike rides!
  • Stubb’s: Earth Day Benefit Concert for the Hill Country Conservancy
  • Guster

April 17, 2009

Freakin’ Full Weekend

First and foremost,

the weekend has already been entirely usurped by the joy that is the Texas Hill Country Wine + Food Festival. I heard Thursday night’s Culinary Masters dinner was exquisite, and tonight’s Stars Across Texas Grand Tasting promises to be the glitziest of the events, held at the Long Center. Among Saturday’s full schedule of events, the marquee is a Rare and Fine Wine Auction at the Four Seasons, and Sunday’s main attraction is the Sunday Fair–a tasting and sampling extravaganza out at the Salt Lick, where chefs get to relax and roll up their sleeves as they interact with fair-goers. A lot of the events are already sold out, but a few tickets remain–check the website for details.

If wine and food isn’t your thing (who are you?!), shopping might hit the spot:

  • The Lone Star Ladies host a crafty shopping event downtown complete with cupcakes, massages, facials, and goody bags. Just $8 to shop and pamper yourself!
  • The C3 Outfitters host their April Event Saturday & Sunday
    Everything* is just $10 bucks–except one $12.50 item. Jeans, tees, hoodies and more are just ten bucks. $5 off for people who follow them on Twitter.  Crockett Center, 10601 N. Lamar Blvd., Austin, TX 78753 (across from Chuy’s)

Or, how about some outdoor music?

  • Do512 Spring BBQ: Saturday from 5-9pm @ Do512 HQ (S Lamar) for beer-braised brisket tacos, burgers and dogs (including veggie burgers), other tasty treats, and vodka-soaked watermelon! Drinks provided by Lone Star Beer, Sweet Leaf Tea and Savvy Vodka. Music by DJ Thibault. RSVP Required
    $10 Suggested Donation will benefit Groundwork Music Project, providing free music lessons to Austin children who could not otherwise afford them.
  • The 12th annual Austin Reggae Festival: 2 days of music, food, arts & crafts and fun at Auditorium Shores, celebrating Bob Marley and supporting the Capital Area Food Bank, an organization that brings food to thousands of Central Texas families each year.
    Performers on Saturday, April 18 include:
    Channel One (12:30)
    Subrosa Union (2:00)
    Bandulus (3:30)
    Mau Mau Chaplains (5:00)
    Grimy Styles (6:30)
    The Skatalites (8:00)Performers on Sunday, April 19 include:
    The Reddies (12:30)
    Don Chani (2:00)
    Radio La Chusma (3:30)
    Tribal Nation (5:00)
    Los Skarnales (6:30)
    Wailing Souls (8:00)
    For more information visit austinreggaefest.com
  • Reggae Fest

Love Mama Earth?

  • I almost forgot that Saturday is Earth Day, but fret not–I remembered in time to post this link: austinearthday.com and to remind you to head downtown tomorrow morning, rain or shine, for a stellar Earth Day celebration. If you hit the Farmer’s Market, I hear Milagro Eggs are the only way to go.

Me?

I’ll be attending a rainy day FREE CrossFit Workout Under The Bridge (UTB) at 8:30am, hopefully playing some MUD FOOTBALL (with any luck!), hitting the new Roaring Fork at the Arboretum’s soft opening, doing Sunday Fair at the Salt Lick, and practicing with Blondes v Brunettes (again, could be Mud Football). Whew! Maybe I can squeeze some shopping in too …

April 13, 2009

100 Pushup Challenge

Y’all know that I’m into CrossFit (BTW: Free CrossFit Central UTB & Indoor workouts (capped at 30 ppl) this Saturday! Here to RSVP for gym or get info on UTB or email Alicia at aliciagolinghorst@crossfitcentral.com), but I’m pretty quiet about what I’m gaining from it, how hard it is on some days, and so on. Not so for an awesome friend of mine, Melissa Joulwan. She runs the witty, gritty, self-aware, poignant blog The Clothes Make the Girl.

Besides being an all-around badass for what she does–CrossFit, running, roller derby, making music, playing in bands–I admire her most for what she doesn’t do: she doesn’t hesitate to be herself. For all her writing about working on accepting who she is, I can’t name someone who is more in tune with herself than Mel. She’ll tell you how she almost quit something and didn’t; she’ll tell you if she almost quit something and did. She’s refreshingly honest and sincere. I adore her fast-paced writing style, and I get motivation and inspiration from her words.

I am now enrolled in her 100 Pushup Challenge, a challenge that is taken from the site Hundred Pushups but completely Mel-ified by adding in a team/accountability aspect. By the end of 6 weeks, 30+ of “us” will be on our way to doing 100 consecutive pushups. I’m thrilled, and it’s one of those things I think I want to do but never actually DO –until someone like Mel comes along.

So add her blog to your RSS or click her link on the side of my page every day, whatever it takes to get you there–reading The Clothes Make the Girl will make you more self-aware, and, in turn, more self-confident. Thanks, Mel!

April 1, 2009

lululemon offers Free Fitness

Weird Wednesdays are back at lululemon, starting this afternoon with Brooke’s Bootcamp on top of Whole Foods from 6:30-7:30pm. Don’t know what Brooke’s Bootcamp entails, but sounds fun, and who wouldn’t want to hit the WF salad bar afterward?

Today also marks the first day you can shop lululemon online, so all you online-shopping-addicts (erm, uh, NOT ME) can get the fingers working on some workout gear. http://lululemon.com/shop/index.php … um, THANK GOD THIS IS AN APRIL FOOL’S JOKE. The 9-year-old KidPix design is a total throwback to the mid-nineties when everyone thought they could “design” a website. But does this mean that online shopping is also an April Fool’s joke? That does not make me happy.

As usual, the yoga-wear store on 6th & Lamar offers free Saturday yoga from 8:30-9:30am, this month Leigh of Love Yoga Co-op teaches.

Sunday is the first day for the new lululemon run group for ALL-level runners. Be at the store @ 9am for the inaugural run!

March 26, 2009

Three FREE CrossFit Workouts!

This Saturday there is a UTB: Free Community Workout at Town Lake and two Free CrossFit Indoor workouts at the CrossFit Central facility! Both workouts are open to everyone, but the Indoor ones require an RSVP and are almost full already, so do it STAT if you’re into that!

UTB: Free Community Workout
8:30-9:30am
Under the Bridge on the Hike and Bike Trail (Map)
No RSVP necessary

CrossFit Indoor Workout
8-9am OR 9-10am
@ The CrossFit Central Facility (Map)
Limited to 30 people RSVP to Nicole Hughes at nicolehughes@crossfitcentral.com

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