No, I tried that after bigboobies247 didn't work. I guess you guys will just have to take my word for it. I mean, it's not like I was bending bars or anything.
Home gym here.
I've seen the bros, been the bros, noticed the gym whores and been with them a time or two. I'm in my 30's now, married with kids, I get it done at home and then go inside and flex for my wife. She laughs, the kids laugh, I go take a shower. It's better this way.
Of course it would! This is a hunting forum. You are talking about a glorified buzzard. Maybe a bird watchers forum would be more outraged.
Was it wrong, yes. Do wind turbines kill a ton of raptors/birds every year, yep. Does anything happen to those "green" corporations, nope...
We aren't disagreeing at all. I would choose the pup from number 2 as well. I'm not against testing at all. I look at titles and lineages when considering my own dogs. But that is not the only thing I am considering.
Again, I made a comment to a post that said to avoid non-testing...
NA tests are great. But there are guys who spend an inordinate amount of time training a dog for an NA test which kind of strip the "natural ability" out of the test, doesn't it?
Tests can be another useful metric to help find a good dog or weed out a bad one. But they are not the silver...
Right, but you did say to avoid breeders who don't test "at all cost", which is why I made the comments.
Caveats with everything. Hedge your bets best you can and roll the dice.
I'm curious why you would say that?
To me, I would rather buy a dog from the guy who hunts his dogs all season long over the guy who hunts his dogs twice a year but runs every test in the country. Unless, of course, I was looking for a test dog, then that might be different.
It has been...
I liked everything about LMNT except the price.
I found and started using Redmond Re Lyte. The price is much more palpable and the flavors are very similar.
Nearly every training plan mentions/recommends doing some form of cross-training to supplement your running days and overall fitness to include leg workouts. Cross-training helps prevent injuries. Rucking, as long as it isn't overdone, could be a very beneficial recovery/cross-training...
Are you training to win the marathon?
If not, then I think rucking would be a great benefit to your overall health, including your running. I do not think it will hinder your running performance unless you are overtraining.