Prepping for float trip

madtinker

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jan 8, 2023
Messages
182
I’ve gotten a lot of good info here on rucking, and I’ve made great strides in my fitness for rucking and general strength and endurance.

My buddy got a float permit for next year and we are planning a mule deer hunt around the float trip. I am the only one with much rafting experience, but it’s been over ten years since I was on the water. This will also be a bigger raft than I’ve used before.

The goal is to design a workout routine that maintains rucking fitness while adding an element of endurance to my upper body workouts. I do pushup variations and pull-ups. On a river raft I was taught to face downriver, so most of the day you row with a pushing motion at low intensity, but when rapid maneuvering is needed you backstroke with a pulling motion.

So I currently incorporate pulling as pull ups. I’ll need to add rows. I do pushing as pushups of various flavors and handstand pushups. I need to add dips just for variety and wider range of motion. With variations of these exercises I think I can cover basic strength.

Suggestions for increasing endurance? I can do rowing workouts on a machine maybe once a week. I’ve considered running with weights (start off at a pound and work up), and try to focus on range of motion. Other ideas?
 
This is out of my wheelhouse, so take it for what it’s worth. But I’ve viewed pull-ups and push-ups as muscular endurance exercises, once you get past a certain point where you have the strength necessary to complete the exercise. (Call it 40 push-ups and 10 pull-ups.) After that point, to increase strength you’d need to add weight with fewer reps. So maybe continue high volume pull-ups and push-ups, but add overhead press and bent over rows, with progressive increases in weight for strength.

Would strongly advise against weighted running - not effective, because you can and should train endurance and strength separately, and theres a very high risk of injury.

I have very little experience rafting, so I have no idea what the best training for that would be.
 
I’m working through a calisthenics progression where my max reps is in the 10-20 range or even less, but regular old pushups are endurance; that’s a good point.

When I say run with weights, think the old-school heavy hands workouts. A pound or two in each hand with a large range of motion. It was intended to boost cardio, but my idea was that it would simulate the repetitive effort of rowing. I would never run with a weighted pack; my knees wouldn’t take it.

Rows are definitely entering the rotation. I’ll find a bodyweight version that works for me then work to increase intensity.
 
Absolutely do not run with weights. Rucking is a perfectly good substitute for building muscular endurance.
 
Back
Top