Wondering what everyone’s favourite gym exercises are for mountain hunting

I don’t have a “favorite” but F45 has been kicking my old man butt for a while. Feel better than I have in years.
 
It’s out of the gym but I like to run stairs. I get the cardio I need to hustle on hikes when needed and then swap with a loaded pack for the other muscles.
 
I have been going to gym consistently for 2 years and have gained a lot of strength and discipline from it. I do a simple push/pull/leg split.

I have been focusing more on squats and core strength. But I am wondering what else everyone else does that translates to helping with mountain hunting and heavy pack outs


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Sled drags forward and backwards are something I add in, as are banded step-ups.
 
I’ve tried both. My gym has a treadmill that goes to 30% that I’ve used a few times. I’m sure both are equally great from a cardio perspective. On the treadmill, I felt more activation from the hamstrings and calves compared to the stairclimber, which seemed to work quads and glutes more.

The unit I’m hunting this fall doesn’t have much by way of hiking trails, but lots of steep hills that I’ll need to bomb straight up and down. That was part of my motivation to try the stairmaster.
Second all of this. As much as I hate cardio I’ve had to add it in to the routine since moving to a lower, flatter location. I’ve found alternating between the treadmill and stair master have helped a lot.
 
Turkish get-ups have been great for core strength across multiple positions, helps me feel more stable in bad terrain with a heavy pack. Sandbag get-ups make for a pretty good endurance grind too.
 
Turkish get-ups have been great for core strength across multiple positions, helps me feel more stable in bad terrain with a heavy pack. Sandbag get-ups make for a pretty good endurance grind too.
Turkish getups are awesome, those are a constant part of my routine. I like doing them with my 70lb kettlebell.

Another exercise that seems to really help is slant board squats, they really help me hit the inner legs around the knees and have really my my beat up knees feel solid.
 
Turkish getups are awesome, those are a constant part of my routine. I like doing them with my 70lb kettlebell.

For a while I did the Pavel program doing 10x10 single arm swings followed by 10 get ups, alternating arms on each set. I was rock solid at 24kg, and comfortable at 32kg.

Then I went to 40kg. I always felt like I was one momentary slip of focus and concentration away from something bad happening when using 40. I eventually gave it up.

Another exercise that seems to really help is slant board squats, they really help me hit the inner legs around the knees and have really my my beat up knees feel solid.

I haven’t done slant board squats, but I have recently gone back to squatting on balls of feet with a narrow stance, what used to be called deep knee bends in calisthenics. For years we were told not to do this, but as long as I go slow and don’t bounce out of the bottom (usually do a slight pause in the bottom while maintaining tension) my knees feel better.

It makes my knees feel even better to add an isometric hold by sitting in the “wall sit” or “invisible chair” for about a minute before each set of knee bends.

I don’t advise anyone to load balls of feet squats with a barbell on their back, but they load amazingly well with a dumbbell in the goblet position or a barbell in the Zercher position. Doesn’t take much weight to feel them either.
 
For a while I did the Pavel program doing 10x10 single arm swings followed by 10 get ups, alternating arms on each set. I was rock solid at 24kg, and comfortable at 32kg.

Then I went to 40kg. I always felt like I was one momentary slip of focus and concentration away from something bad happening when using 40. I eventually gave it up.



I haven’t done slant board squats, but I have recently gone back to squatting on balls of feet with a narrow stance, what used to be called deep knee bends in calisthenics. For years we were told not to do this, but as long as I go slow and don’t bounce out of the bottom (usually do a slight pause in the bottom while maintaining tension) my knees feel better.

It makes my knees feel even better to add an isometric hold by sitting in the “wall sit” or “invisible chair” for about a minute before each set of knee bends.

AI don’t advise anyone to load balls of feet squats with a barbell on their back, but they load amazingly well with a dumbbell in the goblet position or a barbell in the Zercher position. Doesn’t take much weight to feel them either.
For sure, personally the 32kg kettlebell is my heaviest one and o don’t have any desire to mess with a heavier one. I know pavel talks about doing SS with a 48kg kettlebell but owning one of those isn’t something I’m going to do right now. I find the 24 and 32 kg ones give enough stimulus to build some muscle and endurance just fine.

As for the deep knee bend things, I’m sure the muscles used are different between balancing on the balls of your feet and having your heels firmly planted so you can push off of them. When I keep my feet fairly close together and even point my toes in slightly, I really feel it on the he muscles directly around my knees. For me it really helps.
 
Finished 40 mile plus Gila Wilderness trek, 6 nights.
Been much more focused at gym since June.
Exercises with carry over, and why, in my humble opinion:
Deadlifts, standard & Romanian, and squats: benefit from over all stability and strength in legs, glutes, and core. My glutes are not sore post hike. Plus, I really do feel that those compounds lifts are T-boosting at my 59.5 years of age.
Calf raises, done heavy: I couple the effectiveness of these with some walks, runs and two long, generally unproductive slogs searching for Arizona backcountry doves.
...and perhaps any back and trapezius exercises that help carry a backpack.
 
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