Cycling
More Bodybuilding Training Tips From Mick Hart
Hi Mick,
I\’ve been having mild problems with my elbows for a while now. After a bit of online investigation all the symptoms point to Tennis or Rather Golfers elbow in my case as the elbows are effected on the inside of the arm. The pain extends to the muscle in the forearm and has recently caused me to have difficulty lifting anything heavy. I have ordered a couple of elbow supports to try and help but my main question is have any of you trained with this problem and how did you get round it? Apparently it can take up to year to come right but meanwhile I still want to train my arms etc.
Cheers Mick, Davy.
Hi Davy,
Sadly yes I have had this problem for years as have many of us and it is a pain in the er elbow to say the least. Truth be told the only way to heal this problem fully is to rest it for as long as possible. Now that is the answer that we don\’t want to hear admitted but in truth it is THE only real way for it to heal fully.
However, you and I know that you will not fully rest it so there has to be alternatives that you can do to at least ease the problem and there are.
Of course elbow pads will help, they do me a great deal and hot and cold heat treatment is also a bonus because it helps to increase the blood flow through that area and fresh blood will clean the damaged tissue resulting in a cleaner heal. All these things will help with time AND lower intensity in your training too.
Dropping the heavy weights for a time and using lighter, faster movements will greatly increase the blood flow a major factor in the recovery process – this must be noted.
From a more personal point I found that training lighter and more carefully through the problem did eventually ease enough to assist the healing at a faster rate – mainly because I am a stubborn bastard at the end of the day
Train hard and be strong, Mick.
Hi Mick,
Can you explain to me what advantages \”Split\” systems have…
Cheers, Dean.
Hi Dean,
The \”Split\” systems can vary so much but in this case and for the record the split would be as follows:
You would train on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday then the particular rest day in this case and for this part of the week would be the Thursday of course. Now after this rest day on this week you would then start the circuit again on the Friday and include the Saturday and Sunday off – the next rest day would fall on the Monday etc.
The example for two weeks etc would be:
Train Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, REST THURSDAY followed by: Train Friday, Saturday and Sunday REST MONDAY followed by: Train Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday REST FRIDAY followed by: Train Saturday, Sunday and Monday REST TUESDAY
This particular system suits me down to the ground when I use it because it also brings some variety into my training week fueled by the variety that the different days can give plus the energy levels will ebb different most occasions. This variety can help boost a workout in my opinion as it prevents them from becoming to stale through boredom – \”same day – different shit\” type of thing.
Another point about this type of split is that it allows me to change the training system from a dual part to a single body-part a day system if I want – for the larger groups that is anyway. I can add such body-parts as leg biceps and calves into as I see fit. I like this type of system a lot. zero to British Championship qualifier in less than 1 year.
Holidays to Iceland, Where the Viking Spirit Smoulders
Iceland holidays take you to a colony of the Vikings, where you can follow the trails of the Viking sagas and witness the Norse tradition played out in exuberant festivals.
Vikings! Imagine a gigantic fire the size of a house with a throng of tattooed men in roaring drunken song. Nowadays, such sights are reserved for Iceland’s holiday festivals to celebrate midsummer, such as on the volcanic the isle of Vestmannaeyjar. There will be no longboat aflame though; instead the locals heap wooden pallets into a two-storey bonfire and drench it in petrol. You’ll find no horned helmets here either – at least none to be taken seriously – this iconic headgear is a fiction: the Norsemen never wore them.
The modern population of Iceland has roots in Scandinavian, British and Celtic ancestry, descending from the first Norse settlers and the slaves they brought to Iceland from the nations had they invaded before coming here.
When the first Vikings came to Iceland from Norway, they would have recognised something familiar in the landscape; like the land of their origin, Iceland is edged with fjords and covered with rugged snowfields. But, like every modern visitor on a holiday to Iceland, they must have been puzzled and amazed by the geysers. It was because of these strange geothermal phenomena that the Vikings gave Reykjavik its name, which means “smoky bay”.
Not far from Reykjavik is the Althing amphitheatre at Thingvellir National Park, the centre of Icelandic Viking tradition. Many package holidays to Iceland will bring you to this UNESCO World Heritage Site as part of a tour to see where the medieval chieftain priests settled disputes and brought a semblance of democracy to their burgeoning nation.
The Logberg, or ‘rock of law’, served as a stage for making speeches, and was the focus for discussing the laws of the land. Although the majority of Scandinavian settlers in Iceland were more farmers and traders than rampaging pillagers, it was nonetheless a time where bad blood between tribes meant a cycle of murder and revenge. This early parliament set about bringing some order to that unforgiving society.
From around the year 930, thirty nine representatives from the all populated corners of the country would assemble here annually to discuss issues of power. For some, this meant a hazardous two-week journey crossing glaciers and fording rivers. Even in modern Iceland, the first pagan parliament remains a place of pilgrimage, both for people on Iceland holidays and for the natives who consider Althing a national monument.
The Thingvellir landscape surrounding Althing is also marked for UNESCO preservation. This is a wide green valley with misty mountains in the distance, where the ground is broken by knuckles of rock and channels of glassy water. There are faults here in the bedrock caused by the separation of the earth’s crust where two landmasses are moving slowly but steadily apart. This phenomenon is a popular attraction for ‘Golden Circle’ tours as part of holidays to Iceland, where tourists can peer into canyons and witness where the country is distancing itself from Europe and its Norse origins.
But the Viking influence is not restricted to this Southwest region of Iceland. Holidays that take in any of the country’s coastline will likely observe the Norse seafaring spirit on show in the fjords and the harbours of fishing villages. Holidays to Iceland’s West region of Borgarfjordur, ‘the saga valley’, will encounter the many historical Viking sites situated here among the waterfalls, hot springs and glacial valleys that Iceland is famous for.