T-Shirts

It's past time for us to come out with PVCF t-shirts. Now, you guys will be the ones wearing them (we hope), so we figure you ought to have a say in what's going to be emblazoned across your chests. Here's what we have for front-of-the-shirt slogans (the back'll sport the PVCF logo)--sound off in comments, let us know what you like, and what you absolutely hate.

  1. Fast. Furious. Functional.
  2. If it doesn't make you stronger, it'll probably kill you.
  3. Yes grunting.
  4. I got my ass beat by a girl. (On the back: Cindy. Helen. Fran. Linda. Come meet the girls at...)
  5. "Know how sublime a thing it is to suffer and be strong" - H.W. Longfellow
  6. ...how many pull-ups?!
  7. Tabata this
  8. It's getting ugly in here
  9. One love. One bucket.
  10. Anything else is routine
  11. "Friends will come and go, but two hundred pounds is always two hundred pounds" - Rollins
  12. Would rather die than quit
  13. Get your WOD on
  14. "Be patient and tough; someday this pain will be useful to you" - Ovid
  15. wods with muscle
  16. "Never, never, never quit!" - Winston Churchill
T-shirts will be white print on navy, 50/50 blend, probably American Apparel. We want to make shirts you want to wear. You guys are our best advertisements!

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How Sublime a Thing

THE NIGHT is come, but not too soon;
And sinking silently,
All silently, the little moon
Drops down behind the sky.

There is no light in earth or heaven 5
But the cold light of stars;
And the first watch of night is given
To the red planet Mars.

Is it the tender star of love?
The star of love and dreams? 10
Oh no! from that blue tent above
A hero's armor gleams.

And earnest thoughts within me rise,
When I behold afar,
Suspended in the evening skies, 15
The shield of that red star.

O star of strength! I see thee stand
And smile upon my pain;
Thou beckonest with thy mailed hand,
And I am strong again. 20

Within my breast there is no light
But the cold light of stars;
I give the first watch of the night
To the red planet Mars.

The star of the unconquered will, 25
He rises in my breast,
Serene, and resolute, and still,
And calm, and self-possessed.

And thou, too, whosoe'er thou art,
That readest this brief psalm, 30
As one by one thy hopes depart,
Be resolute and calm.

Oh, fear not in a world like this,
And thou shalt know erelong,
Know how sublime a thing it is 35
To suffer and be strong.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, "The Light of Stars"

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"I've Seen the Word 'Metcon' Thrown Around a Lot Here, Please Tell Me What It Means."

It's Week Three of our Core Curriculum class series. Gentlemen (and women [and womyn, this is the Happy Valley after all]), welcome to Metcon Conditioning.

"Metcon" is short for "metabolic conditioning," which is "... the CrossFit methodology for improvement of the [body's energy] systems through a variety of functional exercises executed at high intensity." (Here's a link to a cogent discussion of the topic on the CrossFit messageboards.) Metabolism is the sum of the anabolic (building up) and catabolic (breaking down) chemical processes by which the body turns food and oxygen into usable energy. Basically, your muscle fibers have a small amount stored of a molecule called ATP (adenosinetriphosphate); when called into action (say, lifting a weight a single time), various complicated processes break down the ATP for energy. If more action is called for, there are still more complicated systems in place to replenish this very necessary molecule, either sans oxygen (anaerobically), or in chemical processes that "burn" oxygen. Your body can handle this at a certain rate, and then it gets overwhelmed and fatigue sets in. However, you can train your body to produce ATP more quickly...hence, the conditioning. What we've all been taught to think of as "cardio" uses one of the body's energy systems, the oxidative, at a relatively slow and steady rate.

CrossFit trains that, sometimes, with long, monostrucural efforts, like the 5k row from two days ago. But more often, we'll give you tasks to perform that involve short bursts of intense activity followed by rest (sometimes the rest is built into the prescribed workout, and sometimes it's as-needed, like when you break up an assigned 100 pull-ups into sets of ten). The better you get at these, the faster you can do them, or the more you can get done in a certain length of time, the better conditioned your metabolism is. Get it?

Today's WOD kick things off with a bang. Following the work of one Izumi Tabata, we're going to do

Tabata Something Else
Do eight intervals of twenty seconds of work followed by ten seconds of rest of the following exercises:

Pull-ups
Push-ups
Sit-ups
Squats

Your score is your combined total of reps from all exercises. Post your score to comments.

As prescribed, you're to move from one exercise to the next with no rest. As a practical matter, if necessary we'll institute a one-to-two minute rest between exercises.

Check out Rob Miller from CrossFit Central Santa Cruz busting out a score of 350:



This video and many, many more can be found on the CrossFit Exercises and Demos page.

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Press It. Push It. Jerk It.

Tonight we're learning all about the three main overhead lifts. (The more exotic Sotts press we'll leave for another day.) The guaranteed good times at the end of class: a reprise of yesterday's workout, Feel The Love:

"Feel the Love"
Five rounds for time:
10 Push press
10 Box jump
10 Sumo DL High Pull

Post your loads and time to comments.

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Can You Feel The Love Tonight?



Well, can you? If by "love" you mean 75 deadlifts and 75 push-ups, then yes, I'd dare say some of you were feeling the love. Happy Valentine's Day!

7 PM Class WOD: "It's Getting Ugly in Here"
For time:
25 Deadlifts
5 Push-ups
20 Deadlifts
10 Push-ups
15 Deadlifts
15 Push-ups
10 Deadlifts
20 Push-ups
5 Deadlifts
25 Push-ups

Credit goes to Carolyn J. for naming the workout...No doubt! That just might make it onto a t-shirt. Then, we had a small crew that had all kinds of fancy weekend plans which meant they'd be missing class Friday and Saturday, so we did a preemptive make-up at 8PM. Sandy named this one

"Feel the Love"
Five rounds for time:
10 Push press
10 Box jump
10 Sumo DL High Pull

Whichever workout you did, post time and loads to comments, k?

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Fake Sugar Could Make You Fat

From the Wired Magazine Science Blog:

Artificial sweeteners don't have any calories, but they might make you fatter than real sugar.

In a study recently published by Purdue University psychologists in Behavioral Neuroscience, rats given saccharin-sweetened yogurt actually ate more and gained more weight than rats given regularly-sugared yogurt.

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Oh, man. Goodbye, Splenda, I hardly knew ye.

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Core Curriculum Day 5

Fantastic efforts from everyone today. You all astonish me with your ability to soak up and apply new information. We've got some firebreathers-in-the-making!

Today's workout:

"What a Bright, Bright, Sun-Shiny Day"
For time:
5 deadlifts
5 pushups
5 deadlifts
10 pushups
5 deadlifts
15 pushups
5 deadlifts
20 pushups
5 deadlifts
25 pushups

Post load and time to comments.

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Randy

Randy-th.jpg

Enlarge image

Randy Simmons, 51, a 27 year LAPD veteran and SWAT team member was killed February 6 in the line of duty. Our thoughts and prayers go out to Officer Simmons' wife and two children.

"Randy"

75 pound Power snatch, 75 reps for time.

Post time to comments.

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SNOW DAY

Go back to bed. Due to today's early morning ice storm, we're canceling our 8AM class. This is all supposed to melt off this afternoon, so come tonight, ready to rock.

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WOD Classes

You may have noticed that we've added a few slots on the schedule specifically for WODs. For now, ATTENDANCE IS BY INSTRUCTOR PERMISSION ONLY. To be considered, be ready to demonstrate technical mastery of the required movements. If you've never done a particular exercise, the day the WOD requires it is not the day to learn it. Please be sure to email us if you'd like to do the WOD; we won't necessarily be there unless we've got RSVPs.

Today's WOD is (yet another) Hero Workout. For those unfamiliar, CrossFit Hero WODs memorialize CrossFit-associated soldiers, Marines, and SF operators who've been killed in the line of duty. Usually they are real-humdingers, to say the least. They should be done as prescribed, if at all possible. No matter how hard it is, think of the brave, unfortunate man the WOD is named for, and push even harder.

"Nate"

SOC-Nate-Hardy-th.jpg

Chief Petty Officer Nate Hardy was killed Sunday February 4th during combat operations in Iraq. Nate is survived by his wife, Mindi, and his infant son Parker.

We're asking the CrossFit community to make donations to the "Nate Hardy Memorial Fund" in care of the Navy Federal Credit Union, Building 200, FTC Dam Neck, Virginia Beach, VA, 23461.

Complete as many rounds in twenty minutes as you can of:

2 Muscle-ups
4 Handstand Push-ups
8 2-Pood Kettlebell swings (one pood = approx. 35lbs)

Post rounds completed to comments.

For those coming to the 6 and 7PM Core Curriculum classes, we'll be reprising yesterday's squat fest. Come and get some!

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Know Squat

What is it about blogs (maybe it's just CrossFit blogs in particular) that inspires the rampant, indiscriminate use of puns in post titles?

A pun does not commonly justify a blow in return. But if a blow were given for such cause, and death ensued, the jury would be judges both of the facts and of the pun, and might, if the latter were of an aggravated character, return a verdict of justifiable homicide. ~Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table, 1852
Yeah, yeah. Okay, so today we kick off our PVCF Core Curriculum week 2: The Slow Lifts. In the morning class, Brett got his rack together, and Carolyn learned why breakfast is the most important meal of the day. Kudos to both for showing up on such a cold, cold morning.

There's quite a bit of technical info we have to impart tonight, and quite a few drills to do before the real work begins; make sure you're on time so you can get
in a full warm-up. Here's the workout:

Know Squat
Five rounds (not for time! recover fully before getting under the bar):
Back squat: 5 reps (increase weight each round)
Max rep pull-ups (or ring rows)

Post load and reps to comments.

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Muchas Gracias

Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU to everyone who came out for our free opening week. Our first three Core Curriculum classes covered the basics of bodyweight exercise, and it seemed like everyone got a little taste of shock-and-awe, CrossFit-style, as we ran them through a half-Cindy and a brutalizing burpee-fest. But there's so much more to learn, and we hope you'll join us as we cover, in the next three weeks, the proper form and mechanics for the slow lifts (the deadlift, the front and back squat, the overhead and bench press), the Olympic lifts (the clean and jerk, the snatch), proper use of kettlebells, Dynamax balls, and the C2 rower, strategies for maximizing your scores on some of CF's most blistering metcon workouts...the list goes on and on. $125 buys you a month of instruction that will change the way you train forever. Go to our Schedules and Fees page to sign up now. While you're at it, consider purchasing one of our "Founder" memberships--only a few spots remain!

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I Love the Smell of Burpees in the Morning

Kudos to Megan and Brett for making it out to our first 8AM class. It takes pluck and fortitude to do CrossFit so early in the day. So what was their reward? Burpees. Lots and lots of burpees. And they kicked ass! Brett finished the morning WOD in 8:02, Megan in 11:46. So I started thinking, "Hmmm, maybe that was a little too easy." I mean, we really need to cap bodyweight exercise week with something special, right? So here's what you're looking forward to, evening PVCF-ers. Enjoy :)

Everybody's Working for the Weekend
21-15-9 reps for time:
walking lunge
abmat sit-ups
handstand push-ups (sub as necessary)
burpees

Post time to comments.

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Handy HTML Calendar Now Available

See our Schedule and Fees page.

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Mission Accomplished!

For a CrossFit facility, one measure of success might be sending your clients home in such a metabolically-deranged haze that they forget their shoes:



Somebody's got some squishy socks on right now. It's pouring outside, and I bet those Timberlands would've been a lot more comfortable sloshing through puddles than a meshy pair of running shoes.

So yeah, Day 2 of our Core Curriculum Bodyweight Exercise Week seemed like a smashing success. We had many repeats from Monday, a few new faces showed up (Hey Matt!), everybody (including me) learned a trick or two, and fun was had by all when we prescribed a two-heat, ten-minute Cindy (that's as many rounds of 5 pull-ups, ten pushups, and 15 squats you can do in ten minutes). Just a little taste of the good times to come, my friends. Just you wait 'til Friday rolls around...you're gonna have a new favorite exercise, and it's spelled b-u-r-p-e-e-s. See you then!

P.S. Hey, if you did tonight's half-Cindy and can remember your score, how about posting it to comments? We've got some firebreathers-in-the-making...let's see the evidence.

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The People Have Spoken...

...and they're saying, We don't want morning classes. Who can blame them? Getting up early sucks. So no more morning classes (except for the one we're doing tomorrow at 7:30AM--ed.). At least until you, the people, change your minds and decide you really really want them. Then, if you want to train at the crack of dawn, we'll train at the crack of dawn. Just let us know. As much as we share your distaste for the morning hours, we're committed to our clients' needs.

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Strike a POSE

Jon Gilson of CrossFit Boston and Again Faster Equipment has just posted a great account of the recent POSE running certification:

"I have never run a 10k. The idea of six miles of pounding pavement appeals to me about as much as a waist-down hot waxing.

Until October, it was easy enough to avoid. No one asked me to run 10ks, and I never volunteered. Then something changed. In small Lucida Grande type, set above a picture of Annie Sakamoto, CrossFit was telling me to crank out a middle-distance run. Engaged in a heated battle for a dress-less Toronto Certification Seminar, I bristled at the thought. A 5k earlier in the month had left me with enough lateral knee pain to cripple a horse, and I had no desire to repeat the experience..." Read more
I've done my share and more of LSD (long, slow distance) running; every Friday night used to be Half-Marathon Friday. So, unlike Gilson, I never really minded the 5 and 10k runs that are occasionally assigned in the WODs. They just seemed like a good opportunity, as I plodded along, to catch up on the the mp3 audio books I can never pay attention to when I'm suffering through some metcon nightmare. But this POSE stuff sounds really interesting! I'd never given a thought to my running technique before. Either you're a great runner, I figured, with bones of superlight airplane aluminum, or you're not. But CrossFit is about pursuing virtuosity in every modality--even, maybe especially, the ones you kinda suck at.

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Wonders Never Cease

We opened our doors. People actually showed up. Will wonders never cease! HUGE thanks to Sandra, Haley, Wendell, Chris, Brandon, Zach, Hank, Carolyn and especially Megan and Brad for helping to make our first day of business such a success. Everybody worked hard, and just as important, really seemed to get it. I can't wait to watch you guys develop as athletes. What an honor to be part of that process. What a blast.

Don't worry, if you missed yesterday's Core Curriculum class, you have a chance to make it up this evening. At 6, 7, and 8PM, we'll be drilling the very fundamentals--the elements of the CrossFit warm-up. Come on down, and find out why there's a CrossFit t-shirt that brags, "Our warm-up is your workout."

One more thing: I hate to sound like a hectoring schoolmarm, but please try to be on time. We've got some necessary paperwork for you to fill out, and class starts promptly at five minutes past the hour. Get some!

Obligatory sales pitch: our Founder Memberships are flying out the door. My dramatic sense prevents me from telling you how many are left, but suffice to say, they won't last much longer. How could they? A year's training at half-price--what a bargain! ;)

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Now Witness the Power of This Fully Armed and Operational CrossFit Training Facility

Remember back in December, when we posted that we'd found a space in an old factory building? It looked like this:



It's kinda amazing what a month of 14 hour days can achieve.









That's Mjolnir, my 12lbs hammer. I <3 Mjolnir.



Yes, those are pillows bolted to the wall for wallball targets. Yes, they are image-coded according to difficulty. Are you an 8' pretty pony, or a 10' buck? (The froggy bear is not a target. We just taped him up there 'cause he got sassy with us.)



Sandy apologizes for the poor picture quality--her camera doesn't handle our moody, art-gallery-esque track lighting very well.

We've got the toys. Come and play.

PIONEER VALLEY CROSSFIT IS OPEN FOR BUSINESS. Of course, this week we're giving the store away--all classes are free. Please see our Schedule and Fees page for details. Me, I'm going to bed. First class is at 6:30 AM!

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3-2-1-GO!

We're THREE DAYS OUT from opening for our FREE WEEK OF CLASSES. (I feel like the Verizon Wireless guy: "CAN YOU HEAR ME NOW??") I wish I had time to post something more substantial, but we're scrambling to get everything ready. Doors will be open at 6:30 AM MONDAY the 4TH. Get some rest this weekend, and then show up ready to train hard!

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Say Grace

Today's WOD:

"Grace"

135 pound Clean and Jerk, 30 reps

Use 95 pounds, 65 pounds or broomstick as needed. Post time and load to comments.

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One More Reason to Get Off Your Butt and Into the Gym

From the BBC World News:

Sedentary life 'speeds up ageing'
A study of twins found those who were physically active during their leisure time appeared biologically younger than their sedentary peers.
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COUNTDOWN!

Dear Friends of Pioneer Valley CrossFit,

We're one week out from launch! On Monday, February 4th, at 6PM, we'll be opening for a free week of classes.

People will be coming in with a wide range of experience and abilities. CrossFit philosophy (and common sense) dictate that form and mechanics must be mastered before intensity is pursued, so this month, EVERY CLASS WILL BE A CROSSFIT CORE CURRICULUM CLASS. Over the course of twelve one-hour lessons, we'll be presenting all the basic elements of the CrossFit protocol (bodyweight calisthenics, the slow lifts, the Oly lifts, the kip, the rings, the C2 rower, kettlebells, tabatas, chippers, etc and etc), followed by SCALED versions of the WOD.* We don't want any cases of rhabdo in our opening week :) But have no fear: I guarantee even the scaled workouts will have you leaving sweat angels on the floor.

There will be 3 classes a night, 6-7-8pm, 3 days a week, M-W-F, and T-Th-Sat (also, 6:30 and 7:30AM classes M-W-F only--ed.). Monday's classes will be repeated on Tuesday, Wednesday's on Thursday, and etc. There will be a make-up class on Saturdays at noon.** A calendar will be posted on www.pioneervalleycrossfit.com shortly.

Like I said, the first week of three classes is free. If you want to continue on and complete our Core Curriculum, it's $125 for the rest of the month. After that, $125/month will buy you unlimited training sessions. For those wishing to stay on a 3-day-a-week schedule, it'll be a hundred bucks. Cash and checks please for February; after that, we'll be switching to a monthly EFT. Strictly month-to-month! No year-long contracts. Firemen, police officers, soldiers and EMTs get a 20% discount (except on Founder memberships--see below).

HOWEVER. We are offering a limited number of FOUNDER memberships. Ten of them, to be exact. $750 buys you 12 months' worth of unlimited training--that's half price! Oh, and a free t-shirt, when we get some made. I sound like a salesman, but it's definitely a deal. And in return you'll be helping PVC establish itself as the best functional fitness training facility in Western Massachusetts. These Founding Memberships will go fast; buy yours now on the Schedule and Fees page.

Thank you all so much for your interest and enthusiasm. Spread the word!

All the best,

Sandy & Sean

*Anyone who can demonstrate real mastery of the requisite movements and wants to do unscaled WODs can talk to me. We'll figure something out.

**A couple of people have written to ask about the possibility of morning or afternoon classes. If that's something you want, post to comments and let me know what times you're looking for. Again, we can probably figure something out.

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Questionable Contents

Sandy and I are on a day 1 WOD/day 2 max strength/day 3 WOD schedule, so the HQ-assigned CF Total will have to wait 'til tomorrow. Instead I came up with this, named in honor of our next door neighbors (Sorry, dudes! We'll try not to play Queens of the Stone Age so loud you hear it in your new digs on the other side of the building):

"Questionable Contents"

Five rounds for time of

400m Row
10 Ring Push-ups
15 20lbs wallball
20 Double-unders

My time: 18:03. Sandy did ring push-ups from the knees, used a 6lbs med ball, and did 100 single rope skips instead of the double-unders. Her time: 21:30. This one was a metabolic ass-kicker--my lungs haven't felt so scorched in a long time.

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PVCF FAQ

What is CrossFit, exactly?

CrossFit is "constantly varied, if not randomized, functional movements performed at high intensity." A strength and conditioning program developed by Greg Glassman in Santa Cruz, CA, it combines elements of weightlifting (both powerlifting and Olympic-style), gymnastics (movement drills and bodyweight calisthenics) and interval training to produce fitness that is "broad, general, and inclusive." The goal of CrossFit is to help both elite athletes and everyday people achieve "increased work capacity across broad time and modal domains."

Huh?


It's simple: we want you to be able to run faster, jump higher, pick up heavier objects, throw more accurately, and so on and so on. We want this for you for three reasons:

1. Being fit--that is, being capable of meeting all kinds of physical challenges--makes you feel better. A lot better. You'll have more energy during the day, and sleep more deeply at night.

2. It makes you look better.

3. Overcoming the many obstacles that stand between you and fitness (and they never end, because no matter how fit you are, you can always get fitter) will make you a more disciplined, more confident, and (somewhat paradoxically) more humble person. You know,better.

What is a WOD?

The WOD is CrossFit's "Workout of the Day." Each day when you walk into Pioneer Valley CrossFit (PVCF), you'll see a different workout posted on the whiteboard. WODs are constructed of exercises taken from the aforementioned "broad time and modal domains." For instance, a typical WOD might look something like this:

"In twenty minutes, do as many rounds as possible of a 400m row, 10 135lbs deadlifts, 10 pull-ups and 10 push-ups."
Twenty minutes, the duration of the workout, is the time domain. Another WOD might only take 8 minutes (really). A third (say, running 10k), might take upwards of an hour. "Modal domains" is simply the category of activity: running, climbing, lifting, etc. CrossFit specializes in not specializing. It's called "General Physical Preparedness."

WODs are usually done for points or for time. (For instance, in the previous example, if you completed all the prescribed exercises five times, your score would be five rounds.) This introduces a competitive aspect that makes CrossFit a sport: by comparing your results, you can compete with your friends, or athletes around the world, or just with yourself. CrossFit also has a series of "benchmark" WODs that appear regularly; by keeping track of repeated results, it's easy to chart your progress.

I haven't exercised in years, and I have to say, that workout you just described sounds totally impossible.

Don't worry. We won't expect you to be able to perform like that for awhile. It takes time to get stronger. But the great thing about CrossFit is that you can start from wherever you are; it's scalable to any ability level. For that same WOD, a sedentary sixty-five year-old woman might be tasked with "In ten minutes, briskly walk 150m, do 10 15lbs deadlifts, 5 knee push-ups, and 5 ring rows. If you finish with time on the clock, start over."

Getting stronger sounds good. But what about cardio?

People equate "cardio"--by which they generally mean low-intensity training of relatively long duration--with weight loss and aerobic "fitness". (This begs the question, "What is fitness?", succinctly answered here.) "Cardio" means slogging it out on the treadmill or elliptical machine for twenty minutes. But aerobic fitness (the body's ability to take in oxygen and use it in the production of energy) is most efficiently developed through short, high-intensity efforts, which force one's metabolism to adapt to stress and increase capacity. Put more simply: almost all CrossFit training is "cardio." Read more about this here.

Umm...maybe I should get in a little better shape before I try CrossFit.

There's no need to put it off. Come as you are. We'll show you the very basics, and help you take it from there.

Are you sure I can do this?

Yes.

Listen, I'm the first guy's buddy. I have been exercising for years--double-splits, six days a week--and I've got the workout logs to prove it. There's no way an eight minute workout is going to be enough for me.

Crossfit training is about intensity. In this case, we equate intensity with power output, as in the classic physics formula,

P = \frac{W}{t} \,

where power is a function of work (force x distance) divided by time. We're always trying to maximize our power output by increasing our workloads or reducing our times; this causes intense metabolic stress as our body's energy systems (phosphogenic, glycolytic, and oxidative) struggle to meet the demands that have been placed upon them. In keeping with Seyle's General Adaptation Syndrome, following a recovery period they display improved capacity.

Sorry, that was my CSCS talking. Just come try it out. Fran will make a believer of you.

What is the Zone Diet and why do you recommend it?

Alas, exercise alone is not enough to induce dramatic changes in body composition. "Eat less, exercise more" is a good start--weight loss really is a matter of expending more calories than you take in--but there's more to it than that. Different foods produce different hormonal reactions in the body. Ingested carbohydrates (especially high glycemic index carbs like bread and pasta) break down quickly into sugar, which elevates the level of insulin in the blood; consistently high blood insulin causes insulin resistance, which leads directly to obesity. Atkins and other diets address this by advising you to cut out carbs (nearly) altogether. But carbohydrates are an essential macronutrient, especially for athletic performance. Glycogen (stored carbohydrate) must be replenished in the muscles if we're to have the energy we need to work out. It has been the experience of thousands of CrossFitters that Barry Sears' Zone Diet best addresses this conundrum.

From the CrossFit Journal:

Nutrition plays a critical role in your fitness. Proper nutrition can amplify or diminish the effect of your training efforts. Effective nutrition is moderate in protein, carbohydrate, and fat. Forget about the fad high carbohydrate, low fat, and low protein diet. 70% carbohydrate, 20% protein, and 10% fat may work for your rabbit, but it won't do anything for you except increase your risk of cancer, diabetes, and heart disease or leave you weak and sickly. Balanced macronutrient and healthy nutrition looks more like 40% carbohydrate, 30 % protein, and 30% fat. Dr. Barry Sears' Zone Diet (http://www.drsears.com/) still offers the greatest precision, efficacy, and health benefit of any clearly defined protocol. The Zone diet does an adequate job of jointly managing issues of blood glucose control, proper macronutrient proportion, and caloric restriction the three pillars of sound nutrition whether your concern is athletic performance, disease prevention and longevity, or body composition. We recommend that every one read Dr. Sears' book Enter the Zone.
Short answer: anecdotally speaking, the Zone works.

Well, that all sounds good. But why does it cost so much to train at PVCF? My local Globo-Gym only charges half as much.

As the old adage goes, "You get what you pay for." Sure, your Planet Fitnesses and your Gold's Gyms have towel service, saunas, shiny Cybex machines, and lots and lots of treadmills...but none of those things are going to make you any fitter.
If you are a bodybuilder--that is, if you have strength trained for years and dieted so rigorously that your body-fat percentage is in the single digits--then it potentially makes sense to train individual muscles in isolation. The other case in which machine-based training makes sense is in rehab, when the body has become so disabled that it must be rebuilt brick by brick. But most of us are neither crippled nor on the verge of entering the Mr. Olympia competition, so why do we train as if either is the case? The answer is a combination of the gyms' desire to maximize profits, and our own desire to find workouts that don't involve work.

"The club owners bought into what the equipment industry told us," says Michael Scott Scudder, a former club owner and a leading consultant to the industry since 1991. And what the equipment makers ultimately told the gym owners was that if you stocked enough machines, you could do without as much one-on-one attention from trainers. "I don't think fitness happens best in isolation," says Steve Myrland, manager of Myrland Sports Training and a former strength coach for the University of Wisconsin and the San Jose Sharks. Various studies back this up, showing that people who exercise in groups maintain greater motivation to train than those who work out alone. "This is hard stuff, and it's a lot easier to share hard stuff than do it yourself. At the clubs, you are going to be turned loose on the machines, and a machine is like an isolation booth."


From Best Life Online: "Is Your Workout Wasting Your Time?"
Getting fit is a lot like learning to play a musical instrument. Anyone can sit at the piano and figure how to bash out "Chopsticks." Some people, without lessons of any kind, can go on to become competent (or even great) musicians. Most people, though, even those with real talent, benefit from instruction. Rather than losing time using trial-and-error to achieve desired results, a good teacher can quickly show how to play even the most complicated pieces.

With fitness training, especially CrossFit, quality instruction is even more important, because it's not just a matter of getting more results in less time; it's an issue of safety. Olympic-style weightlifting, for example, is complicated. Anyone can learn it, but to be done safely (and trying to move 100kg from floor to overhead shouldn't be done any other way), it needs to be taught, and coached, not just read about in a magazine.

At PVCF, you won't be left on your own to sink or swim. Every time you walk into the gym, you'll get top-quality instruction and be encouraged to push your limits, but always with safety foremost in mind.

Finally, PVCF is a community of like-minded self-strivers; you'll be amazed at what a different experience it is to work out with a group, instead of laboring in isolation. PVCF costs more than any Globo-Gym, because PVCF offers more. Way more.

Okay, I went to crossfit.com, checked out some of the videos, and I'm beginning to get pretty psyched about this. How do I get started?

Email us. Show up. See our Schedule and Fees page for more details.

What should I wear? What should I bring?

As Henry David Thoreau said, "Beware all enterprises that require new clothes." Luckily, you've probably already got everything you need for CrossFit. Shorts or sweatpants, t-shirts, and sneakers are appropriate. (No flosstards, please!) After the snow melts, running shoes would be helpful. Bring a towel, because you're definitely going to sweat. A bottle of water is a good idea, too.

Do you have a sauna, like my local Globo-Gym?

Not even a shower. Sorry. There are four bathrooms on our floor, though, so changing areas aren't a problem. For amenities, we have chalk, You'll-Be-Fine spray bottles, and a bucket in case Pukie the clown comes to visit.

I'm a loner, Dottie, a rebel. Can I come in and work out on my own?

No. If you're on the PVCF gym floor, you're under instructor supervision. Whether that's in a group class setting, or private training, is up to you. The flip side of the fact that we're not a dumbed-down Globo-Gym is that our equipment requires real know-how to be utilized safely; for everyone's sake, no one will be allowed to start trying out that cool H2H kettlebell juggling trick they saw on YouTube (unless, of course, you can talk your instructor into trying it out too).

More to come. Lynne Pitts's official CrossFit FAQ is here. Got any questions you want answered? Send them here.

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Nasty!

We're going to do our best to follow the workouts posted on CrossFit HQ. Today it was

"Nasty Girls"

3 rounds for time of:
50 Squats
7 Muscle-ups
135 pound Hang power cleans, 10 reps

Nasty Girls has one of the most famous video demos in CrossFit history. Check out a younger, less experienced, less uber-badass and entirely human Nicole Carroll suffering through the workout. Though it's obvious she's at the limit of her abilities, she simply refuses to give up...it's incredibly inspiring, and a great example of why CrossFit training is so special. If you did "Nasty Girls" today, post your time to comments here. And then while you're at it, fire up your email client and get on our mailing list.

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Tabata Stall Mat Cutting

Today, among other tasks, we sliced up three 3/4" thick rubber horse stall mats with a drywall saw--thank god for increased work capacity! It was grueling. When it was time to start busting out max effort snatches, it was a relief.

We had our first visitors! Chris, Eric, Matt and Liz came by this evening. Eric, who's been marooned for the last year in a Globo-gym, seemed like a kid on Christmas morning as he took in all our CrossFit-centric equipment. Chris and Matt are going to help us get our pull-up bar mounted, and man, it's good to have some professionals on your side. It's a wonder I have any fingers left after the last couple weeks; some people just should not be allowed around power tools.

Hey! Take a minute to get on our mailing list. We'll be making an announcement soon about our upcoming FREE FREE FREE week of classes, as well as offering first dibs on a very special (and very limited in number) opportunity to become a PVC founding member (hint: it involves a huge discount). Email us today!

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Bon Voyage, Motherf#*%er!

Things are really starting to pick up. Today Jon Gilson from Again Faster came by with our Oly bars, Dynamax balls, and kettlebells. Yesterday we got our shipments of bumper plates, plyoboxes, and our C2 rower. Tomorrow we're puttin