Fitness & Wellness 2022-09-06T10:46:53Z https://www.fitnessalertblog.com/feed/atom/ WordPress fitadmin https://www.fitnessalertblog.com <![CDATA[The Best Walking Treadmills To Add To Your Home Gym]]> https://www.fitnessalertblog.com/?p=1423 2022-09-06T10:46:53Z 2022-09-06T10:46:50Z Whether you’re setting up a state-of-the-art home gym or simply looking to invest in a single machine to work out whenever you’re in the mood, treadmills are one of the hottest commodities on the exercise market. Fueled by a renewed interest in home gym equipment, a treadmill eliminates the need for a trip to the Gym club or worse, a jog in the rain or heat. Whether you’re training for a marathon, trying to increase your daily step count or simply hate waiting at the gym for open equipment, the best treadmills for every routine are ready to roll into your home. With the growing popularity of at-home exercise equipment comes an equally impressive number of machines out there—from affordable picks to high-tech models. Finding the right treadmill can be overwhelming, but that’s why we’ve rounded up the Sole F80 Treadmill (FORBES awarded The Best Treadmill for Walking).

F80 – Best Rated Treadmill In Its Class

SOLE F80 TREADMILL

The F80 treadmill has been reviewed as “the best treadmill in its price range” by both consumers and numerous consumer resources.

The F80 treadmill offers an industry-leading lifetime warranty and the Cushion Flex Whisper Deck, reducing impact up to 40%, as compared to running on asphalt. The strong, 3.5 HP motor delivers challenging speeds up to 12 mph and inclines up to 15 levels. When not in use, the treadmill deck locks into place and is 100% secured.

While you can use any treadmill for walking, the Sole F80 is a top pick. It has a wide 22-inch belt that’s double woven with a one-inch cushion flex, so your feet stay comfortable even during longer workouts. Quick adjustment controls on the arm rests make it easy to control the speed and incline while you’re walking. And with a 15% maximum incline, you’re guaranteed to feel the burn, even at lower speeds.

The 9-inch LCD display guides you through 10 pre-programmed workouts, or you can use the integrated tablet holder to catch up on Netflix or your favorite podcast while you walk. Of course, with a top speed level of 12 mph and a 3.5 CHP motor, it’s powerful enough for running or jogging, too.

SOLE’s folding treadmill frame design for the F80 originated from the demand of hotels for a treadmill as mobile as a room service cart, yet still stable and powerful. Run up to six preset programs, two customizable workout programs and two heart rate programs.

The F80 features cooling fans, as well as speed and incline controls on the arm rests. The treadmill console is user-friendly. The display information includes Speed, Incline, Time, Distance Traveled, Calories, Pulse and Pace. There is a 1/4-mile track feature and a Peak and Valley graph for different programs. The console has built-in speakers that allow you to play music from your media device.

The F80 now includes an integrated tablet holder so you can use your smart devices to watch shows or follow workout routines. Also included is a USB port for charging and Bluetooth Audio Speakers so you can listen to music.

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fitadmin https://www.fitnessalertblog.com <![CDATA[Great Benefits of Using a Stationary Bike for Workout]]> https://www.fitnessalertblog.com/?p=1415 2022-08-29T10:51:28Z 2022-08-29T10:51:25Z Riding a stationary exercise bike is an efficient and effective way to burn calories and body fat while strengthening your heart, lungs, and muscles.

Compared to some other types of cardio equipment, a stationary bicycle puts less stress on your joints, but it still provides an excellent aerobic workout.

Read on to learn more about the benefits of a stationary bike workout, and the kinds of workout plans that can help you reach your fitness or weight loss goals.

What are the benefits of a stationary bike workout?

1. Boosts cardio fitness

Cycling is an excellent way to get your heart pumping.

Cardiovascular or aerobic workouts, such as cycling, strengthen your heart, lungs, and muscles. They also improve the flow of blood and oxygen throughout your body. This, in turn, can benefit your health in a number of ways, including:

  • improved memory and brain functioning
  • lower blood pressure
  • better sleep
  • improved blood sugar levels
  • a stronger immune system
  • better mood
  • lower stress levels
  • more energy

2. Can help with weight loss

Depending on the intensity of your workout and your body weight, you can burn more than 600 calories an hour with a stationary bike workout. This makes indoor cycling an excellent workout option for burning calories quickly.

Burning more calories than you consume is the key to weight loss.

3. Burns body fat

Working out at a high intensity helps to burn calories and build strength, which, in turn, can lead to fat loss.

2010 studyTrusted Source found that indoor cycling, combined with a low-calorie diet, was effective in reducing body weight and body fat in the study’s participants. It was also effective in lowering cholesterol and triglyceride levels. The participants cycled for 45 minutes three times per week, and they consumed 1,200 calories per day for 12 weeks.

4. Provides a low-impact workout

A stationary bike workout is a low-impact workout that uses smooth movements to strengthen bones and joints without putting much pressure on them. This makes it a good workout option for people with joint issues or injuries.

Your ankles, knees, hips, and other joints can be put under a lot of stress when running, jogging, jumping, or doing other high-impact aerobic exercises.

Because your feet don’t lift off the pedals with a stationary bike, this option is kinder to your joints, but it still provides a challenging and effective workout.

5. Strengthens legs and lower body muscles

Riding a stationary bike can help build strength in your legs and lower body, especially if you use a higher resistance.

The pedaling action can help strengthen your calves, hamstrings, and quadriceps. Additionally, it can work the muscles in your core, back, and glutes.

If you use a bicycle with handles, you’ll also be able to work your upper body muscles, including your biceps, triceps, and shoulders.

6. Allows for interval training

Interval training allows you to alternate short bursts of intense exercise with longer intervals of less intense exercise. This type of training can help you burn more calories in less time, and also elevate your cardio fitness.

Stationary bikes allow for varied resistance levels, so you can exercise at low, medium, or high intensities. This makes it ideal for an interval training workout.

7. Safer than road cycling

Cycling outdoors can be a great way to exercise, but it does come with certain hazards, such as inattentive drivers, uneven or slick road surfaces, and poor visibility.

Also, if it’s hot and humid, or cold and wet, it can be hard to muster up the motivation to head outdoors. It might not even be safe to do so.

With indoor cycling, you don’t have to be concerned about traffic, road conditions, or the elements. You can work out safely at a comfortable temperature any time of the year.

SOURCE- https://www.healthline.com/health/fitness-exercise/stationary-bike-workout#bottom-line

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fitadmin https://www.fitnessalertblog.com <![CDATA[How Exercise Can Help Build Physical — and Mental — Resilience]]> https://www.fitnessalertblog.com/?p=1378 2022-07-18T09:24:03Z 2022-07-18T09:23:22Z “Resilience is the ability to recover from stress quickly and efficiently, and secondly to have a higher threshold for stress so you can successfully deal with a lot more,” says Jenny Evans, author of The Resiliency Revolution.

Resilience isn’t reserved for a select few who naturally adapt well in the face of adversity, trauma, tragedy, threats, or other significant sources of stress. Everyone can become more resilient to the stress of all kinds.

That’s because this remarkable capacity is trainable: You can learn not only to survive and manage stress but also to grow and improve in response to it.

“It is not a personality flaw to feel really stressed or feel like you’re not very resilient,” says Evans. “That is not a personal shortcoming. That is 100 percent straight-up chemistry and biology, and that is what your brain and body are hardwired to do. In a way, if you’re struggling with stress, good. It means your brain is actually doing its job. Now let’s find a way for you to handle it before the physiological stress response gets triggered.”

Resilience training is a big ask. It suggests pushing your physical limits, in some way, almost daily. You could sum it up in one phrase: “Do the stuff you don’t feel like doing.”

That probably doesn’t sound like much fun — but that’s exactly the point. If our attachment to creature comforts has done a number on our resilience, it makes sense that the way back is to occasionally detach deliberately from them.

The way out may not be easy, says Nelson, but in principle, it’s fairly simple: “Practice doing hard stuff.”

Ready to get uncomfortable? These ideas can help you get started.

Find Your Strength

Lifting weights can be a powerful way to foster resilience because it involves believing in oneself, says clinical social worker and trauma specialist Mariah Rooney, MSW, LICSW, the cofounder of Trauma Informed Weight Lifting, a program that teaches fitness professionals how to use resistance exercise as a tool for overcoming mental-health challenges.

“For some folks who have experienced trauma, the body can be a scary place to be and connect with,” she says. “Weightlifting can be one way of engaging our bodies that allows us to expand our window of tolerance and have powerful experiences of agency and strength when perhaps our bodies have been the holders of our painful experiences.”

At the same time, the progress many lifters experience offers encouraging evidence that growth is possible and that effort yields results — in the gym as well as in other areas of life. “Weightlifting fosters self-trust,” says Rooney. “Every time you approach the barbell, there’s a question mark: Can I do this? Will it feel good? Do I feel safe? And every rep becomes an opportunity to learn to listen to and respond to ourselves in more attuned ways.”

As we accrue more successful lifts, our capacity to grow from stress is reinforced.

Rooney has discovered that those little weightlifting triumphs can be an empowering metaphor for people struggling with psychological burdens. “The physical strength they build translates into a greater sense of efficacy in their relationships and other aspects of their lives,” she says.

Building resilience in the weight room takes some finesse, however. The wrong workout — too much weight, too many reps — can break you down physically rather than build you up. Similarly, the wrong environment can stress you out rather than calm you down.

A key to training for resilience is to stay flexible and tuned in. “It can be helpful to adjust a routine — even throw it out altogether — when necessary,” Rooney says, “particularly when our bodies are letting us know that we need something different.” She suggests that people seeking resilience take one step beyond the fitness axiom “Listen to your body”: “Pay attention to your emotional and psychological state, too.”

Find Your Breath

Resistance training isn’t the only physical path to greater resilience. The “instructive discomfort” of an asana practice can also help you get there, says yoga and martial-arts instructor Stephen Schilling.

“You can confront that discomfort in one of two ways: Draw away from it, or breathe through it and accept it. That’s what allows you to endure,” Schilling explains. “The discomfort doesn’t necessarily go away. But you learn that it won’t break you. You discover you can live with it to a greater extent than you thought.”

Contained within that simple process — breathing through discomfort — is a powerful life lesson: Practice yoga long enough and you can learn to manage your response to life’s disappointments and worries. “Your time on the mat gives you a reference point,” he says. “You can say, ‘I got through my workout this morning; I can get through this.’”

Cardiovascular exercise can produce a similar effect: In addition to improving circulation and strengthening your heart and lungs, steady-state cardio — think jogging, cycling, vigorous hiking — encourages deep, steady breathing, which helps stimulate the stress-relieving, parasympathetic, rest-and-digest system.

Find Your Intensity

High-intensity interval training (HIIT) is yet another potent physical approach to building resilience.

HIIT — which describes a style of exercise rather than a specific activity, sport, or movement style — can include strength and cardio moves. And by design, HIIT workouts are brief, making them accessible to those who are short on time or who lack the motivation for a longer session.

“It takes just 30 to 60 seconds of high-intensity physical activity to produce endorphins, so HIIT is your in-the-moment resiliency solution. Like, boom! You just hit the reset button,” says Evans.

“Then, when you string together these short bursts of activity for 10 or 20 minutes, and over time string together these short workouts, you increase your level of fitness and raise your threshold for stress,” she explains.

If you prefer body-weight moves to traditional cardio, Evans suggests making a list of five to 10 exercises, grabbing a deck of cards, and pulling cards every round to dictate how many reps to perform. (Evans, who is also a certified personal trainer, has developed a training tool called Hit the Deck, a set of 35 exercise cards along with a programmable interval timer.)

“Whether it’s cardio or strength — as long as it’s making you uncomfortable, it’s making you more resilient,” Nelson says.

And if high-intensity work simply isn’t for you, don’t stress about it. The same 2017 study showed that steady-state training (longer workouts performed at lower intensity) could also improve glucose metabolism — suggesting that either approach is effective when your goal is tuning up your carb-burning engine.

Movement for Body and Mind

Exercise is probably the most widely practiced strategy for boosting physical resilience. When you work out, you subject your muscles to stress; work hard enough and some of the muscle fibers fray and break. In the hours and days after your workout, your body repairs those broken fibers, laying down extra reinforcement to protect your muscles against similar stress in the future.

Repeat the same exercise session a few days later, and continue that process for weeks or months, and you’ll be measurably stronger, faster, and more muscular. Your muscles are now better able to handle challenging loads.

“If there is a fountain of youth, it is regular exercise.”

Your bones are stronger and less likely to break. Your body is better able to clear waste products from your muscles, so that burning feeling doesn’t come on as quickly or acutely. Your heart pumps more blood more easily, so you don’t get as winded. Your nervous system is more efficient, so the movement is smoother and easier.

That is resilience at work, and it’s woven so completely into our physiology that it continues to function into old age. Research has shown that nonagenarians get predictably stronger and fitter from a consistent exercise routine.

“If there is a fountain of youth, it is regular exercise,” says geriatrician Edmund Lew, MD. “It enhances the function of the cellular, metabolic, and organ systems of the body.” This includes the immune, vascular, and nervous systems, translating into better movement, cognition, and emotional stability.

The Resilience Workout

Bad news first: You can’t entirely prevent injuries. The inevitability of the odd ankle twist or lower-back torque when you’re working out or just living life makes complete prevention a pipe dream.

What is possible, says strength coach Dan John, is to gain an edge over the slower forces that threaten to erode your resilience in the long term — things like muscle loss, joint instability, and weakness in the core. “Those are the things that get you down as you age,” he says.

John designed the following four-week workout routine to help ward off the age-related decline and frailty that many consider inevitable. These five moves can help preserve — and even increase — muscle mass; teach you to stabilize your core, keeping your spine safe; and fire up your glutes, build grip strength, and address other neglected areas that directly affect longevity.

Commit to holding the line on those things, and you’ll have a better chance of emerging unscathed from life’s bigger mishaps.

The Workout

Perform the workout up to four times a week on nonconsecutive days. Always choose a weight — or variation — that makes the move challenging on your final few reps. For example, you’ll use more weight in week 2 when you’re doing sets of five reps than you used in week 1 with sets of eight.

1. Half-Kneeling Press

  • Holding a dumbbell or kettlebell at shoulder height in your right hand, assume a half-kneeling position, with your right knee on the floor and your left foot standing in front of you.
  • With your torso braced and upright, exhale strongly as you press the weight from shoulder height to a locked-out position overhead.
  • Slowly inhale as you lower the weight to the starting position.
  • Repeat for reps, then perform the same number on the other side.
Week 1:Three sets of eight reps.
Week 2:Five sets of five reps.
Week 3:25 reps total, breaking up the reps into as many sets as you need.
Week 4:Same rep scheme as Week 1.

2. Suspension-Trainer One-Arm Rows

  • Holding one of the handles of a TRX or equivalent in your right hand, face the anchor point and walk back to create some tension on the band.
  • Keeping your body straight and your shoulders and hips square, walk your feet forward to increase the load (the farther forward you place your feet, the tougher it will be).
  • Place your left hand behind your back and keep it there throughout the set.
  • Keeping your gaze on the anchor point, pull yourself upward by retracting your shoulder blade and bending your right arm, keeping your elbow close to your side throughout the movement.
  • Reverse the move, slowly lowering yourself back to the starting point.
  • Repeat for reps, then switch sides and perform the same number with your left hand.
Week 1:Three sets of eight reps.
Week 2:Five sets of five reps.
Week 3:25 reps total, breaking up the reps into as many sets as you need.
Week 4:Same rep scheme as Week 1.

3. Goblet Squat

  • Hold a kettlebell in both hands by the horns — the two base points of the handle — against your chest just under your chin (you can also hold a single dumbbell, vertically, against your chest in the same manner).
  • Assume a shoulder width stance with your toes turned slightly out.
  • Keeping your lower back in its natural arch, your chest up and out, slowly bend at your knees, ankles and hips, sitting down as far as you can while keeping your back flat.
  • Pause in the low position, reverse the movement, and repeat for reps.
Week 1:Three sets of eight reps.
Week 2:Five sets of five reps.
Week 3:25 reps total, breaking up the reps into as many sets as you need.
Week 4:Same rep scheme as Week 1.

4. Glute Bridge

  • Lie on your back with your knees bent and your feet flat and shoulder-width apart.
  • Tuck your pelvis and push through your feet, raising your hips as high as you can.
  • Contract your glutes as hard as you can and hold for a one-count.
  • Slowly lower yourself, stopping just before your sacrum is on the floor, and repeat.
Week 1:Three sets of 10.
Week 2:Three sets of 12.
Week 3:Three sets of 15.
Week 4:Four sets of 15.

5. Suitcase Carry

  • Hold a heavy dumbbell or kettlebell by your side in your left hand.
  • Maintaining excellent posture (chest up, shoulder blades on your back, head stacked over your spine), walk forward for 20 to 60 seconds. No space? March in place.
  • Switch hands and repeat for about the same time frame (you can also count steps: go for double the number of seconds indicated — so if you’re trying to hit 20 seconds, take 40 steps).
  • Change the duration of each set week to week according to the following parameters:
Week 1:45 seconds/side, 3 sets.
Week 2:60 seconds/side, 2 sets.
Week 3:20 seconds/side, 4 sets.
Week 4:Week 4: 15 seconds/side, 3 sets.

Get top quality fitness, gym, exercise and sport equipment in Nigeria from Gategold Fitness. With branches in Surulere (Lagos), VGC (Lagos), Jabi (Abuja), Wuse (Abuja), Onitsha and Port Harcourt. Hotlines: 08033293090, 08090926122, 08032258018.

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fitadmin https://www.fitnessalertblog.com <![CDATA[FIT2000 2 STATION MULTI GYM]]> https://www.fitnessalertblog.com/?p=1375 2022-07-18T09:17:27Z 2022-07-18T09:17:26Z FIT2000 2-station Multi-Gym

Structural Frame Modern styling and structural reliability through the use of 40mm×80mm and 50mm×100mm oval-shaped tubes and precision laser-cut steel plate components.
Pulleys Aluminium pulleys with deep V-grooved channels provide secure cable seating and optimum bearing rotation. Sealed ball bearings ensure smooth and quiet pulley operation.
Weight Stack 5Kg increment plastic coated weight plate.
Weight Stack Enclosure Heavy-duty 20-gauge steel panels enclose weight stacks for safety and aesthetics. Each panel can be easily removed when necessary.
Axles and Ball Bearings ø17mm or ø25mm solid steel pivot axles with lubricated sealed bearings encased in steel housings for frictionless movement and precision alignment of pivots.

PRODUCT SPECIFICATION    

Length: 2800mm
Width: 2300mm
Height: 2200mm
Weight stack: 75Kg x 4
Net Weight: 660kg

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fitadmin https://www.fitnessalertblog.com <![CDATA[SOLE SB800 Air Cycle (AIR BIKE)]]> https://www.fitnessalertblog.com/?p=1372 2022-07-18T09:11:53Z 2022-07-18T09:11:52Z Key Features:

  • LCD screen provides ‘realtime’ feedback displaying time, distance, calories, speed, RPM, watts and H/R
  • Fully adjustable up/down, fore/aft oversized cushioned seat
  • 25″ steel resistance fan delivers increased resistance the harder you pedal
  • Dual action handle bars with industrial style foot pegs for use while focusing on the upper body
  • High quality alloy pedals and crank

Overview:

The SB800 Air Bike is the perfect way to boost your calorie burn. The 25″ steel resistance fan is powered by you and allows you to train like an athlete at your own pace; the harder you push, the higher the resistance. You can set your own training goals with customized programs such as Target Distance, Target Calories, Target Time, or choose Manual Mode. The Champion program tests your training intensity and compares the values to previous sessions. For a pure calorie-burn workout, let SOLE SB800 assist you in achieving your goals.

Purchase of the SOLE Fitness SB800 air cycle includes premium threshold delivery meaning your cycle is delivered directly to the first dry area of your home: inside your front door, garage, or inside the front lobby of your building, and will not be left on your curb.

Built with a sturdy steel frame, the SB800 Air Bike is durable enough for both Light Commercial use and high intensity training. With large stationary foot pegs for resting your legs while still working your arms and an oversized cushioned seat that easily adjusts to accommodate users of all heights.

SOLE Cycle Technology:

At SOLE, we have designed our exercise cycles to meet consumer needs and allow you to work out on your own terms. The natural, comfortable feel of SOLE cycles has been created with an ergonomic design, adjustable seating, a large easy to view console display, and A strong, durable frame. Using only premium components, SOLE has focused on ergonomic design without sacrificing quality.


Pedal Design

The SOLE air bike dual pedal system features large, articulating pedals to work ouot legs using the bike’s air resistance, as well as large, stationary foot pedals for resting your legs while still working your arms..


Adjustable Seating

SOLE cycles feature adjustable seating to ensure all users are able to customize the seat position to their specific requirements, ensuring all users are in the correct position to maximize each workout.


Handle Bars

The Air Bike features moving handlebars for upper body training. They can be used simultaneously with the large foot pedals or used alone while resting your feet on the conveniently positioned foot pegs. You take control of the intensity of your workout by how hard you push.


Display

Easy console viewing helps to prevent frustration during your workout. With your workout feedback and progress displayed on a large screen, it is easier to keep your workout goals in view.


Durable Frame

A strong, durable frame is the foundation of SOLE Fitness cycles. Heavy steel tubing makes our indoor cycles durable, light, and manageable. Dual transport wheels at the front of each frame help make moving the cycles easy and convenient. The SB800 frame is built with high tensile steel with an industrial powder coated finish.


Air Resistance

A The 25″ resistance fan provides easily controlled, varying levels of challenge for all workouts. The fan housing is left open so a constant breeze helps keep you cool during training sessions.

Specifications:

Machine Dimensions:
Footprint (in.):49″ L x 31″ W x 57″ H
Item Weight (lbs.):161 lbs.
User Weight Capacity (lbs.):300 lbs.
Carton Dimensions:52″ L x 14″ W x 35″ H
Shipping Weight (lbs.):178 lbs.
Controls & Features:
Heart Rate Monitoring:Chest strap compatible
Chest Strap Included:No
Cooling Fan:Yes
Standard Programs:6
Custom Programs:2
Heart Rate Programs:2
Audio System:2
Console Display:Large single-window LCD
Display Feedback:Time, speed, distance, calories, pulse, RPM, watt, target distance, target calories, target heart rate, target time
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fitadmin https://www.fitnessalertblog.com <![CDATA[DFT-679 Functional Trainer]]> https://www.fitnessalertblog.com/?p=1369 2022-07-18T09:09:43Z 2022-07-18T09:09:40Z DFT-679 Functional Trainer

1.Machine Size:1950x860x1630mm
2.Machine weight:345kg
3. Weight Stack:100kgs*2(steel)
4. Square Tube:50*100mm, thickness 2.5mm, high strength steel tube oval tube precision welds and internally lubricated cables.
5.Powder Coating: 2 rounds (silver/black/dark grey/white/red + varnish)
6. Pully: Nylon
7. Cable: 6mm
8. Machine color: moonlight grey

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fitadmin https://www.fitnessalertblog.com <![CDATA[RU006R Fytter Brand Treadmill 3.0hp (Cardio Running Series)]]> https://www.fitnessalertblog.com/?p=1364 2022-07-18T08:54:45Z 2022-07-18T08:54:43Z RU-6R specification:

Running size:140x45cm

speed:1.0-18km/h

Incline:0-15% auto incline

Motor: DC 3.0HP

Max user weight:130kgs

Program: P1-P12

Handrail with quick key, heart rate sensor

Screen: 7-inch LCD screen

Function: can connect with Bluetooth APP Spax, with easy-self lubrication, with MP3 and USB input.

absorption: with rubber cushion and main frame with spring absorption 

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