How to stay in shape when you go on holiday
by Christian
Finn
Going on holiday is supposed to help you get away from
the stress
and hassle of daily life. But, if you're someone who finds it hard to
function without your exercise "fix," a holiday often creates a whole
new set of problems.
When a hotel says it has "a gym," you never know if they
mean a
proper gym, or a couple of pink dumbbells and a rusty old Life Fitness
Life Cycle® from 1978. If you're someone who takes an "all or
nothing"
approach to exercise, it's hard to find the motivation to train in this
kind of environment.
Finding the time to exercise can also be difficult,
especially if
there's a lot of stuff that you want to see and do while you're away.
Because of this, some people avoid exercise completely while they're on
holiday, vowing to "start fresh" when they get back.
Whenever I tried this in the past, I found it really
hard to get
back into my exercise routine when I returned from holiday. So, what I
do now is cut right back on the frequency and volume of my workouts.
Although I often get told that 20 minutes of exercise
two or three
times a week "isn't worth it," the truth is that it takes a lot less
exercise to stay in shape than it does to get there in the
first place.
Some evidence for this comes from a study that tracked a
group of 12
subjects taking part in an aerobic exercise program. The program
involved cycling and running for 40 minutes, six days each week. The
average increase in aerobic fitness after 10 weeks of training was
20-25%.
Subjects were then assigned to one of two groups, and
continued to
exercise for a further 15 weeks. Group one trained at the same
intensity and duration on four days of the week. The second group
trained at the same intensity and duration only twice each week.
The researchers found that VO2max--a marker of aerobic
fitness--remained the same in both groups. This was despite the fact
that group two was only training twice each week. In short, the
frequency of aerobic exercise needed to maintain your fitness is less
than that required to improve it.
It also takes a lot less work to maintain the muscle you
have than it takes to build it from scratch.
Researchers from Australia's Southern Cross University
took a group
of 27 men with up to four years of training experience, and assigned
them to one of three groups. Subjects in each group trained using a low
(three sets per muscle group per week), medium (six sets per muscle
group per week) or high (12 sets per muscle group per week) training
volume.
Despite the fact that group one did only three sets per
muscle group
per week, the results show "no significant between-group differences"
in muscle size or strength (although there was a trend toward greater
gains in the high-volume group).
Although I don't believe that such a low volume
of exercise is the best way to build muscle, it can be used to
maintain the muscle you already have.
When I went to California a couple of years ago, I had a
great
workout on Muscle Beach consisting of pull-ups supersetted with dips,
followed by a few sprint intervals on the beach (you can see a
few of
my holiday photographs here).
The pull-ups and dips worked most of the muscles in my
upper body,
while the sprint intervals worked my legs and also took care of my
cardiovascular fitness.
Even though the workout took me less than 20 minutes, it
helped me
stay in shape during the two weeks I was away. Plus, it also stopped me
feeling so guilty about all the junk I was eating.
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