ap

Skip to content
Kate Whitcomb, right, and Darlin Baker hold rocks as they practice squats in Warm Springs, Idaho. The rocks, because they vary in weight, shape and size, activate small stabilizer muscles that a traditional weight would not, say the athletes.
Kate Whitcomb, right, and Darlin Baker hold rocks as they practice squats in Warm Springs, Idaho. The rocks, because they vary in weight, shape and size, activate small stabilizer muscles that a traditional weight would not, say the athletes.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

The athletes behind Ketchum, Idaho’s, “ghetto workouts” have a slogan: “Routine is the enemy of progress.”

And it’s awfully easy for the gym to become routine, they said so they came up with a solution. This summer they met regularly in a field, where there are rocks, pipes, giant tires, logs, barrels and other equipment you might find on an abandoned construction site.

The group reproduces typical gym exercises but with a twist, like using an uneven log for overhead presses instead of an evenly shaped bar. They also came up with exercises of their own, like the heart-rate- busting “mullet express,” a sled made from wooden pallets, metal pipes and old skis that they push fast and hard down a stretch of gravel road, raising sparks.

“I’m so pathetic at the sled,” said participant Kate Whitcomb, grimacing at the difficulty. “OK, that means I need to do it!”

“Hillbilly playground”

The athletes have an obvious sense of humor, poking fun at improvised exercises like a barrel-and-rocks “squat potato” and the part of the field they call their “hillbilly playground” not to mention the names of the workouts themselves.

And they seem to have fun working out, too, not tuned into iPods or televisions but teasing each other and egging each other on to do one more rep or go just a little faster.

Eric Palmer, coordinator of the workouts, said he lost 30 pounds this summer with these unusual methods, and other regular participants are professional athletes looking to cross train for such sports as ice skating and event running.

The athletes don’t disdain gyms, and many use them regularly, but they said they’ve found that the workouts are more inspiring and better at helping them achieve their goals.

“It’s balance, coordination, because everything’s not a set weight,” said founding member Nic Nottingham. “The gym, everything’s at a fixed pivot point. In real life, when are you ever handling a balanced load?”

Whitcomb said there are no excuses when it comes to improvised workouts they’re cheap, primarily using materials found in nature or around a typical rural home and they’re available any time of day or night.

“This sort of workout is more raw. There’s no mirror to look in, no audience to show off for,” she said. “Do you want big pecs to look good at the gym, or do you want to be able to pick up your kid?”

The workouts are also fun, she said, and have gotten her excited to exercise in a way she hadn’t been in the recent past. “The gym sometimes becomes work after work, it almost becomes a chore. We’re like kids again, playing with things you find around the house.”

These workouts are easy to adjust for any ability level; rocks and logs come in different sizes, and you can always pour sand out of or add sand to a 5-gallon bucket.

Palmer said even traditional gym equipment can be modified to do similar exercises, if that’s what you have on hand.

RevContent Feed

More in News