That's why I throw in burpees. You can layer these bodyweight exercises into CIRCUITS, ROUNDS, and vary the routines to keep your mind interested. My bother in law changed my entire thinking on exercise ...he did 7 years in prison doing nothing but pushups, dips, pullups, squats and many calisthenics variations. Funny he said after a while he would never count...just go hard for time or until fatigued. He felt hitting a number would automatically set you up to just hit that number instead of going to exertion. His mantra.. BEAT YOUR NUMBERS OR BEAT YOUR TIME...... GREAT VIDEO! love to hear about ANECDOTAL training rather than facts or research.....
7 years that's a long time to get into bodyweight stuff, sounds like he's really been there! I'm glad to hear the same! A scientific study means absolutely nothing compared to the real thing
Breathing easier alone is worth it! I was doing a lot of circuit training a year and a half ago and I definitely felt like my endurance was off the charts, felt way better when doing jujitsu, I could even run a faster mile time at a heavier body weight. Definitely want to find a way to incorporate it without interfering with my powerlifting goals. Great video man!
Great Vid. At 37 I now base my workouts around calasthenics and cardio. Great thing about calisthenics is you have so many methods to play with. One of the best conditioning tools ive used is alternating simple sets of squats and pushups, jogging on the spot and hitting a heavy bag. If you want a great chest workout do nothing but pushups to failure slow and controlled for 45 mins. Its very basic stuff., same with pullups, rows, dips. You dont need loads and loads of weights. If you need the weights for any reason add in 2 to 3 sets here and there but don't make it the bulk of your program. A weighted barbell (not loads) is great for legs,aim for higher reps and volume rather than pushing massive numbers. Good thing woth calasthenics is you can either train streaight sets, failure, circuits , ladder, high frequency, low.as long as your hitting the basics your going to get on shape
I hear you. I had the same thing happen during Covid, pre-vaxx, when I quit my gym. After working out with your classic squat/ barbell rows/ bench/ military press/ deadlift/ pulldown/ curls workout for 30+ years, I was forced into a tiny garage. No room for even a bench with two cars. So I hung a cheap suspension trainer (Rip-60) in the rafters, and some light (for me) kettlebells (35-55 pounders). Most of my workout was fast, explosive calisthenics. Not having enough weight to squat, I'd do 25 goblet squats with my heaviest kettlebells, jumping at the top. I'd rip off 50 pushups, then do Spiderman and pike variations. I'd do dips and pullups on the Rip-60. I took little to no time between sets. Talk about endurance. Now, eight months back at the gym, I've regained most strength I lost. But I recover much faster. And I still do my garage workout once per week. I'm amazed that I am even fitter at 55 than I was at 45... and I've been exercising regularly since age 14.
Wow that's awesome to hear! That's my goal too, I just need make sure I keep these in at least once a week. It's crazy how effective they are, when I stopped doing these altogether my full body workouts went from 2 hours to almost 3, that extra rest time adds up fast
@@thestonecircle Yup. The fast recovery gets me the same workout that used to take 2 hours about 90 minutes, Unfortunately, there's nothing in the world that can speed up setting up and stripping down the barbell, gathering and returning dumbbells, etc. Not to mention chit-chatting and waiting for equipment to open up.
@@The.Ghost.of.Tom.Joad. haha oh I get that! Even in my home gym, I swear half my workout is getting exercises set up and organizing the room so I don't trip over things!
@@thestonecircle Good advice. I plan to, mostly because variety spices things up, and it saves time. It pays that I really like it, though. I mean, if you told me three years ago that I'd be doing anything gymnast-style, like body-ups and ring work, I'd laugh at you. Me being a classic team-sport blockhead. But I've found that I love the movements because they're hard work and yet strangely freeing.
@@The.Ghost.of.Tom.Joad. haha yeah that makes sense, there is something very freeing about moving your body through space rather than moving an object through space
Found your channel yesterday, the combo of calisthenics and bar work speaks to me and I really like your narrating of your thoughts. I’ll try out a circuit soon!
Nice video. I tried some calisthenics circuits years ago but never stuck with as I found it too taxing. At the moment I'm more focused on hypertrophy and adding in tiny bits of Tabata-style intervals as well as high rep bodyweight leg work to try and keep my cardio conditioning decent. I might try circuits again at some point the future. IronWolf here on RUclips does some circuit style stuff which would probably be good for cardio.
Yeah it can be difficult finding the right balance, I figure everything cycles, whenever you feel the pull towards calisthenics circuits they'll be there waiting for you! Also ironwolf has some insane conditioning I check in from time to time just to see what he's up to
Cali circuits are the most effective total body workouts for sure. Only equipment necessary to get in phenonmenal shape is a pull up bar, a dip bar and rings/extension trainer. Couple with sensible nutrition and consistent application, results are guaranteed!! What you advocate here is pure gold - those that know, know!!!👊🏾💥 Just subbed & liked, great info.
You can also increase intensity in bodyweight exercises by going from bilateral limbs to unilateral limbs Example . Pullups - to- 1arm pullup .pushup- to- 1arm pushup .squat - to- pistol squat Learned this from convict conditioning book
Thanks! I haven't but that sounds like a killer of a workout! I think I've seen some guys at a nearby crossfit gym doing that one, no surprise they're all jacked af!
@@thestonecircle I won’t boast that I have done an orthodox Murph, but I have done modified ones and they were awesome: there is no way I can currently do 100 strict pull-ups in one workout let alone all of the calisthenics with a weighted vest!The second mile done after all of the callisthenics is a good test.
Hey bro, really enjoying your content. I fell into the gallon of milk a day weight gain strategy as well and found myself at about 195 lbs feeling very unfit. I've been trying to lose the weight for a little bit, down to 180 now but didn't really change my nutrition just started training more. Did you lose weight by a CICO method or some other strategy? Many thanks
Hey glad you're enjoying the videos so far thanks for being here! And congrats on your progress so far Yeah the gallon of milk idea, it's ruined so many people! I was just super restrictive for about 3 months and lost most of it in that time. Probably would have held onto more muscle if I'd gone slower but I couldn't stand it at the time aha. Yeah cico and made sure to get a higher amount of protein every day. Also fasted 16-20 hours of every day. Was pretty terrible honestly lol I'm currently on a cut rn and I'm taking it very slowly this time
@@dude861 30, small rest, 29, small rest, 28, small rest, 27, small rest, 26, small rest, 25, small rest.....etc. down to 1. I honestly just do sets of 100 or more now though when I am doing high rep body weight only squats.
You almost get like a runners high from an upper body workout. I do down circuits for upper/lower split and can concur that when I do hill sprints or biking now I dont get nearly as gassed as I did when doing straight sets. As you said "Im not sure how it works, but it works."
Usually they'll have a sign posted outside the area letting you know for sure, but it depends on what they offer. Some of the land is more like a campsite and they offer electricity hookups/ bathrooms etc but those cost money. I didn't care about all that and just found the free sites. In my experience the free ones are usually a bit further from town, which was actually better for me. There are a few sites you can use to plan out a route beforehand, I used 'free campsites net' and 'campendium' when I was on that trip and they worked pretty well. That was a few years ago and I never saw a campsite closed. Sad thing I've seen over this last year specifically is a lot of the free sites are closed off now, at least in the CO area. Hopefully it's just temporary and that stuff will open back up
Great Stuff! How would you implement this circuits with some other strength program for example stone lifting in your case, or other PPL kind of programs.
Thanks! With stones I think of it in terms of upper lowe which makes it pretty easy. The calisthenics circuits are the upper days and the stones are lower, even though there's some overlap. PPL might be tricky because I think the circuits work best when you Alternate between push and pull in the same workout, but doing something like a 4-5 day split with ppl on three of the days and a circuit on the 4th or 5th could work. With full body you could get your main compound out of the way and do a basic 10 down circuit at the end of the workout as a finisher. They're not super taxing so it's easy to add them to most things!
5down and up works really well too! I've spent a lot of time with that as well, actually prefer it if I'm being honest. 5,4,3,2,1,1,2,3,4,5 repeat, could even do 3 down and up 3,2,1,1,2,3 repeat, I like that for more difficult variations. Less Taxing on the conditioning but still good!
I'm running starting strength, could I do a calisthenics circuit on my off days? (specifically the balanced strength/endurance one you showed in your other video)
From my experience, if you stick to the starting strength program 100% you should max out the gains you'll get from in within a few months. I'd probably just focus on improving those barbell strength movements until progress slows way down and you pass on to the next stage. At that point you could probably start doing more calisthenics stuff! If you're already making gains doing starting strength though I'd just ride that out as long as you can first
Since I released my new program that uses these circuits as one of the main forms of training I've had a few combat guys tell me it helped a lot with not getting gassed out, I think it should carry over great!
I need to do stuff like this. The hard part is I need to scale back everything else I'm doing for a while cause I know my fatigue ceiling is low right now :/
Circuits, one form of loaded aerobics, are where it's at. As you age you're not going to want to carry any extra body weight. Muscle or fat. You're going to want to be lean w/ off the charts aerobic/strength work capacity. Research what Steve Reeves was doing after he retired from bodybuilding and the work of Dr. Leonard Schwartz, M.D. Why was Superman super?
@@thestonecircle It's interesting to me that all the folks I know in my age group who started w/ "get big get strong" find their way to "get lean get work capacity". At least the nattys.
@@oldnatty61The "getting big and jacked" thing is fun in your 20s and early 30s until your joints start getting beat up and your blood work starts showing high LDL and extra lbs in body fat. Sure you look 'big' and can pick up heavy shit, but getting out of breath after 10 min of cardio also not fun lol. All show no go...As we get older I think the lean and mean look is more funtional, healthy, and looks better.
@@J01123 It's so interesting how everyone I know in my age group who trains travel a similar path. Somewhere around 40 to 50 we give up the heavy weight and eating. We start lighter circuit conditioning stuff (often bodyweight stuff). We shift focus to joint health, mobility, flexibility. We want to jettison all extra bodyweight be it muscle or fat. We strive for a high level of cardio strength work capacity. I now much prefer squatting my own body weight 500 times in 15 mns. or less than 500 lbs. once. It is this kind of training that will best serve you as you age if your goal is healthy longevity.
@@oldnatty61 Exactly. Being a very lanky/skinny kid in high school I beat my body up from age 18-31 trying to put on mass. After one too many injuries and being gassed from doing any sport like activity I ditched 90% of my weights. Im 41 now but still want to cut 10-15 lbs. The military circuit workouts are hard as hell but afterwards you feel like a beast knowing you have the gas in the tank to do what 85% of the guys in my age bracket cant do.
That's why I throw in burpees. You can layer these bodyweight exercises into CIRCUITS, ROUNDS, and vary the routines to keep your mind interested. My bother in law changed my entire thinking on exercise ...he did 7 years in prison doing nothing but pushups, dips, pullups, squats and many calisthenics variations. Funny he said after a while he would never count...just go hard for time or until fatigued. He felt hitting a number would automatically set you up to just hit that number instead of going to exertion. His mantra.. BEAT YOUR NUMBERS OR BEAT YOUR TIME...... GREAT VIDEO! love to hear about ANECDOTAL training rather than facts or research.....
7 years that's a long time to get into bodyweight stuff, sounds like he's really been there! I'm glad to hear the same! A scientific study means absolutely nothing compared to the real thing
7 years of eating another mans ass. He s tough af
Breathing easier alone is worth it! I was doing a lot of circuit training a year and a half ago and I definitely felt like my endurance was off the charts, felt way better when doing jujitsu, I could even run a faster mile time at a heavier body weight. Definitely want to find a way to incorporate it without interfering with my powerlifting goals. Great video man!
Thank you! It's cool to hear circuits translated to something as intense as jujitsu too, those guys are on another level cardio wise!
Great Vid. At 37 I now base my workouts around calasthenics and cardio. Great thing about calisthenics is you have so many methods to play with. One of the best conditioning tools ive used is alternating simple sets of squats and pushups, jogging on the spot and hitting a heavy bag. If you want a great chest workout do nothing but pushups to failure slow and controlled for 45 mins. Its very basic stuff., same with pullups, rows, dips. You dont need loads and loads of weights. If you need the weights for any reason add in 2 to 3 sets here and there but don't make it the bulk of your program. A weighted barbell (not loads) is great for legs,aim for higher reps and volume rather than pushing massive numbers. Good thing woth calasthenics is you can either train streaight sets, failure, circuits , ladder, high frequency, low.as long as your hitting the basics your going to get on shape
Yes so many options with calisthenics!
I hear you. I had the same thing happen during Covid, pre-vaxx, when I quit my gym. After working out with your classic squat/ barbell rows/ bench/ military press/ deadlift/ pulldown/ curls workout for 30+ years, I was forced into a tiny garage. No room for even a bench with two cars. So I hung a cheap suspension trainer (Rip-60) in the rafters, and some light (for me) kettlebells (35-55 pounders).
Most of my workout was fast, explosive calisthenics. Not having enough weight to squat, I'd do 25 goblet squats with my heaviest kettlebells, jumping at the top. I'd rip off 50 pushups, then do Spiderman and pike variations. I'd do dips and pullups on the Rip-60. I took little to no time between sets. Talk about endurance.
Now, eight months back at the gym, I've regained most strength I lost. But I recover much faster. And I still do my garage workout once per week. I'm amazed that I am even fitter at 55 than I was at 45... and I've been exercising regularly since age 14.
Wow that's awesome to hear! That's my goal too, I just need make sure I keep these in at least once a week. It's crazy how effective they are, when I stopped doing these altogether my full body workouts went from 2 hours to almost 3, that extra rest time adds up fast
@@thestonecircle Yup. The fast recovery gets me the same workout that used to take 2 hours about 90 minutes, Unfortunately, there's nothing in the world that can speed up setting up and stripping down the barbell, gathering and returning dumbbells, etc. Not to mention chit-chatting and waiting for equipment to open up.
@@The.Ghost.of.Tom.Joad. haha oh I get that! Even in my home gym, I swear half my workout is getting exercises set up and organizing the room so I don't trip over things!
@@thestonecircle Good advice. I plan to, mostly because variety spices things up, and it saves time. It pays that I really like it, though. I mean, if you told me three years ago that I'd be doing anything gymnast-style, like body-ups and ring work, I'd laugh at you. Me being a classic team-sport blockhead. But I've found that I love the movements because they're hard work and yet strangely freeing.
@@The.Ghost.of.Tom.Joad. haha yeah that makes sense, there is something very freeing about moving your body through space rather than moving an object through space
Really clean lookin video with nice visuals and good enunciation. I'm liking seeing all of this come together
Thank you I really appreciate that!
I loved doing 15 down workouts. Dips, Rows, 100ft sandbag carry isbone of my favorites
Adding the sandbag is next level!
Found your channel yesterday, the combo of calisthenics and bar work speaks to me and I really like your narrating of your thoughts. I’ll try out a circuit soon!
Awesome thanks for being here, good luck with your training!
Nice video. I tried some calisthenics circuits years ago but never stuck with as I found it too taxing. At the moment I'm more focused on hypertrophy and adding in tiny bits of Tabata-style intervals as well as high rep bodyweight leg work to try and keep my cardio conditioning decent. I might try circuits again at some point the future. IronWolf here on RUclips does some circuit style stuff which would probably be good for cardio.
Yeah it can be difficult finding the right balance, I figure everything cycles, whenever you feel the pull towards calisthenics circuits they'll be there waiting for you! Also ironwolf has some insane conditioning I check in from time to time just to see what he's up to
Cali circuits are the most effective total body workouts for sure. Only equipment necessary to get in phenonmenal shape is a pull up bar, a dip bar and rings/extension trainer. Couple with sensible nutrition and consistent application, results are guaranteed!! What you advocate here is pure gold - those that know, know!!!👊🏾💥 Just subbed & liked, great info.
You said it!! Glad you liked the video thanks for being here!
Great video dude. Really fantastic. Some good info here!! I've got RDLs and sqauts tonight. I'm going to add something, not sure what....
Thank you! And sounds like a good session hope to see some vids man!!
I appreciate your genuine attitude, you’re a real one 🤙🏼
Hey thank's I really appreciate that!
You can also increase intensity in bodyweight exercises by going from bilateral limbs to unilateral limbs
Example . Pullups - to- 1arm pullup
.pushup- to- 1arm pushup
.squat - to- pistol squat
Learned this from convict conditioning book
That's a great way to do it!
Thanks for making the videos you do, i struggle to find much content that talks in detail about strength endurance training.
Hey I'm really glad you liked this one! Strength endurance is so underrated
I never really enjoyed the prospect of circuits, but this video shed it all into a new light for me. Very enjoyable to watch your journey!
Hey thanks for being here glad you liked the video!
i love your style of videos! hope you get more subs!
Hey thank you I really appreciate that!
Great video man
Thanks!
I like bodyweight training but I have to add some weights for my lower back, glutes and hamstrings. Might do the sandbag program for the winter.
I agree 100%!! Good luck with it, sandbags really changed everything for me at least!
Well done. Do you Murph! My favorite fitness workout.
Thanks! I haven't but that sounds like a killer of a workout! I think I've seen some guys at a nearby crossfit gym doing that one, no surprise they're all jacked af!
@@thestonecircle I won’t boast that I have done an orthodox Murph, but I have done modified ones and they were awesome: there is no way I can currently do 100 strict pull-ups in one workout let alone all of the calisthenics with a weighted vest!The second mile done after all of the callisthenics is a good test.
Hey bro, really enjoying your content. I fell into the gallon of milk a day weight gain strategy as well and found myself at about 195 lbs feeling very unfit. I've been trying to lose the weight for a little bit, down to 180 now but didn't really change my nutrition just started training more. Did you lose weight by a CICO method or some other strategy? Many thanks
Hey glad you're enjoying the videos so far thanks for being here! And congrats on your progress so far
Yeah the gallon of milk idea, it's ruined so many people! I was just super restrictive for about 3 months and lost most of it in that time. Probably would have held onto more muscle if I'd gone slower but I couldn't stand it at the time aha. Yeah cico and made sure to get a higher amount of protein every day. Also fasted 16-20 hours of every day. Was pretty terrible honestly lol I'm currently on a cut rn and I'm taking it very slowly this time
Don't forget your 30 (or more) Down Squats
So the idea is to do 465 body weight squats in as little time as possible or what does that 30 down mean??
@@dude861 30, small rest, 29, small rest, 28, small rest, 27, small rest, 26, small rest, 25, small rest.....etc. down to 1. I honestly just do sets of 100 or more now though when I am doing high rep body weight only squats.
@@jasonwelsh417 That's crazy man. Good work building up to that level.
what does the down and up rep scheme actually look like within the circuit. What does one full circle around the circuit look like
@@nevercanyoucant 10 reps of each exercise, then 9 of each, 8 of each, all the way down to 1 of each, repeat one, then make your way back up to ten
@@thestonecircle Thank you!!
You almost get like a runners high from an upper body workout. I do down circuits for upper/lower split and can concur that when I do hill sprints or biking now I dont get nearly as gassed as I did when doing straight sets. As you said "Im not sure how it works, but it works."
Hey heck yeah the feeling after those workouts is the best!
is it free to stay at any bureau of land management?
Usually they'll have a sign posted outside the area letting you know for sure, but it depends on what they offer. Some of the land is more like a campsite and they offer electricity hookups/ bathrooms etc but those cost money. I didn't care about all that and just found the free sites. In my experience the free ones are usually a bit further from town, which was actually better for me. There are a few sites you can use to plan out a route beforehand, I used 'free campsites net' and 'campendium' when I was on that trip and they worked pretty well. That was a few years ago and I never saw a campsite closed. Sad thing I've seen over this last year specifically is a lot of the free sites are closed off now, at least in the CO area. Hopefully it's just temporary and that stuff will open back up
gonna look in to it, thanks for the info, really appreciate it 👊
@@ATCMUS For sure!
Homeboy discovered CrossFit on his own
Haha I figured other people probably do something similar, no wonder they're all jacked and lean!
Great Stuff! How would you implement this circuits with some other strength program for example stone lifting in your case, or other PPL kind of programs.
Thanks! With stones I think of it in terms of upper lowe which makes it pretty easy. The calisthenics circuits are the upper days and the stones are lower, even though there's some overlap.
PPL might be tricky because I think the circuits work best when you Alternate between push and pull in the same workout, but doing something like a 4-5 day split with ppl on three of the days and a circuit on the 4th or 5th could work. With full body you could get your main compound out of the way and do a basic 10 down circuit at the end of the workout as a finisher. They're not super taxing so it's easy to add them to most things!
Imma try it out for a while
Good luck with it! I find this type of training very enjoyable
You reinvented CrossFit.
Haha hey those guys are pretty jacked!
Interesting concept - sounds good. how would you set it up if you cant do 10 pull ups in a row?
5down and up works really well too! I've spent a lot of time with that as well, actually prefer it if I'm being honest. 5,4,3,2,1,1,2,3,4,5 repeat, could even do 3 down and up 3,2,1,1,2,3 repeat, I like that for more difficult variations. Less Taxing on the conditioning but still good!
Bands
@@thecalisthenicsman7415 that's a great method too
I'm running starting strength, could I do a calisthenics circuit on my off days? (specifically the balanced strength/endurance one you showed in your other video)
From my experience, if you stick to the starting strength program 100% you should max out the gains you'll get from in within a few months. I'd probably just focus on improving those barbell strength movements until progress slows way down and you pass on to the next stage. At that point you could probably start doing more calisthenics stuff! If you're already making gains doing starting strength though I'd just ride that out as long as you can first
Is that type of circuit benefical for fighters?
Since I released my new program that uses these circuits as one of the main forms of training I've had a few combat guys tell me it helped a lot with not getting gassed out, I think it should carry over great!
I mentioned it a month ago and started doing this, and it actually gave me great results. It feels like I can fight for hours. Thanks, man.
How frequently did you do these circuits everyday?!
Every other day 🙂
@@thestonecircle thank you
❤
❤
LETSS GOOO
YEAHHHH!
I need to do stuff like this. The hard part is I need to scale back everything else I'm doing for a while cause I know my fatigue ceiling is low right now :/
These circuits are so worth it! They can build up work capacity pretty quick too
Circuits, one form of loaded aerobics, are where it's at. As you age you're not going to want to carry any extra body weight. Muscle or fat. You're going to want to be lean w/ off the charts aerobic/strength work capacity. Research what Steve Reeves was doing after he retired from bodybuilding and the work of Dr. Leonard Schwartz, M.D. Why was Superman super?
"Lean with off the charts aerobic/strength work capacity." Sounds more appealing every day!
@@thestonecircle It's interesting to me that all the folks I know in my age group who started w/ "get big get strong" find their way to "get lean get work capacity". At least the nattys.
@@oldnatty61The "getting big and jacked" thing is fun in your 20s and early 30s until your joints start getting beat up and your blood work starts showing high LDL and extra lbs in body fat. Sure you look 'big' and can pick up heavy shit, but getting out of breath after 10 min of cardio also not fun lol. All show no go...As we get older I think the lean and mean look is more funtional, healthy, and looks better.
@@J01123 It's so interesting how everyone I know in my age group who trains travel a similar path. Somewhere around 40 to 50 we give up the heavy weight and eating. We start lighter circuit conditioning stuff (often bodyweight stuff). We shift focus to joint health, mobility, flexibility. We want to jettison all extra bodyweight be it muscle or fat. We strive for a high level of cardio strength work capacity. I now much prefer squatting my own body weight 500 times in 15 mns. or less than 500 lbs. once. It is this kind of training that will best serve you as you age if your goal is healthy longevity.
@@oldnatty61 Exactly. Being a very lanky/skinny kid in high school I beat my body up from age 18-31 trying to put on mass. After one too many injuries and being gassed from doing any sport like activity I ditched 90% of my weights. Im 41 now but still want to cut 10-15 lbs. The military circuit workouts are hard as hell but afterwards you feel like a beast knowing you have the gas in the tank to do what 85% of the guys in my age bracket cant do.
You lost me when stopped training legs
@JeffBush-sw8yk understandable haha. You can use these and train legs on the other days too, I just didn't care at the time
I’m just picking at you man. I enjoy your channel
@JeffBush-sw8yk haha all good, thanks man!