@2many2no Keep at it and in no time you’ll be up to 40 oz. I believe in you, you can do it!
I will, however, start to worry if after the 40’s you switch to 750ml
I used to work out, but one day I was distracted by the vagaries of life. I started my exercise with a quick cool up, supersetted everybody part, and finished with an extended warm down. I slept for 3 days and now the only way I can combat my whole word dyslexia is to saunter up the front of the road humming the lonely man (the closing theme to the Incredible Hulk) backwards.
Stretch first, in the form of getting Tempest into her bondage gear (she backs out of her collar and runs into traffic when frightened, so she wears a belt tight around her waist which I then strap to her collar). Then chasing down Zephyr and forcing him into the car (he gets terribly car sick). Then we exercise, wherein I walk briskly while the two of them pull me like I am a plow (I’m working on leash manners). Cool down is the 5 minute drive home, dismantling Tempest’s bondage gear, and usually pulling out the seat protector to hose off Zephyr puke. Taking the dogs for a walk is a whole lot more of a production than it was with Simba.
@moondrake have you ever tried a head collar with them? I used one on my pit mix for a while and now she walks on a normal body harness without pulling me down the street.
@RiotDemon Tempest can back out of a “no-slip” martingale collar in seconds, and she backed out of her harness so fast I never saw her move, one second she was on the lead and the next she was dashing across a busy dark street in rush hour traffic. I wouldn’t trust a halter to keep her restrained. After 5 incidents of her getting scared, escaping restraints before I could stop her and running into traffic, taking her anywhere is very stressful. Which is sad bcause she loves going places. She just has these panic attacks and is as limber as a freaking Cirque de Soleil performer.
@moondrake maybe try it with the usual thing you have now, just a shorter leash on the head collar? Wish I was close by so you could borrow the one I have. My dog wasn’t able to get out of it, but granted, she doesn’t get out of a harness either.
Does your current setup have the leash on her back or neck? I’ve seen newer harnesses where the leash comes out midpoint, front of the chest. Supposedly better for control since it turns their body similar to a head halter.
@RiotDemon Thanks, but those won’t work. They cinch around the chest, she can back right out of them. She backs out of martingale collars, designed for greyhounds, whose necks are thicker than their heads. They tighten like choke chains when pulled, but she still backs right out of them. So I put a belt around her skinny waist and clip it to her collar. In theory, she can’t pull the collar forward over her head as the belt around her waist holds it in place. In theory, because she can pretzel herself around to take the tension off the line if she figures it out.
This is Tempest sitting on my lap, while bending herself in half to put her head on my lap for scratches at the same time. Her chin is on her tail.
@moondrake maybe combine the chest control harness with the waist strap and you would have more control, but still keeping her from getting out of the harness.
If I’m just lifting, I normally don’t do a warm-up or cool-down. But I’m not maxing or doing clean and jerk or other quick full-body movements that are prone to injury. However, if it’s nice out and want to do some light cardio to get my heart rate up, I’ll run or bike there and back (about a mile each way).
If I’m playing a sport (ultimate frisbee, basketball, soccer, etc.), I do an fairly extensive active warm-up (full 10-15 minutes) that mostly consists of drills that stretch during movement since that’s the latest recommendations I’ve read. I do very little static stretching. The extent of my cool-downs is maybe a few stretches and walking back to my car.
Neither. Scientifically, you don’t have to, and in fact doing so (specifically the warm-up) can decrease your strength during the workout. Do stretches on your off-days instead, if you need to.
Also, never run before weight-lifting, only after.
Wow. That is a large number of non exercisers. I am surprised. Although, I wonder what is classified as workout. Like does a walk around the block count?
I’ve been biking the past few months for fitness; I’m down 11 pounds now.
Quick warm-up: A lap around my street. Workout: Several miles of hills in my neighborhood.
Cool down: Several slow laps around my street.
When I work out…
unless it’s specifically…
@2many2no Keep at it and in no time you’ll be up to 40 oz. I believe in you, you can do it!
I will, however, start to worry if after the 40’s you switch to 750ml
@sicc574
Casemates.com
When I love I love hard.
When I sit I sit loose.
When I work-out I fall asleep
@Mehrocco_Mole
Well that certainly explains a lot!
do a quick warm-up and a short cool-down, which is an option that feels like it should have already been on the list.
I have a hot toddy, followed by a cold beer.
A lot of lazy people on meh.
@Darrell2
I am one of them.
What is a warm-up and cool-down? I just get hot, sweat, and take a shower.
@hchavers I live in Texas. That’s called “living.” Workout adds earbuds.
I used to work out, but one day I was distracted by the vagaries of life. I started my exercise with a quick cool up, supersetted everybody part, and finished with an extended warm down. I slept for 3 days and now the only way I can combat my whole word dyslexia is to saunter up the front of the road humming the lonely man (the closing theme to the Incredible Hulk) backwards.
Don’t forget rule #18: Limber up.
@PocketBrain “You ever see a lion limber up before it takes down a gazelle?”
Stretch first, in the form of getting Tempest into her bondage gear (she backs out of her collar and runs into traffic when frightened, so she wears a belt tight around her waist which I then strap to her collar). Then chasing down Zephyr and forcing him into the car (he gets terribly car sick). Then we exercise, wherein I walk briskly while the two of them pull me like I am a plow (I’m working on leash manners). Cool down is the 5 minute drive home, dismantling Tempest’s bondage gear, and usually pulling out the seat protector to hose off Zephyr puke. Taking the dogs for a walk is a whole lot more of a production than it was with Simba.
@moondrake have you ever tried a head collar with them? I used one on my pit mix for a while and now she walks on a normal body harness without pulling me down the street.
@RiotDemon Tempest can back out of a “no-slip” martingale collar in seconds, and she backed out of her harness so fast I never saw her move, one second she was on the lead and the next she was dashing across a busy dark street in rush hour traffic. I wouldn’t trust a halter to keep her restrained. After 5 incidents of her getting scared, escaping restraints before I could stop her and running into traffic, taking her anywhere is very stressful. Which is sad bcause she loves going places. She just has these panic attacks and is as limber as a freaking Cirque de Soleil performer.
@moondrake maybe try it with the usual thing you have now, just a shorter leash on the head collar? Wish I was close by so you could borrow the one I have. My dog wasn’t able to get out of it, but granted, she doesn’t get out of a harness either.
Does your current setup have the leash on her back or neck? I’ve seen newer harnesses where the leash comes out midpoint, front of the chest. Supposedly better for control since it turns their body similar to a head halter.
@moondrake this store is specifically for great Danes. Not sure if the harnesses you tried were similar, but maybe this will give some ideas?
https://www.all-about-great-dane-dog-breed.com/great-dane-harnesses-c-4/
@RiotDemon Thanks, but those won’t work. They cinch around the chest, she can back right out of them. She backs out of martingale collars, designed for greyhounds, whose necks are thicker than their heads. They tighten like choke chains when pulled, but she still backs right out of them. So I put a belt around her skinny waist and clip it to her collar. In theory, she can’t pull the collar forward over her head as the belt around her waist holds it in place. In theory, because she can pretzel herself around to take the tension off the line if she figures it out.
This is Tempest sitting on my lap, while bending herself in half to put her head on my lap for scratches at the same time. Her chin is on her tail.
@moondrake maybe combine the chest control harness with the waist strap and you would have more control, but still keeping her from getting out of the harness.
Good luck finding something that works.
Depends.
If I’m just lifting, I normally don’t do a warm-up or cool-down. But I’m not maxing or doing clean and jerk or other quick full-body movements that are prone to injury. However, if it’s nice out and want to do some light cardio to get my heart rate up, I’ll run or bike there and back (about a mile each way).
If I’m playing a sport (ultimate frisbee, basketball, soccer, etc.), I do an fairly extensive active warm-up (full 10-15 minutes) that mostly consists of drills that stretch during movement since that’s the latest recommendations I’ve read. I do very little static stretching. The extent of my cool-downs is maybe a few stretches and walking back to my car.
I do a light lift, typically with no plates, before I begin my workout just to ensure the form feels good and my body is ready to start the workout.
Granted, doing it everyday some muscles always feel sore especially depending how devastating the workout was the day prior.
Wha?
Work out? Bwahahahahahaha
Neither. Scientifically, you don’t have to, and in fact doing so (specifically the warm-up) can decrease your strength during the workout. Do stretches on your off-days instead, if you need to.
Also, never run before weight-lifting, only after.
Wow. That is a large number of non exercisers. I am surprised. Although, I wonder what is classified as workout. Like does a walk around the block count?