Fitness
Think You're a Strong Hiker? Test Your Trail Strength with These 4 Exercises
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Strength tests can be extremely useful for hikers who are training for a big objective, or simply want to learn more about their own fitness levels. Last year, we published four assessments to test your trail readiness. There are plenty of other physical tests you can do to see how strong your hiking muscles are. Below are four exercises you can perform to monitor your overall hiking fitness and highlight major areas that feel powerful or could use more training. (Feeling really strong? Combine both tests for a complete full-body assessment.)
How To Perform This Strength Test
Objective measures are useful, but subjective results reveal more about your fitness. For example, you might be able to complete 20 single-leg sit-to-stands per leg on the initial assessment, which is a great score. But if the exercise left you tired and sore for days, that’s less ideal.
Perform the strength test honestly and stop once you can no longer execute a full range of motion with good form. If you can’t achieve the baseline targets on the first go-around, keep strength training and try again in four to six weeks.
It’s helpful to re-test regularly to understand your progress. Upon reassessments, think back to your previous attempt. Did the effort required to complete any particular assessment feel easier? Did you recover quickly? Was there any lingering soreness? Were your muscles burning at any point? These subjective results are a great measure of progress that won’t necessarily appear in objective findings.
To interpret your results, compare the scores for your right and left legs. If they are equal or within a few reps, that’s good. If there is a difference of more than five reps per side, add an extra set of the suggested exercises for the weaker side. Your training is going well when the assessments all meet the baseline.
Single-Leg Sit-To-Stand
One of the more challenging assessments, the single-leg sit-to-stand, primarily targets the quads, hamstrings, adductors, glutes, core, and ankle mobility. What makes this assessment hard is the control required to lower down to the bench or chair.
Begin this assessment standing with your back to a stable chair or bench. With control, you’ll lift one leg and hold it in front of you while lowering to sit on the bench or chair with the opposite leg. Return to standing using one leg and repeat until you can no longer perform the motion with controlled form. End the assessment if you start using your arms for momentum or if you start using a rocking motion to come up from the seated position.
For this assessment, the goal is 25 controlled reps per leg. If you fall short, add some single-leg step-downs and pistol variations into your regular training routine.
Single Leg Dorsiflexion
This exercise tests the endurance of the big shin muscle, the anterior tibialis. This muscle helps lift the foot when walking and lowers the foot back to the ground after the heel makes contact. Basically, it prevents you from tripping. Strong shin muscles can also ward off issues like shin splints and help make ascents and descents easier.
Stand near a countertop, wall, or doorway if you need to hold onto something for balance. While keeping your heel on the floor, raise the rest of your foot as high as possible—the motion is like lifting your foot off a gas pedal. Avoid shifting your hips backward as you raise your foot. With control, lower your foot back down to the floor.
The goal is 40 repetitions for each leg. If you come up short, add single-leg dorsiflexion from a 4- to 6-inch step to your weekly workouts, or try the wall lean dorsiflexion variation. Both will provide a greater range of motion and are excellent for building strength.
Side Plank
The side plank is an excellent exercise for building stability and core strength. Specifically, it targets the obliques, abs, and other stabilizing muscles required for carrying a fully loaded backpack.
To perform a side plank, lie on your side with your feet stacked and your elbow underneath your shoulder. Raise your hips off the floor, aiming to keep your trunk straight and still from your head to your feet. Don’t let your hips sag toward the floor; stay tight. Once you can no longer maintain position, lower your hips back to the floor and repeat the assessment on the opposite side.
Your goal is to hold the plank for 90 seconds per side. If your time isn’t quite there, don’t worry. Train any side plank variation or weighted marches (such as suitcase marches or farmer carries) to get stronger. Pallof isometric holds or Pallof presses are also great additions to any training program.
Ankle Dorsiflexion
This test assesses your ankle’s range of motion, which, if limited, can increase the risk of ankle sprains and injury. Place a tape measure perpendicular to a wall, measuring away from it. Get down on one knee in front of the wall with your leading foot 2 to 3 inches from the wall. Keeping your hips straight, glide your front knee forward to touch the wall, and keep the heel of that foot down. If you can’t touch the wall with your knee while keeping your heel down, move closer to the wall and retest. If you can touch the wall, move your foot back and retest. Record your score (the furthest distance you can place your foot from the wall while keeping your heel down) for each ankle and use the chart below to find your degree of dorsiflexion.
Normal ankle dorsiflexion is 40 degrees, or about 4.5 inches from the wall. If you fall below 34 degrees of dorsiflexion, roughly 4 inches from the wall, you have a fivefold increased risk for ankle sprains. In addition, if there is an asymmetry of more than 5 degrees per side, your risk of injury increases.
|
Inches from Wall
|
Degree of Dorsiflexion
|
|
5
|
45 degrees
|
|
4.5
|
41 degrees
|
|
4
|
36 degrees
|
|
3.5
|
31 degrees
|
|
3
|
27 degrees
|
|
2.5
|
22 degrees
|
|
2
|
18 degrees
|
|
1.5
|
13 degrees
|
|
1
|
9 degrees
|
If your measurement falls below 40 degrees, or you have an asymmetry greater than 5 degrees, add ankle mobility work to your workout warm-ups. There are three options to improve dorsiflexion: Start with the ankle rocker, progress to a dumbbell, and finally, use a band to mobilize the joint. If your retest score does not improve after four to six weeks of ankle rocker exercise, move on to the dumbbell or band option. Once your mobility improves, reduce the frequency to once per week.
Fitness
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Fitness
Alexandra Daddario, 40, relies on this underrated crunch upgrade for strong abs – here’s how to do it properly
From enduring some serious physical prep for Baywatch to working consistently with elite trainer Patrick Murphy, Alexanda Daddario’s dedication to fitness is well-documented. She often shares insights on social media, and in a recent Instagram post, the White Lotus star gave an insight into how she trains her core with one powerhouse movement: the reverse crunch into shoulder stand.
Why is it so good? Most traditional ab exercises require repetitive spinal flexion – the process of pulling your chest down toward your knees, like in a standard crunch. This isolates only the upper section of your abs, and for women who spend hours sitting at a desk, it can reinforce a slouched, rounded posture.
Daddario’s movement flips the mechanics entirely since you actively curl your pelvis up toward your chest. In doing so, you target not only your upper abs, but the lower portion and your obliques (the sides) simultaneously, all while keeping your chest open and your neck unstrained. This translates into a much stronger core, better posture and crucial lower back protection. Research also shows that a controlled posterior tilt – the lower-body curl that initiates Daddario’s move – recruits a significantly higher percentage of deep core muscle fibres than traditional crunches.
Daddario then drives her hips directly up into a vertical shoulder stand. This completely removes momentum from the equation (meaning you can’t “cheat”) and forces your abs – particularly your obliques – to balance your body and prevent you from tipping sideways.
She then takes it one step further into a Pilates plow position with her legs overhead, before reversing the movement and, again, using her abs to control the lowering of her entire lower body as she slowly unrolls her spine down onto the mat. The plow portion is optional (and super advanced); the slow, controlled, lowering phase, which happens whether you move into plow or not, is where the magic happens, challenging your core through both lifting and resisting gravity. Inspired? Here’s exactly how to do the move with good form, and how many reps and sets to aim for.
How to do a reverse crunch into shoulder stand
- Lie on your back (either on a mat, or on a reformer Pilates machine, like Daddario, with your arms anchored tightly to the floor.
- Engage your core to curl your knees toward your chest, then fluidly press your feet straight up toward the ceiling, lifting your hips and lower back off the floor.
- Slowly lower down, one vertebra at a time. Aim for 3 sets of 6-8 controlled reps.
Optional progression:
- As you reach shoulder stand with your legs extended to the ceiling, slowly start to lower your toes toward the floor over your head. Your weight should rest entirely on your shoulders and upper back – not your neck.
- Keeping your legs straight, use your core to extend them straight back up to the ceiling, then control the descent by rolling your spine down one vertebra at a time, with your legs remaining straight.
One of our most frequently asked questions here at Women’s Health? How to build muscle and burn fat at the same time. So, we asked superstar trainer Oyinda Okunowo exactly how to do it. In this 4-week plan – created exclusively for Women’s Health COLLECTIVE members – you’ll get the workouts and nutrition guidance needed to help you on your way to better body composition. Tap the link below to unlock 14 days of free access to Oyinda’s plan and start training today.
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As Women’s Health UK’s fitness director and a qualified Pilates and yoga instructor, Bridie Wilkins has been passionately reporting on exercise, health and nutrition since the start of her decade-long career in journalism.
After earning a first-class degree in journalism and NCTJ accreditation, she secured her first role at Look Magazine, where she launched the magazine’s health and fitness column, Look Fit, before going on to become Health and Fitness writer at HELLO!
Since, she has written for Stylist, Glamour, Cosmopolitan, Marie Claire, Elle, The Metro, Runner’s World and Red. Today, she oversees all fitness content across Women’s Health online and in print, spearheading leading cross-platform franchises, such as ‘Fit At Any Age’, which showcases the women proving that age is no barrier to exercise.
She has also represented the brand on BBC Radio London, plus various podcasts and Substacks – all with the aim to encourage more women to exercise and show them how. Outside of work, find her trying the latest Pilates studio, testing her VO2 max for fun (TY, Oura), or posting workouts on Instagram.
Fitness
Built Strong: Fitness forges unbreakable father-son bond
Fathers often share special bonds with their children. For 80-year-old Chanka Ramrattan, that bond is a shared love for fitness and exercise with his 46-year-old son Nari.
The Rousillac resident recalled that he began exercising at the age of 14, lifting weights and taking long walks, a passion that remains with him today. During his time working as a clerk at Texaco, he said he would walk from Forest Reserve to his Rousillac home, a distance of approximately 12 kilometres.
“I have done every marathon in Trinidad; you name a marathon, I could tell you. Miami Marathon, Tobago Sea-to-Sea, which is the most difficult marathon that I’ve ever done. I even have a trophy where I got the fastest speed walking man, and I have all my medals,” he recounted.
Chanka’s last marathon was a virtual one in 2021. Since then, his doctor has advised him to slow down because of his age. Now, he spends his time at the Health and Fitness Gym in Debe and South Oropouche about three times a week, walking marathons of his own on the treadmill.
“I do cardio walking for one hour, and I do weight training for one hour. Then, I go in the sea and I swim and dive for one hour,” he noted.
Chanka firmly believes regular exercise has contributed to his longevity and said he plans to keep going.
“Exercise is very important, and I like exercise. You go to Miami, and you’ll see 90-year-olds and 100-year-olds in the gym, walking, and even going to marathons. That’s because if you don’t exercise, you feel lethargic, you feel down. And you also have to read a lot. So, you exercise the brain, and you exercise the body,” Chanka advised.
His son Nari believes that perseverance was one of the most important lessons his father passed on to his children, along with a love of fitness and exercise.
“When you are looking at your dad, and your mom, and you are seeing them exercising and you are seeing them fit, why would you not want to do the same thing? So, it was instilled in all of us, myself and my two siblings. That exercising became a routine. My bigger sister, she would run, and my smaller sister would do cardio,” Nari explained.
The engineer and businessman recalled starting to exercise and lift weights with his father and uncle from a young age, crediting the experience with shaping the discipline and fitness mindset he still follows today.
However, in 2016, he faced a big obstacle after he hit his head during a diving accident, damaging his C6 and C7 vertebrae and spinal cord.
“I was 37 at the time when I got into the accident. I lost all feeling in my body. The person that you see in front of you now is not the person I was three years ago. I actually couldn’t move at all; I could only move my toe. It took a lot of hard work and will, to come out of that situation. Eventually, I started to transfer from my wheelchair to a bed, to a car. I even built a machine for me to stand up with a harness, and it pulls me up in the air so I can stand up straight. So, I used that for two years to get my body back to where it is,” Nari explained.
Nari, who is currently a quadriplegic, said he was only able to make progress through persistence and support from his loved ones. Chanka admitted that period was one of the most difficult experiences of his life as a parent.
“I wouldn’t like to explain that, that is a different thing altogether. He was in Mount Hope for six months, we had to go every day. It was a real trying thing, but you know, he is on the way to recovery. His mother wants to see everything good for him. For me, she will treat me second class and she will treat them first class, and she is right. Because the ones that are able to walk, you give them less attention because they are tending to themselves. You have to give more attention to the one that needs attention,” he acknowledged.
But their bond through exercising didn’t change. During COVID-19, Nari said his father returned to weightlifting under his son’s guidance.
“When my dad was trapped in the house and he couldn’t go anywhere, he was very miserable. So, we had a schedule where he and I would use the weights that I have at home, and I would tell him what to do. He actually got a six-pack during COVID. So, we stayed home and exercised with my wife and all too. After, I realised now I could start back to go to gym,” Nari reflected.
Chanka said his son’s determination continues to inspire him.
“When you see somebody who is a bit incapacitated and they’re exercising, they give you inspiration. Like if that man could do that, I could do that too. I wish Nari all the best. He is adhering to all his exercises, and he has a will that you won’t get in your next life. It’s probably my genes passed on to him,” Chanka shared.
Nari said none of that would have been possible without his father’s influence.
“Dad, I just want to tell you, thank you very much for being in our lives. You give us the encouragement to go day to day, and just keep being who you are, because you have a strong will, strong mind, and that is what keeps us going every day,” he said.
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