Use These 5 Exercises While Traveling

Motion
A picture of dogs, not traveling.

Traveling can make sticking into an exercise routine difficult.

For those that travel frequently for career, your ability to stay fit is hinged on staying active once you arrive at your destination, and managing calories (and quality of those calories).

While traveling, never forget the POWER of bodyweight based exercises.

Yoga, bodyweight strength training or an exertion focused workout, bodyweight fitness requires no equipment, minimal time investment, while delivering a potent dose of physical activity when you need it the most.

Spend time getting familiar with “minimalist” fitness techniques. You never know when you’ll need to put those resourceful methods into action.

If you know how to design a workout for a small space, with little to no equipment, in a varying time frames, you can stay fit for life.

And I’m telling you, getting a daily dose of exercise, no matter how small and insignificant it might feel, is worth the effort.

Here are 5 exercises for busy travelers:

1. Crawling

Crawling is the one of the most underutilized bodyweight-based exercise. Basic forward and backward crawling provides a ton of benefits that you’d just don’t get with other exercises. There are hundreds of crawling variations and combinations I can deliver a great workout and keep things fresh and interesting.

Sideways, Lizard🦎 , Bear🐻 , Amoeba 🦠 crawling patterns are all kick ass crawling variations.

Crawling can serve as a a reminder that fitness shouldn’t be all about up and down repetitions.

Movement is life, and it comes in many different forms.

Read more about crawling here

2. Kick-Throughs

Kick-throughs are a ground based movement pattern that challenge your core, upper body strength, timing, balance and coordination. These exercise variations, for many people, will be a much needed departure from traditional exercise.

Kick-throughs can be performed to the side or front.

Workouts can really benefit from incorporating MORE dynamic, free flowing movements like this.

Tip: Perform reps at slow tempo. Control every inch. Breathe.

Multi-planar, “quirky” movements like kick-throughs are an exceptional exercise to push movement training outward from the cookie cutter stuff.

If you find kick-throughs interesting, here’s an online program that specializes in coaching clients through multi-planar movement training techniques.

3) Flow Combinations

Flow combinations are a great option for minimalist travel workouts. Flows can include common bodyweight exercises into a 2-3 exercise mini circuit, or multi-planar (less definable, yet movement rich) drills into movement sequence. Either way, a flow adds a whole new dynamic to a travel workout.

Here are some examples:

Cossack Warm Up Flow

Push Up+ Cross Body Knee + Scorpion + Side Kick Through Flow

And I can’t forget about this really challenging low lizard crawl flow.

Dodging the furniture in a small space hotel room adds another level difficulty to the flow.

4) Push-Ups, Squats, Lunges

No article related to staying fit while traveling would be complete without mentioning 3 of the most effective exercises: push-ups, squats and lunges.

Over the years, one of my biggest regrets is not documenting the hundreds of the workouts I’ve done inside of sh*tty hotel rooms and Airbnbs. The best workouts almost always include variations of push-ups, squats and lunges. I’m not talking about a fancy pants variations either, just grinding HARD using the basic push-up, air squat and lunge.

Fitness trends remind me a lot of fashion trends. They come, they go. People get hooked onto “new” exercises, methods, etc… and in time forget about the pillar exercises and the principles that should be applied to those exercises (progressive loading, tempo, etc) that deliver predictable results.

Here’s a classic workout for you to try.

Perform the following, in cyclical order, for 10-15 minutes without stopping:

10 push-ups

10 squats

10 jumping jacks

10 lunges

Too easy? We can make it harder by ramping up the exercise complexity:

5 carpet slide push ups (per side)

5 pistol squats (per side)

10 no jump/push-up burpees

5 alternating lunge jumps (per side)

5) Burpees

“You son of a bitch! Burpees are the worst exercise ever created! Rot in hell, bastard!”

Few other topics get people upset like burpees.

Burpees have a bad reputation because many (not all) personal trainers mindlessly plug them into client workouts using super high rep ranges, without giving thought to the clients readiness to perform a burpee with reasonable technique.

A decent base of strength and mobility is required before diving into a full burpee workout.

If you can’t squat, don’t burpee. If you can’t push-up, don’t burpee.

Personal trainers have a tough gig because clients knock on sign up for training sessions often expecting to get beaten into a pulp.

It doesn’t have to be like that. Especially if you’re chasing body transformation (weight loss, fat loss, etc). Put less calories in your mouth if you’re wanting to lose weight. Versus injuring yourself doing an exercise your body isn’t suited to tolerate. As if the 100 calories burned during the beat down will offset the 500 calories the client ate on the way home. You dirty clients!

The benefits of having a blog is I get to write about whatever… Z-Fack… I want. And on that note, I love burpees. Actually, I don’t love them, but do I use them and see value in using them from time to time.

Burpees can elicit one hell of a training effect.

I don’t use burpees every day, or every week for that matter. I do frequently use them while traveling because they create a total body training effect with a minimal time investment. And, most hotel gyms suck, so if there’s no equipment available, burpees kick ass.

The key to having a healthy relationship with burpees is remaining mindful of the following:

  • Burpee variations and modifications (select a variations to suit your abilities)
  • Volume: reps/sets
  • Rest periods for recovery
  • Frequency throughout the week
  • Current fitness Level

It’s all about expectations. Burpees aren’t the end all be all of fitness. They are difficult, but difficult doesn’t mean they are good for you.

Here are some other difficult exercises: kettlebell swings, rear foot elevated split squats, chin-ups, rowing or deadlifts.

Fact is, burpees deliver a WHOPPING punch when it comes to cardio. A shit ton of total body work can be performed in a really short amount of time.

Like any other exercise, be mindful of HOW burpees are being used in a workout. Don’t bite off more than you can chew with regard to volume and the ability to handle fatigue.

Burpees are a tool, use them sparingly, pay attention to your movement quality while doing them, keep a reasonable perspective about their purpose.

If you’re not ready to engaged in a burpee workout, don’t! Skip it. Use other exercises and mobility techniques to build a solid base first.

Or, give this burpee variation a try:

Are You a Hotel with a Gym?… Thank You. If Not, We’ll Ruin Your Doors.

Quick Tips

Screen Shot 2013-05-07 at 6.42.49 AM

Finding time and space to workout while on the road can a real nightmare.

For those of you who travel often for your career, you undoubtedly know exactly what I am talking about.

It’s a constant challenge to find the motivation and the square footage.

Nothing is ever ideal while traveling, and maintaining positive progress is difficult.  It’s a real shame that it has to be this way, because so many of us travel frequently.

Not every hotel has made a conscious effort to provide its customers with adequate fitness equipment.  It’s disturbing to think about, especially since the active approach to life is gaining momentum.

For those hotels that currently have (and always have) provided paying customers with quality/spacious amenities like well equipped fitness rooms… I would like to say… thank you.

Screen Shot 2013-05-07 at 6.47.57 AM

Few and far between…

Thank you for taking the time to appreciate that not everyone who travels wants to sit in the hotel bar and waste away all night.  I’m not saying that I don’t enjoy a beer or two to come down after a long day of travel, but it’s typically not the first on my priority list.

Screen Shot 2013-05-07 at 6.51.10 AM

We’ve all been there…

Traveling is the definition of being force to be lethargic.  When we travel, we are crammed in narrow/uncomfortable seats on an airplane or stuck behind the wheel of a car.  We are forced in a static position that smashes our asses flat like pancakes and reeks havoc on our hips, lower backs and necks.  Maintaining this sitting posture can deeply effective our overall posture which is not a good things.

We develop knots, muscles firing out of whack or not firing at all, stiff and immobile joints along with a decrease in our overall energy levels.  Sitting makes the best of us lethargic.  It sucks.

Personally, when I arrive to hotel, I typically snap out of it and realize that I am not tired or groggy, but I am desensitized from lack of movement for hours on end.

The traveling businessman or businesswoman understands this feeling, I have no doubt.

Sometimes we just want to hop on the treadmill (yes I said the treadmill) and log a few miles with the headphones in, do some squats, push ups, pull ups, presses and unwind the damage caused from long days of travel.  It feels good to open up the lungs and get a good sweat in after being confined in the jail that we refer to as airports.

One of the reasons that I push so hard for people to purchase suspension trainers is because a suspension trainer allows you to take your strength training anywhere.  The resistance based moves that you’re able to perform with a suspension trainer might be sub-maximal and far from the weight that you’re capable of lifting, but at the very least you can execute one hell of a workout that will get your blood pumping, aid in maintaining strength and offset the detrimental effects that traveling posture can have.

Screen Shot 2013-05-07 at 6.59.04 AM

Just hook your trainer to your door and get after it.  It’s that simple.

Fire up your iPhone with Pandora, Spotify or music from your iTunes library and you’ve brought your home gym with you.

If you’ve got room, you can add a jump rope and a timer of some kind and now you’ve just set up a quality gym… all from the comfort of your hotel room.

The portability (is this a word?) of suspension trainers and jump ropes is a major turn on for active folks.  It’s fitness without bulk.

You can pack a suspension trainer, jump rope and timer in a bag not much larger than a quart sized zip loc.  Seriously.  These items pack like a charm and really provide the most benefit in situations where the equipment is not ideal.  I rarely travel without packing my suspension trainer and jump rope.  Even if I don’t end up using it, I know that it is in my bag if I need it.  That’s a good feeling for someone who places priority on staying active no matter what.  If it’s important, you should do it every single day.

You can’t put a price on that… well actually you can… because a suspension trainer is about $99 and a quality jump rope shouldn’t cost more than about $10-15 reasonably.

So for less than $115, you can have a fully functioning gym that you can take anywhere in the world and get a kick ass training session in.

Bad ass I’d say.

I have worked out in hotel rooms more times that I can count.  While it may be unpopular with your roommates and neighbors, I can honestly say that I have never regretted getting a workout in while on the road… and that just might be the point.  Rarely do people ever regret how they feel after getting a simple and effective training session in.  Can you remember the last time that you regretted getting a sweat and opening up the lungs? Probably not, we almost always feel better post-workout.

Be willing to adapt.  Training at home, everything is ideal.  You have what you need tool-wise and you’re neatly situated in your comfort zone.  On the road, it is almost always the opposite.  Space is tight, equipment is foreign and motivation is lacking.  It’s important to be able to adapt to your environment.  Your body will seriously thank you for making the effort.  The proof of your efforts will be visible to onlookers, I guarantee it.

The Wrap Up…

So if you’re a hotel (or hotel chain) that has taken the time to supply a fitness room that has properly functioning equipment… thank you.

Sincerely, thank you.

We travelers aren’t asking for much.  Just a simple space to take care of our bodies physically.  We enjoy being active, and just because we are away from home, doesn’t mean that we don’t give a shit about our health.  Sure, it might be a vacation and we are staying in your hotel to relax and have fun, but please realize that an increasing number of us really do want to stay active whole host of reasons that differ from person to person.

It’s become a part of our lifestyles, fully integrated into our lives just like showering or eating breakfast.

Hotels, thank you for recognizing this.  And if not, thank you for making the hotel door solid enough, and the lock with such quality that we are able to hang our suspension trainers from them and really get after it when you forget to include fitness rooms on your premises.  We appreciate that too…

Sorry for ruining your doors.

Cheers to keeping up with your movement while on the traveling…

KG