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Nexus
05-15-2006, 12:06 PM
http://www.navyseals.com/community/navyseals/navysealworkout_main.cfm

WORKOUT FOR CATEGORY I

RUNNING: The majority of the physical activities you will be required to perform during your six months of training at BUD/S will involve running. The intense amount of running can lead to over stress injuries of the lower extremities in trainees who arrive not physically prepared to handle the activities. Swimming, bicycling, and lifting weights will prepare you for some of the activities at BUD/S, but ONLY running can prepare your lower extremities for the majority of the activities. You should also run in boots to prepare your legs for the everyday running in boots at BUD/S (Boots should be of a light-weight variety i.e. Bates Lights, Hi-Tec, Etc.).

The goal of the category I student is to work up to 16 miles per week of running. After you have achieved that goal, then and only then should you continue on to the category II goal of 30 miles per week. Let me remind you that category I is a nine week buildup program. Follow the workout as best you can and you will be amazed at the progress you will make.

RUNNING SCHEDULE I

WEEKS #1, 2: 2 miles/day, 8:30 pace, M/W/F (6 miles/ week)
WEEK #3: No running. High risk of stress fractures
WEEK #4: 3 miles/day, M/W/F (9 miles/wk)
WEEKS #5, 6: 2/3/4/2 miles, M/Tu/Th/F (11 miles/wk)
WEEKS #7,8: 4/4/5/3 miles, M/Tu/Th/F (16 miles/ wk)
WEEK #9: same as #7,8 (16 miles/ wk)


PHYSICAL TRAINING SCHEDULE I (Mon/Wed/Fri)
SETS OF REPETITIONS
WEEK #1: 4X15 PUSHUPS
4X20 SITUPS
3X3 PULL UPS
WEEK #2: 5X20 PUSHUPS
5X20 SITUPS
3X3 PULL UPS
WEEK #3,4: 5X25 PUSHUPS
5X25 SITUPS
3X4 PULL UPS
WEEK #5,6: 6X25 PUSHUPS
6X25 SITUPS
2X8 PULL UPS
WEEK #7,8: 6X30 PUSHUPS
6X30 SITUPS
2X10 PULL UPS
WEEK #9: 6X30 PUSHUPS
6X30 SITUPS
3X10 PULL UPS


* Note: For best results, alternate exercises. Do a set of pushups, then a set of situps, followed by a set of pull ups, immediately with no rest.

SWIMMING SCHEDULE I
(sidestroke with no fins 4-5 days a week)

WEEKS #1, 2: Swim continuously for 15 min.
WEEKS #3, 4: Swim continuously for 20 min.
WEEKS #5, 6: Swim continuously for 25 min.
WEEKS #7, 8: Swim continuously for 30 min.
WEEK #9: Swim continuously for 35 min.


* Note: If you have no access to a pool, ride a bicycle for twice as long as you would swim. If you do have access to a pool, swim every day available. Four to five days a week and 200 meters in one session is your initial workup goal. Also, you want to develop your sidestroke on both the left and the right side. Try to swim 50 meters in one minute or less.

WORKOUT FOR CATEGORY II

Category II is a more intense workout designed for those who have been involved with a routine PT schedule or those who have completed the requirements of category I. DO NOT ATTEMPT THIS WORKOUT SCHEDULE UNLESS YOU CAN COMPLETE THE WEEK #9 LEVEL OF CATEGORY I WORKOUTS.

RUNNING SCHEDULE II
(M/TulTh/F/Sa)

WEEKS #1,2: (3/5/4/5/2)miles 19 miles/week
WEEKS #3, 4: (4/5/6/4/3) miles 22 miles/week
WEEK #5: (5/5/6/4/4) miles 24 miles/week
WEEK #6: (5/6/6/6/4) miles 27 miles/week
WEEK #7: (6/6/6/6/6) miles 30 miles/week


* Note: For weeks #8-9 and beyond, it is not necessary to increase the distance of the runs; work on the speed of your 6 mile runs and try to get them down to 7:30 per mile or lower. If you wish to increase the distance of your runs, do it gradually: no more than one mile per day increase for every week beyond week #9.

PT SCHEDULE II
(Mon/Wed/Fri)

SETS OF REPETITIONS
WEEK #1, 2: 6X30 PUSHUPS
6X35 SITUPS
3X10 PULL UPS
3X20 DIPS
WEEK #3, 4: lOX20 PUSHUPS
10X25 SITUPS
4X10 PULL UPS
10X15 DIPS
WEEK #5: 15X20 PUSHUPS
15X25 SITUPS
4X12 PULLUPS
15X15 DIPS
WEEK #6: 20X20 PUSHUPS
20X25 SITUPS
5X12 PULL UPS
20X15 DIPS


These workouts are designed for long-distance muscle endurance. Muscle fatigue will gradually take a longer and longer time to develop doing high repetition workouts. For best results, alternate exercises each set, in order to rest that muscle group for a short time. The below listed workouts are provided for varying your workouts once you have met the Category I and II standards.

PYRAMID WORKOUTS

You can do this with any exercise. The object is to slowly build up to a goal, then build back down to the beginning of the workout. For instance, pull ups, situps, pushups, and dips can be alternated as in the above workouts, but this time choose a number to be your goal and build up to that number. Each number counts as a set. Work your way up and down the pyramid. For example, say your goal is "5."

# OF REPETITIONS
PULL UPS: 1,2,3,4,5,4,3,2,1
PUSHUPS: 2,4,6,8,10,8,6,4,2 (2X # pull ups)
SITUPS: 3,6,9,12,15,12,9,6,3 (3X #pull ups)
DIPS: same as pushups


SWIMMING WORKOUTS II
(4-5 days/week)

WEEKS #1, 2: Swim continuously for 35 min.
WEEKS #3, 4: Swim continuously for 45 min.with fins.
WEEK #5: Swim continuously for 60 min. with fins.
WEEK #6: Swim continuously for 75 min. with fins.


* Note: At first, to reduce initial stress on your foot muscles when starting with fins, alternate swimming 1000 meters with fins and 1000 meters without them. Your goal should be to swim 50 meters in 45 seconds or less.

STRETCH PT

Since Mon/Wed/Fri are devoted to PT, it is wise to devote at least 20 minutes on Tue/Thu/Sat to stretching. You should always stretch for at least 15 minutes before any workout; however, just stretching the previously worked muscles will make you more flexible and less likely to get injured. A good way to start stretching is to start at the top and go to the bottom. Stretch to tightness, not to pain; hold for 10-15 seconds. DO NOT BOUNCE. Stretch every muscle in your body from the neck to the calves, concentrating on your thighs, hamstrings, chest, back, and shoulders.

NUTRITION

Proper nutrition is extremely important now and especially when you arrive at BUD/S. You must make sure you receive the necessary nutrients to obtain maximum performance output during exercise and to promote muscle/tissue growth and repair. The proper diet provides all the nutrients for the body's needs and supplies energy for exercise. It also promotes growth and repair of tissue and regulates the body processes. The best source of complex carbohydrates are potatoes, pasta, rice, fruits, vegetables. These types of foods are your best sources of energy.

Carbohydrates, protein, and fat are the three energy nutrients. All three can provide energy, but carbohydrate is the preferred source of energy for physical activity. It takes at least 20 hours after exhaustive exercise to completely restore muscle energy, provided 600 grams of carbohydrates are consumed per day. During successive days of heavy training, like you will experience at BUD/S, energy stores prior to each training session become progressively lower. This is a situation in which a high carbohydrate diet can help maintain your energy.

The majority of carbohydrates should come from complex carbohydrate foods that include bread, crackers, cereal, beans, peas, starchy vegetables, and other whole grain or enriched grain products. Fruits are also loaded with carbohydrates. During training, more than four servings of these food groups should be consumed daily.

Water intake is vital; stay hydrated. You should be consuming up to four quarts of water daily. Drink water before you get thirsty! ! ! Substances such as alcohol, caffeine and tobacco increase your body's need for water. Too much of these substances will definitely harm your body and hinder your performance. Supplemental intake of vitamins, as well, has not been proven to be beneficial. If you are eating a well balance diet, there is no need to take vitamins.

TRAINING TABLE CONCEPT

NUTRIENT INTAKE
Carbohydrates 50-70% of calories
Protein 10-15% of calories
Fats 20-30% of calories

svenfeynord
05-15-2006, 12:32 PM
wow that is an intense workout program. I have heard of SEAL training. I always wanted to join the military but I was born in Aska, Sweden so I am ineligeble.

neilhytholt
05-15-2006, 01:57 PM
That seems kindof low. Wasn't it higher a few years ago? I seem to remember at least 6 miles per day of running or something when I was checking it out before.

By those #s I was doing that same program about 10 years ago, which seems to make it a lame program, because I was no superman or anything.

EDIT: Okay, nevermind. It was the category-2 program I was checking out before. Okay, that makes more sense.

The Willow Sword
05-15-2006, 03:07 PM
I mean i was looking at the basic dietary requirements and i saw no mention of chicken beef, fish, pork etc. I mean i know that if you are undergoing rigorous physical activity that eating Meat is not a good thing as your digestive system has to work harder to assimalte and process that animal protien. Now couple that with doing the aforementioned workout program, i would think you would have alot of guys crapping out, literally.
i am a partial vegetarian with my diet mainly consisting of what was mentioned, however i am a salmon and poultry consumer, but that only is about 20% of my diet and very infrequent(maybe once or twice every other week).

Any Comments?

As Always,,TWS

Royal Dragon
05-15-2006, 04:31 PM
I've done this workout, it is *Very* good, and pretty darn tough!

http://www.martialartsmart.net/pr-bw002.html

When I was injured, I mixed back exercises my daughter taught me from her old school romanian gymnastics coach, and a few from my back theripst, in to this guys circute training systm, and my healing started to happen in record time (Physical therapy had tanked out, and I was seeing no progress at all at the time). I feel it saved me from surgery.

Of course, I trained my ass off and all, but I do believe the principals behind this guys method are what really got my recovery in gear and moving along.

When I saw that he was tourched, and his buring body beat, quartered and strung up on a bridge in Iraq while he was on a civilian security detail, I was sickend for a long time because his methods were so instermental in my recovery.

I will be teaching his method as my conditioning system when I have students.

I really wish I could have met the man in person.

Royal Dragon
05-15-2006, 04:39 PM
Are these guys vegetarian????

Reply]
I doubt it. Scott Halvenston recomended a diet of 35% protine, 45% carbs, and the balance of healthy fats and oils.

Over all, I think that works out to half your diet being raw fruites and veggies, and half meats. This is about what my daughter was on as a competitve gymnast. Her diet was a bit more refined though, as she ate raw fruites and veggies early in the day, and her diet was much more meat heavy at nite. The theory there is that you need the meat at nite for the protine.

Protine is the building blocks you body uses to rebuild, and recover from your workouts as you sleep, so it is important to protine load before bed.

Early in the day, you need carb based foods to fuel your day.

Melissa was on a 4 meal day, with the extra being a high carb meal right before her daily 4 hour training session that consisted mostly of raw veggies with some rice mixed in to add a bit of extra fuel. Sometimes a tad of meat, but not much.

Taking her off of this diet literally would knock her out of the medals, and into 6-8th place. Keeping her on it however kept her between Gold and 4th place very consistantly in all events.

neilhytholt
05-15-2006, 04:55 PM
I don't think you can be a vegetarian and do alot of workouts. When I was running 3 miles a day on the weekdays and 6 miles a day on the weekends, several times at around the 5 mile mark I thought I was going to pass out.

Anyways, a friend of mine at the time was doing Triathlons, and he mentioned some guy who was winning the Ironman who said he sucked as a vegetarian so he ate a big steak and he won his next event.

IMHO the vegetarian diet isn't for healthy, athletic people. But that's just my opinion. You don't want to eat sugars and stuff because those lead to low blood sugar later, but I don't think you want to cut out the meat.

Of course not too much meat otherwise you get too much acidic in your blood and you feel sore and stuff, so that doesn't work either.

The Willow Sword
05-15-2006, 07:59 PM
Its mainly because most "vegetarians" do not eat correctly anyway. Because they substitute the animal protien for soy or vegetable, they crash their own systems by loading up on more "simple" carbs than their adrenals and pancreas can handle.( soy is a common allergen and would explain alot in the detrement to an athletic body)it would explain why certain athletes do not perform well on a vegetarian diet. Especially when all they are eating is pasta(which in my opinion is the worst poison you can put in your body aside form tobacco) my soy intake has drastically declined over the years.

The complex carb is the way to go if you are going to be an athlete and be a vegetarian, and there are a few athletes that are raw foods advocates who also eat fish to supplement that protien load. now i DO comsume a bit of Whole grain pasta which is complex in nature, but i have avoided semolina and the refined pastas for years. Now if i can just stop my freakin "i love cake and cookies" addiction id be 10 times better athletically than i am now:o

neilhytholt
05-15-2006, 08:31 PM
Its mainly because most "vegetarians" do not eat correctly anyway. Because they substitute the animal protien for soy or vegetable, they crash their own systems by loading up on more "simple" carbs than their adrenals and pancreas can handle.( soy is a common allergen and would explain alot in the detrement to an athletic body)it would explain why certain athletes do not perform well on a vegetarian diet. Especially when all they are eating is pasta(which in my opinion is the worst poison you can put in your body aside form tobacco) my soy intake has drastically declined over the years.

The complex carb is the way to go if you are going to be an athlete and be a vegetarian, and there are a few athletes that are raw foods advocates who also eat fish to supplement that protien load. now i DO comsume a bit of Whole grain pasta which is complex in nature, but i have avoided semolina and the refined pastas for years. Now if i can just stop my freakin "i love cake and cookies" addiction id be 10 times better athletically than i am now:o

I dunno ... doing complex carbs + non-soy legumes didn't really seem to cut it, either. To put it in Hindu terms, I think the Brahmin diet is fine for doing hatha yoga and copying books and otherwise sitting around all day, but it seems like the Kshatriya needs some meat to run around killing stuff.

Edit: When you say Pasta, do you mean Pasta? Or do you mean tomato sauce + pasta? Because too much tomatos seems to be very bad too. Tomatos are a relative of the nightshade and tobacco, right?

WanderingMonk
05-15-2006, 09:33 PM
wow that is an intense workout program. I have heard of SEAL training. I always wanted to join the military but I was born in Aska, Sweden so I am ineligeble.

if you are in the states, have a green card, under the age of 25, you can join the service and try out for navy seal.

US needs a lot of boots on the ground right now, you probably can work something out as long as you swear allegiance to the flag of the United States of America.

FuXnDajenariht
05-16-2006, 01:15 AM
yeeeep. their giving out citizenship for service now.

The Willow Sword
05-16-2006, 07:56 AM
Edit: When you say Pasta, do you mean Pasta? Or do you mean tomato sauce + pasta? Because too much tomatos seems to be very bad too. Tomatos are a relative of the nightshade and tobacco, right

Yes but i was reading that Tomatoes are good for keeping the prostate in check.
so i aint givin dems up. Hey i eat veggies from the nightshade family all the time and havent suffered ill from them. Eggplant, peppers of every variety. I make a killer salsa picosa, will burn the hair on your ass and yet the salsa is so **** good:cool:

Too Much of anything can be a hazard to you i believe.

As Always,,TWS

Nexus
05-16-2006, 01:27 PM
I'm doing the PT workout for the pushups, situps, pullups, lifts. It's complimenting my training and I find they are great strength building exercises.

I do a few days of weight lifting as well, which doesn't seem to be part of the pre-seals training, but may very well be part of their actual core training.

Nexus
05-16-2006, 01:30 PM
I found some photos of Navy seals BUD(S) training:
http://www.coreyrich.com/website/photo_essays/navy_seals/images/navy_02.jpg
http://www.coreyrich.com/website/photo_essays/navy_seals/images/navy_03.jpg
http://www.coreyrich.com/website/photo_essays/navy_seals/images/navy_04.jpg
http://www.coreyrich.com/website/photo_essays/navy_seals/images/navy_05.jpg
http://www.coreyrich.com/website/photo_essays/navy_seals/images/navy_06.jpg
http://www.coreyrich.com/website/photo_essays/navy_seals/images/navy_08.jpg

Nexus
05-16-2006, 02:03 PM
Here's a few more:
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-1.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-2.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-3.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-4.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-5.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-6.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-7.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-8.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-9.jpg

Obstacle course:
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-10.jpg

Drown Proofing:
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-11.jpg

Cold water torture:
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-12.jpg

neilhytholt
05-16-2006, 02:35 PM
Here's a few more:
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-1.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-2.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-3.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-4.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-5.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-6.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-7.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-8.jpg
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-9.jpg

Obstacle course:
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-10.jpg

Drown Proofing:
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-11.jpg

Cold water torture:
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/navy-seal-12.jpg


It seems like surfing guys would have all the necessary skills to be a Seal.

Used to being in water, used to heavy waves, used to holding their breath when duck diving, used to dealing with heavy water and foam, used to climbing fences and obstacle courses when getting to secret surf spots, used to running fast with gear (surfboards), when property owners or cops are trying to get you when they find you on their land.

Nexus
05-18-2006, 03:42 AM
This theread should have been titled Navy SEALs workout. My mistake :) hasty!