Hi,
I live in a rural area with no gym available. Driving to one is not a practical option for me. I have two dumbbells, one barbell, and a few steel weights. That's it! No bench or anything else.
I am 51 years old and have been 5'-11" and ~145-150 pounds since high school. I've always been athletic and strong for my weight, am very active outside, fit, and eat cleaner than anyone I know.
However, due to several upper body injuries in the last 4-6 years, as well as changes in my routine, interests, and being lazy....I lost a lot of strength and muscle. I finally got serious in December, and started arm curls, push-ups, and lunges in addition to riding my bike. I did this everyday, consistently, since December. I was very pleasantly surprised to see and feel quite a noticeable difference in my upper body. As I increased reps and weight though, it seems I began feeling some fatigue. So, I scaled back to every other day. In just looking in the mirror the last 2 weeks, it seems my muscle growth has stopped or even regressed.
I am most interested in building up my pecs, biceps, and latissimus dorsi...but I would also like to build up my thigh muscles too.
How might I build my muscle back, and actually gain from what I used to be, using what little equipment I have, in the shortest amount of time? Should I go back to my daily routine?
Thanks!
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02-21-2020, 08:12 AM #1
Building muscle with no gym access?
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02-21-2020, 10:02 AM #2
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02-21-2020, 11:07 AM #3
You don't need much to be honest. Basically what Blue9steel said.
If you have the space you can build your own. It's crazy how much people get rid of workout equipment on the ******** Store. I built my small home gym less than a year all for under $1000, mostly all used equipment. The only thing new is the squat rack which i got off amazon, cheap.
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02-21-2020, 01:57 PM #4
Personally I think as a minimum you need a bench and some form of squat rack. I imagine you could get a pull up bar that fits into a doorway or such like.
When I used to train in my teens I had a mixture of steel weights and plastic ones filled with concrete. The problem I had is that within a year I just didn't have enough weight that could all fit on the bar at once, as my strength eventually exceeded it. It was at that point that I joined a gym.
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02-22-2020, 12:02 AM #5
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02-22-2020, 02:11 AM #6
You need to workout muscles against resistance using some kind of sensible rep/progression scheme and sensible choices/scheduling
Do your muscles know that you are pushing against a barbell with chrome knurling and blue bumper plates or black anodised bar with black cast iron plates? No they just know how hard they are pushing/pulling. So for that matter, do they know if you are using gym equipment at all?
The huge benefit to gym equipment is convenience and flexibility. Clearly it's the easiest way to do it.
But, it's perfectly possible to slowly increase resistance without gym equipment even just bodyweight (calisthenics) by altering angles/leverages, so you can keep the rep range the same and progressively increase load just like gym
Read up on calisthenic bodybuilding
https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B00KH...rb_top?ie=UTF8
Get a pull-ups bar and some dumbbells, or even make a backyard gym. Checkout these guys! If that's not low-tech I don't know what is. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/world-...d-bodybuilders
This guy lived on a farm and used home made equipment https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul...(weightlifter). Seemed to work for him!
You don't need expensive gym membership. Just the right tactics and determination
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02-22-2020, 11:58 AM #7
I will agree with the above.
While you have something to start with you need a basic set up and you will have many training options.
Of course in the mean time you can integrate some bodyweight exercises with the weights you have to get you going.
One of the main things is you need to be discipline and have some goals for yourself to stay motivated.
Good luck.
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02-22-2020, 12:18 PM #8
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02-22-2020, 01:01 PM #9
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04-15-2020, 08:53 AM #10
Thanks, you all! Shortly after posting, I was in town and found a bench with bench press bar. It's not super high quality but it gets the job done. I haven't the amount of weights for a proper workout so hang buckets of dirt from the bar. So, besides lunges and squats with a backpack on, pushups, and arm curls, I've been doing bench presses. I've been very diligent about doing this on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays.
In looking in the mirror, my gains seem to have been greater when doing lighter curls and pushups daily. However, perhaps that was just a phase that has plateaued and gains from here on out will be slower. That said, a week ago, my wife (who isn't overly observant) mentioned out of the blue and unsolicited, that I had "filled out" noticeably in my upper body. That was good to hear since my progress seems so slow to me. But, considering my age and/or lack of equipment, maybe I can't expect anything faster. I'm 5 months into this now. Thoughts?
Question: Is there a particular time I should focus on eating more protein? In other words, should I eat extra right after lifting? Extra the day after? Or...should it be an even intake all the time? Since starting, I've had general muscle soreness and aches that don't really go away. Perhaps I'm not getting enough protein?
All advice and ideas welcome. Thanks!
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04-16-2020, 09:34 AM #11
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04-16-2020, 11:05 AM #12
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04-16-2020, 08:15 PM #13
- Join Date: Aug 2013
- Location: Stanwood, Washington, United States
- Posts: 5,460
- Rep Power: 47591
Check out Alan Thrall on YouTube, he's mastered using items you wouldn't necessarily think of for his strongman training (truck tires, sandbags, homemade cement stones, empty beer kegs, etc). You can find lots of those items being given away for free and they're perfect for a garage/backyard setup.
As long as you're getting about 0.7g of protein per lb of bodyweight daily then protein/nutrient timing in the grand scheme of things really isn't that critical. Ideally you'd want to spread your intake out over the course of your day, but again its not going to make or break you. But protein is unlikely to be the cause of your aches and pains. Muscle soreness (DOMS) is generally an OK/acceptable thing, but pain really isn't so if you're experiencing continuous pain somewhere then you may have an injury that needs to be rested or maybe looked at by a health professional if its bad enough.All it takes is consistency, effort, proper nutrition, good programming, and TIME.
Don't be upset with the results you didn't get from the work you did not do.
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04-16-2020, 08:56 PM #14
Thanks! I'll check out Alan. Sounds right up my alley.
Thanks also for the protein tip. I eat little meat but lots of legumes, seeds, nuts, quinoa, and eggs. I use a protein powder as well in my breakfast smoothy. I'll check the amounts I'm getting.
Re my soreness.... I hate to think it, but.... if I were to listen to those whom are a few years older than I, I would believe it to be normal from simple wear and tear. I have abused my body since I can remember from playing hard in different extreme sports, martial arts, etc. So maybe just wear and tear. Was hoping that wouldn't occur for another 20 years but....
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04-17-2020, 12:51 AM #15
Ive been using heavy water containers 5 to 8 liters plus adding couple heavy resistance bands and have managed to keep most of my muscle op.
Im also doing higher reps like 20 to 30 reps which seems to be helping and ofc stay consistent with your diet even if your not lifting heavy makes a huge difference43yr old motivator
Went from 98 bls to 133bls all booty gains 😄💪
https://www.instagram.com/doreen_cairns
Lets connect ❤
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04-17-2020, 11:11 AM #16
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04-20-2020, 06:55 AM #17
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04-27-2020, 11:46 AM #18
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04-28-2020, 06:17 AM #19
That question is the same with or without gym access. What did you do before lockdown?
The most popular approach is to follow a program that uses some kind of progressive rep/resistance scheme keeping reps in the 8-20 range per set.
100 reps of 1Kg might not cause the same adaptions as 1 rep at 100Kg, Or.. 100 wall pushups might not cause the same adaptions as 1* one arm push-up.
But see the sticky on size versus strength.
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04-28-2020, 11:08 AM #20
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04-28-2020, 03:13 PM #21
- Join Date: Apr 2016
- Location: Chicago, Illinois, United States
- Posts: 466
- Rep Power: 12062
For me, even with weighted backpacks and duffle bags at the moment, I'm still trying to stay in the 6 x 6 range like I was going at the gym. A lot of people swear by 5 x 5 for mass building, which is fine but I've noticed 6 x 6 works better for me. Really you'll just have to see what you're comfortable with and modify your workout as you go.
If you're just starting out again, I don't think doing higher rep volume is bad at all right now, just make sure you're doing exercises to the point where you're only leave a couple reps left in the tank in each set. Going till failure in every set isn't doing yourself any favors either.
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04-28-2020, 04:26 PM #22
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04-28-2020, 05:09 PM #23
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04-28-2020, 10:25 PM #24
"x% of 1 rep max" may be difficult to estimate if you're doing say... Pushups or something. So another way to achieve the same thing is pick a variation of exercise where you can only just do 8 reps (before form starts to go bad). Then work on that until you can do 20 reps then move up to a harder variation again.
So for example if you can do a sh** load of standard pushups, then... don't do ordinary pushups! Do a variation like diamond pushups (hands/fingers together) where you can only just do 8 good ones. Work up to doing 20 reps in each set, then go for a harder variation again.
These are just examples, the principle applies to all exercise even ones like bridges, squats pull-ups etc
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04-30-2020, 01:57 PM #25
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05-03-2020, 08:03 AM #26
I don't understand this - why can't you find variations "heavy" enough to keep yourself in the 6-15 range without needing the sand?
Are you really saying you find one arm pushups too easy to keep in that range? If so you're so many levels higher than me because I can't do 1 "clean" one.
Even if that was the case... you could always move to one arm one leg pushups, planche pushups, etc, etc as harder variations.
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05-14-2020, 12:29 PM #27
Thanks, all!
Thus far, though my body type is ectomorph, I've gained enough mass to be noticeable and I'm pleased with my results. I've been religiously lifting on Mon, Wed, and Fridays. My upper body is outpacing my lower though and I'm beginning to look and feel top heavy...or out of proportion. However, I've always been more muscular up top. It's just more pronounced now. Guess I'll have to step it up more on the lower half which, I have to admit, has taken the backseat to my upper.
All that said, I am often times feeling muscle fatigue...and fatigue in general... and it has become a real physical and mental challenge to keep up my Mon, Wed, Fri routine. I'm not sure if it's due to my age, or something else... like the fact I'm not getting super quality sleep. What ever the reason, I'm wondering if I might benefit from backing off from 3 days per week to 2 days per week. Could 2 days per week possibly be enough for me to continue seeing gains?
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05-14-2020, 05:54 PM #28
The first thing you'll notice about men over the age of 50 is their lack of flexibility. If you want to build some of those leg muscles, be sure you have a mobility plan. The best way to ruin your back is to lift to much without mobility. Squatting without being able to sit into it is the quickest way to injury.
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