Monday, October 11, 2010

How to Minimize Callus Formation & Treat Ripped Calluses

Here's a great article from stronglifts.com on how to prevent and take care of ripped callus. I ripped my hands badly doing FRAN on day one of my Crossfit cert last summer. A few people ripped theirs on day one of my KB cert and suffered badly. I just spent the last 10 minutes shaving the callus build-up from my palms. Now the methods below are very safe however if I used those tools it would take hours to do just one palm. I would never advocate using a sharp hunting knife but if you do, do it very slowly. It will take you 10 minutes. From experience, if you don't shave them down every week or so, you will rip them. That takes away precious time from effective training.



Callus formation is a byproduct of strength training & weight lifting, just like building muscle & losing fat are. The pressure of the bar against the bones of your hands promotes callus formation.
Gripping the bar remains painful as long as you don’t have calluses. That’s one reason you should never wear gloves. However big calluses tear apart more easily, so you should minimize callus formation. Here’s how.

Grip Bars Correctly.
The bar will slide down in your hand during Barbell Rows, Deadlifts & Pull-ups if you put it in the palm of your hands. Your skin will fold, increasing callus formation.
Put the bar close to your fingers. Not in the palm of your hand. This only applies to pulling exercises! On pushing exercises like Bench Press, Overhead Press or Dips, the bar must be close to your wrists.

Chalk. Chalk fills your skin folds, making the surface of your hand palm smooth. Less skin is pressed down, thus less callus formation. Chalk also provides a better a grip by preventing sweating. Click here to get chalk from Amazon.

Shave Calluses
. Don’t bite or rip off calluses with your nails, you’ll rip off too much and they’ll bleed. Shave calluses every 10 days. Avoid too much shaving: it weakens the surrounding skin, causing ripped callus. Tools you can use:
  • Pumice stones
  • Nail files
  • Foot files

How to Treat Ripped Calluses.
In case you didn’t followed the above tips and ripped a callus, here’s what you can do:
  • Cut the ripped skin away using scissors
  • Disinfect
  • Wrap nose tissue around your hand when working out
It will take 2 weeks for your hand to heal. Count another 2 weeks for your skin to toughen up. During those 2 weeks you can rip of the calluses again. So make sure you grip the bar correctly and use chalk.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Agatsu Kettlebell Cert

I had an incredible Agatsu Kettlebell (KB) Certification this weekend. We were lucky enough to have Shawn Mozen (The foremost authority on Kettlebell training in Canada) as our instructor. I must say that I was a little nervous months ago after signing up. Here is a cut and paste from their .com

Instructor courses are intense and very physical. Each weekend course is aprox 16hrs and covers: Kettlebell basics and advanced exercises, Joint Mobility and Bodyweight Exercises as well as marketing. This is NOT a pay for diploma, you must earn your diploma. Be prepared for an intense physical and educational challenge. Any instructor who is recognized by Agatsu Inc may attend any future workshop for their level free of charge to upgrade their skills. Anyone who does not pass an Agatsu instructor course course may within one year attempt the same course free of charge.

This was no joke. I was able to push my limits during this certification and explore new avenues of soreness. Check out this benchmark work-out. We had to complete this after a full day of training. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TCsVnvubjYo&feature=fvw 

Day two started with the pistol squats (one legged squats) and then the Turkish Get up (TGU). The morning refining our skills, marketing lecture, bodyweight exercises and a 15 minute lunch. We spent a good portion of the afternoon coaching each other. There was a written exam and a demo exam that we had to pass. The end of the day consisted of....you guessed it, another work out. 5 rounds of 5 minutes each of alternating swings, presses, and bodyweight exercises with a 1 minute break between. Call it a champion fight. There was only 1 rule, put the KB on the floor and fail. Imagine 16 hours of driving the body and the putting your KB down on your last 25 minute work out. I am stoked about being able to start teaching my newly acquired skills.