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Ask Rocco: Send My Saddlebags a Packin'! |
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| Written by Rocco Castellano, on 30-07-2007 15:20 |
Ask Rocco: Send My Saddlebags a Packin'!
A local lady has some pesky saddlebags that just won't go away - no matter how hard she exercises her butt and thighs. Rocco tells her how to check those bags the next time she exercises.
Question: What is the best exercise to get rid of "saddle
bags? I exercise about four days a week with cardio and strength
training, but I can't quite find a move that targets that pesky area.
- KS
Answer: You have no doubt exhausted all your resources and
body parts or you would not be writing me. The best way for me to
answer this question is for me to give you a lesson in gravitational
pull. I am going to take some liberties here and assume that you have
been exercising the area of the hip region that you call “saddlebags.”
And this couldn’t be further from what you should be doing.
When you work the hip area on the side of your legs you are actually
creating a larger area for the saddlebags to sit, and that ain’t good!
What needs to be done is build a more muscular “booty” or gluteal area,
so that you can pull the skin that surrounds your hips up and back.
This keeps gravity from pulling fat down on your thighs. The higher and
rounder the butt, the better at fighting gravity it will be. Sir Issac
Newton would be proud.
The trick is to build the butt without actually building your thighs in
the process. Here are some exercises to accomplish that task:
- Mountain Climbers – Get down on all fours, then position
your left leg straight out in back of you while bending your right leg
and bringing it underneath your torso and to your chest. Now alternate
this process for 60 seconds.
- Lunges (on the same leg) - Step forward with one leg and lower your
upper body down, bending your leg (don't step out too far). You should
have about two to two and a half feet between your feet. Do not allow
your knee to go forward beyond your toes as you come down, keeping your
front shin perpendicular to the ground. Push up and back and repeat
with the other leg or do all the reps with one leg then switch at least
30-35 repetitions on the same leg (do not alternate!) Switch legs and
do 30-35 more.
- Nautilus Hip & Back (at the gym)
- Illustration taken from Bill Pearl’s “Getting Stronger”, Shelter
Publications, 1985
Try these for at least six weeks and watch those “saddles” seemingly melt away.
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Rocco Castellano |
| About the author: |
| Rocco Castellano is a contributor for Cincy Chic as well as the co-founder of askROCCO Media, which provides boot camps, seminars, media content and online fitness services at askROCCO.com . He is certified by the National Academy of Sports Medicine and has written askROCCO Uncensored v1 available at bookstores everywhere. To submit your fitness question click here. | Last update: 30-07-2007 18:02
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