What do you currently do in the gym?For context I'm 29 years old and already go to the gym frequently - I'm mainly a after a targeted exercises/routines that will help me with this. As much as I've thought of dragging a bunch of weights around at the gym, I don't think the other users would approve.
This however is (along with everyone else's contribution, but especially this) extremely good advice
My wife recently lost loads of weight on that. Trouble is the cost privately. We recently stopped because £250 a month is just crazy right now. Withing 2-3 months, all the weight is back because she's demolishing biscuits and crisps again. Basically wasted a couple of grandUsing a well known injection system Ive lost 22 kgs in 10 months and the impact on my stalking endurance has been incredible, blood pressure treatments binned by doctor, knee aches gone, can now cope with any hill and can carry roe out
quite easily - I have impressed myself with the improvements - not bad for 78!
I tend to do a mix- three runs a week, plus 2 -3 cycles for cardio.Hi all,
I’m looking to improve my overall fitness this includes for my stalking, especially for longer days on the ground. I manage fine on flatter woodland terrain, but when the elevation starts climbing, I definitely feel it more than I’d like - especially when dragging.
For those of you who regularly stalk in the hills, are avid gym goers or personal trainers -
- What kind of training or exercises have you found most effective?
- Do you focus more on cardio, strength, or a mix of both?
- Any practical tips for building up endurance?
- And if you’ve made noticeable improvements, how long did it take before you felt the difference in the field?
I’m not aiming to be an ultra athlete — just fitter, more comfortable, and able to enjoy a full day without feeling like I’ve been run over the next morning.
Would really appreciate any advice, routines, or personal experiences from those who’ve been there and improved their fitness.
Thanks in advance!
Reds or sika/ fallow in multiples require contingency plans for extraction otherwise they can quite literally be the death of you.I had a rude awakening about my fitness level, or more precisely the lack of it, over the past weekend
I travelled with the missus and a couple of pals to North Wales for a bit of white water kayaking
I was made to realise that I had enough in the tank for one day of moderate to hard paddling on the Saturday but I wasn't fit for much on the Sunday
I had a heart attack in February 2024 and started exercise as soon as I could thereafter
But
I clearly need more strength & endurance work than what I have been doing, I need to push myself a bit harder
I wouldn't want to try to drag a big Red out of a North Devon valley - certainly not by myself anyway
Back to some bigger weights and upping protein intake for me
Pilates is your friend!! Build those core muscles and you will be surprised how much fitter and stronger you become.Hi all,
I’m looking to improve my overall fitness this includes for my stalking, especially for longer days on the ground. I manage fine on flatter woodland terrain, but when the elevation starts climbing, I definitely feel it more than I’d like - especially when dragging.
For those of you who regularly stalk in the hills, are avid gym goers or personal trainers -
- What kind of training or exercises have you found most effective?
- Do you focus more on cardio, strength, or a mix of both?
- Any practical tips for building up endurance?
- And if you’ve made noticeable improvements, how long did it take before you felt the difference in the field?
I’m not aiming to be an ultra athlete — just fitter, more comfortable, and able to enjoy a full day without feeling like I’ve been run over the next morning.
Would really appreciate any advice, routines, or personal experiences from those who’ve been there and improved their fitness.
Thanks in advance!
I’m looking to improve my overall fitness this includes for my stalking, especially for longer days on the ground.
Walking on moor is a special kind of exhausting.A chap I know maintains that he shoots all of his deer in the rut - the rut of where his car has just driven
One thing I will say is that I've found that people tend to adapt to the ground they are on - as an example I took a chap fishing on the Isle of Lewis. The ground was relatively flat but hard walking on the moor. Before going, having had experience of taking people out before, I asked if he was fit enough to walk etc. and he assured me that he ran 5k every day and was in the gym 3 days per week and was very fit. The short story is that when we got to the loch he came to me and said that he didn't think he could make the walk back and asked how far we were from the road. When I informed him that we were about a mile from the road he could hardly believe me as he was knackered. I'm sure that he was fit, was in the gym, and was doing a lot of running on roads and paths but this simply hadn't prepared him for walking on the moor and it seems normal to see this. I know a super fit keeper in the Hebrides who admits that when he goes onto another estate's ground it knackers him just because the ground is so different. So I'm going to suggest that the best way to get fit for your stalking is to be out on the ground. I appreciate that isn't always possible and for all of us we usually have to compromise and make the best of what we have easy access to but I have to say that I don't think anyone, no matter how fit they are, will match someone who is out on the ground every day.