Dude, seeing your name pop up in the most random comment sections is refreshing. You have been preaching this stuff for so long and I consider myself fortunate to be learning about it while I’m still able bodied. Let’s get after it!
The biggest, fastest gain in strength and endurance in my entire life was over the course of a 3 week period during a deployment work up in the Marine Corps. My 3 mile PFT time went from 21:30ish to 20 flat. Did not run once during that 3 week period. Carried weight from 40-85 pounds for miles every day. I think up to 25Km daily.
I’m 220. 45 years old. Wear a weighted vest( actually 3). The weight is front and back. Vest total is 100lbs. 3 days a week for 60min. I bike hills the other days. It is the best. Winter time it is 5 days a week, 100lbs, no matter what the temperature, 0 to -20C. Just do something. Your older self will thank you.
@@Travlinmoyes. I started with 20 lbs evenly on my vest which has wt front(chest) and back( Midback). Would walk hills and some flat for 60 minutes until it felt like it was not taxing anymore and would add 10 lbs and repeat until I hit 100lbs. I figure 100lbs is good enough
Thank you for this. I will be 38 in a few weeks. Going to take this hobby up. I usually just ruck on steep incline with my 35lb plate carrier for 2 miles. But I'm going to take it up a notch this fall.
One way to solve that is to strengthen your calves and feet by wearing minimalist shoes. Make use of your feet and calves for shock absorption. I guarantee you will be sporting massive calves and strong ass feet that allows you to run with rucksack.
Try landing on your forefoot, even with weight, especially with weight. To dampen the load on your knees. Your feet will hurt, your calves will be sore, but much better than fucking Up your knees. On flat ground I do that while rucking, bc walking with weight is still too low weight to reach my target Zone 2 heart rate. So I try to tuck walking uphill to stay in Zone 2 while walking
I go “rucking” about 3-4 times per week, and I do it on a very steep “mule track” (average 33% slope), i dont carry much weight because the steepness of the climb is enough to give me a good workout, same for coming back down. I remember when i started my knees were hurting like HELL when walking back down (and i was generally already in good shape because i always worked out) after just few weeks the knees must have adapted to the effort because i dont feel any pain or discomfort whatsoever anymore.
I was at the GORUCK Rucking event in Normandy/France last week, we were expecting you there! We have missed you Peter, too bad you couldn't be there at short notice. :(
i do what i guess is a sort of rucking. a couple times a week i wear an empty backpack and walk about 3 miles to a trader joe’s. then i shop for only what i can fit in the backpack and walk back home. usually the weight is between 20-25 pounds. this both limits the food i consume and gives me great exercise. i lost 25 lbs in a few months
I continue to this day "Rucking", in the British Army which I've dedicated 22 years of my life I ran the whole 4 miles with 16 kg (35lbs) nearly ever day. Today at 57 I run and walk with the weight however break it down to 1 min run 1 min walk on hilly and undulating terrain. I do this twice a week and complete it in 40 minutes, I never had knee problems and hopefully never will.
Google AEE Fan Dance race. It sounds like your kind of thing. I'm 54 I run 8 miles twice a week year round with a 30lb Bergen. I've done the Fan Dance 6 times.
I do most of my cardio on an erg I integrated rucking in my 60’s . In the UK part of the selection for the SAS is a 15 mile event across the Brecon Beacons called the ‘Fan Dance’ it’s absolutely brutal . I have now done 7 of these , best time just under 5 hours . The Bergen weight is with 25lbs + food and 4 litres of water .
I recently got into rucking at age 60 generally doing 5 miles with 25 lbs. Going to start taking it up a notch as it is a nice change of pace from more traditional work in the gym.
Tried rucking for the first time the other week after wanting to for years (was inspired by the delta force 40 mile ruck). 35 lbs, 2 miles in 28 minutes w/ incline was a better leg workout than anything else I’ve done. Hopefully I can do 20 miles eventually.
At the risk of bringing up a controversial topic, I have recently dropped 40 lbs with Zepbound. It was prescribed by my doctor, not as a quick fix or a gimmick, but as a much needed measure to quickly bring my weight down to help lower my blood pressure and better prepare me for my third coronary ablation to treat atrial fibrillation/ flutter. Not to get off on that tangent, I'll just say that as I lost the weight from my skeleton, I put it in my rucking pack to maintain my same overall weight on walks. My knees, hips and back barely felt the difference, and now when I walk without the pack, it feels almost effortless. Four months ago, I could barely walk a half mile without huffing and puffing. Rucking has been a HUGE part of my health recovery!
Love this video - I carry 22kg in a day pack on the short walk to my kids school twice a day - the big advantage is when I do a multi day backpacking trip every four months or so I have no issues carrying the weight.
I started rucking about 3 months ago, starting with 15lbs in my hiking backpack and going anywhere from 3 to 7 miles over rough and hilly terrain. I'm utterly grateful there's a park literally 3 miles from me with some great hiking trails. Now, I'm up to 45-50lbs. Wears me out. But, dang, it feels great.
I'm considering starting this. I'm a 57-year-old past cross-country runner, but can not jog 10 miles on pavement anymore due to my knees. I'm hoping rucking would allow me to reach my old load without pounding the knees.
Possibly. Start low & slow & gradually increase over time. But I would look into Chase Mountain's mountain-proof knees, program & start his training program, he's got tons of videos online too
Knee wear - to what extent is it modulated by inflammatory metabolic factors? I suspect it’s significant, and if so it suggests Peter could probably continue to run somewhat regularly.
3 time and 8 times number hold true in barefoot versus "traditional" heal strike shoes? I would assume lighter loads in the knees when barefoot + forefoot strike no?
You missed a bit : in Rugby Union the benefit of rucking is you can use your sprigged boots to get a player off the ball if they are on the ground lying on it... so the benefit of rucking is "you can mess the opposition player up big time" so tehnically i been rucking since i was about 5 years old.. just started rucking (walking) : do about 18kgs on a 7km golf course (cart path) at night.. too early to tell the benefits yet...
I ruck with a 60 pound vest for approximately 1 hour daily. I also deadlift in powerlifting twice a week. My legs are always tired. But, I am not sure if it is interfering with deadlifts or helping it. Any thoughts?
Ohhh rucking! I think I need new glasses. Been doing it when walking the dogs with 20lbs( rucking that is ). Enjoying it a fair bit, lost over a stone over a few months with help of kettlebells.
10 to 15 percent, build up gradually, increasing weight by a couple pounds every two weeks or so. Increasing any higher than 30 percent body weight increases risk of injury. Maintain good posture and don't slouch.
Dr. Attia, please tell me where you got that shirt. If you can't, then please give me a clue at least. Secondly, I love this topic and I'm a regular consumer of your videos - finding them exceedingly helpful. Thirdly , thank you for reminding me about this rucking practice and I'm going to start doing it again now at my age of 58. This is something I used to do in my twenties and thirties for fun. I had no idea it had a name...
Shhh he’s getting royalty’s from the GoRuck corporation. You know the overpriced kid backpacks with US flags all over it…. Which were not made in the USA.
I mean i haven't read that but you are required to do 20km within 3h and that's the bare minimum. Most around the 2h mark. It is required to hit 6 miles at 100 minutes and 8 miles at 128 minutes. Those are baseline minimum standards.
Whats kinda weird though in this message: Go rucking, we as humans are perfectly adapted for that. But don't go running. We are perfectly adapted for that too, but don't do it. You will likely get injured. So keep the following things in mind: - like with rucking, start slow. Even most fit runners run too fast in training. Most running should done at a very gentle pace - use proper technique; you think you know how to run correctly but you don't. Many running shoes make you feel running with heel strike is natural. Run barefoot on grass. Then switch to a track. Pay attention to how your feet behaves. Then run the same in your running shoes. - listen to your body. If something hurts a bit. Take a break.
I remember years and years ago where there was a short time where runners were putting weights on their ankles when they were running. It was determined later on, knowing that the weights slowed down the running times of the runners, that if you ran (I’m using simple numbers to make a point) 4 miles in an hour wearing weights and the same person ran 5 miles in an hour without wearing weights, it was pretty much the same amount of exercise. Rucking seems to be the new fad now. I’m not saying it as a fact, I’m asking. Using the same analogy as running, if you ruck for 4 miles in an hour and you don’t ruck, but walk 5 miles in an hour, I’m wondering if you’re basically getting the same amount of exercise.
Rucking is touted to burn three times the calories of walking alone. The weight increases VO2 max as well so Im going to allege that you get more exercise in that 4 miles under weight than you would in 5 miles without.
As long as you don’t run or jog with the extra weight. That’s the mistake the military makes in training. Sure you do it in the field. But it should be extremely limited and always fully recovered. PT destroys people with sleep deprivation and limited recovery. Frankly PT should be over the course of a year or two depending on the lack of conditioning. It should also start doing primary schooling. Every boy and man should be preparing for military capability.
With the weights you mentioned carrying (30% of body weight) are you saying the same weight for males and females? I suspect this could be too much / cause injury for women. My sons (very lean and light in their teens to early twenties) can easily carry far more than me without any training and yet they are of similar weight (50kg). I would find it very hard to hike with 17kg on my back, I have the endurance (I'm a long distance runner), but not the strength. My friend's daughter (young and fit) is a paramedic in a combat unit and she has been having medical difficulties in her pelvis and lower back due to the heavy weights she has to carry over long periods, and I've heard of other young women in the military with similar issues.
Is there any research on how this might affect spine and back health? Has someone recovering from injuries, and finally on the other side of pain, I’m wondering if this is something that should be potentially gradually adopted or avoided altogether
My opinion only....definitely something to start low and increase weight and/or distance and/or slope over time. The goruck company seems to build these pretty well to distribute the load to minimize as much as possible any impact to spine. But, I think the point about 3x load on the body does indicate there is always wear and tear.
A good backpack should distribute most of the weight onto your hips. That's optimal. Rucking will help to build the muscles that support your spine. It really is a full body exercise.
If I were you, I'd start building your body up with calesthenics, light weight lifting and some begginer level plyometrics training as well as doing some kind of ab work 5 days a week to increase the overall muscular endurance and static strength of your core. You also need to get your base aerobic capacity up to an acceptable level; preferrably something to where you can hold a convo with someone while riding an exercise bike or an eliptical at about 30 to 40% of a machines resistance or walking at a brisk pace up and down hills for about 30 minutes. Once you've built up a base level of strength and endurance again then I would start adding in rucking with a lower weight and lower distance and then slowly build up in weight and distance and overall speed as you adapt to it.
30% is a solid goal, but the actual limit seems to comfort, rather than a percentage of your bodyweight. i have settled on 60lbs even though i have a vest that holds 100 because i just could not find a way to feel comfortable with that much weight. it just plain hurts to wear the vest at that point.
Sorry, rucking is not the main fitness practice in the US military. Rucking is primarily used when a soldier goes to the field. It is how he or she carries supplies . It just so happens that there is a huge fitness benefit, but the main fitness practice is running. Running is part of a soldiers physical fitness testing.
@ericstephenson145 @ericstephenson145 Absolutely! Actual Ranger qualified personnel serving in Ranger units like The 75th Ranger Regiment is less than 1% of the total Army. Rangers still have to conduct the Army PFT, and the 2 mile run is a component of that test. Airborne!?
He said light infantry, airborne, or ranger. Any form of infantry or special operations unit will ruck a lot. That's what we do - move from one objective to another with lots of weight. You will conduct field ops and ruck from range to range for one to two weeks, every day. Battalion and company level rucks up and down massive hills. Even fire and maneuver exercises are essentially rucking at a faster pace. It is THE activity that people have the most difficulty with. A 160 pound, 300 PFT stud could very well fall out of a long ruck. His body isn't meant for that weight.
All the reply’s are proving the point, making comments about infantry based units. What % is that of the entire US Military? Remember it’s 5 branches and there are people who get us paid, who make meals, fly things, etc. it’s not the primary mode of fitness. Look at the PT tests for all branches and you can see this.
Have any studies been done on dogs that ruck? I've started getting my brother into hiking/rucking. His dog is half German shepherd, half husky. Hes thinking of getting her a harness with pack for backpack camping trips, shell be able to carry her own supplies
@@darkclownKellen A buddies shepherd was getting tons of complements, but still the hips dipped after he turned ten. Was on a real food diet the whole time, dogs his breed & half his age looked terrible compared to him. Their owners were constantly asking what was being done to have him look so good. Probably the diet, but could also have been luck of the draw with that breed...You'll probably know right around 5 years what you're in for.
No load in biking. Hahaha. You obviously haven't tried going to the bike park on a downhill mountain bike spending a day on the jumpline. To be fair I rock as often as possible and occasionally I run but it tends to leave me with little aches and pains that I don't get from rocking or biking.
Yeah in the infantry I never heard anyone call it “rucking”, it was referred to as a ruck march. It’s crazy how all these civilians want to be soldiers when they’re in their 40s and 50s but it was the most unpopular thing imaginable in the 90s.
I ran into a older woman doing this form of exercise when I was mountain biking . This is the high desert with technical climbs that can get steep and loose . She was hiking . Not running . Now I believe pedaling up with my mountain bike in this difficult terrain is actually the most pure firm of exercise . Its not just a cycling cardio event and just working the legs . This type of technical mountain bike climbing is a full body and cardio workout in one activity . It's interesting the flat pedalers who go for speed on cycling rides who are in good cardio health struggle with this as they lack the upper body strength to accomplish these technical climbs . I will also hit my vo2 max in short order depending how steep and loose a trail is .
“Eccentric” has too c’s and they both make a sound.. The first c makes a hard sound and the second makes a soft sound. It’s like eksentrik. Not ee-sentric. Peter probably mispronounces it just to get people like me to comment.. 😂
This claim of humans walking down wild animals… a hunter can’t keep up with a black bear that’s simply walking… nor a brown bear… nor an elk… this hunter should know this? Disagree? Time to head into the back country and try it, or ask any Alaskan or Canadian hunting guide… humans don’t have a chance at beating these animals in a linear distance traveled contest, “short” or “long” time frame.
I don’t know about bears or animals like that in cooler climates… but it seems to make sense that in very hot climates when we can sweat, but the animal cannot and has no method of cooling off when we continue to force it to move, persistence hunting makes sense
Big cats(mountain lions) and other large north american animals can travel hundreds of miles a day. Always a good joke when the powers that be relocate a big cat by a few hundred miles. The mountain lion will be right back where it stated the next day if it wants to be.
The method of hunting that they describe would have occurred through grasslands and desert conditions. The land would have been mostly flat and traversed by humans with the athletic ability comparable to pro level athletes today.
@@nathanclaspell6003 It’s still laughable. Wolves in North America can run down ungulates, perhaps wild dogs can do it in Africa. A human can attempt to repeatedly sneak up on an animal and take it by surprise, but that is not what was claimed. What was claimed was that humans could, like canines, run down large game animals and tire them out by outdistancing them over time. This is classic anthropology types making crap up and then trying to find facts to support a story they contrived in their heads. It’s total nonsense, and only indicates whomever is coming up with this theory does not spend time in the wilderness attempting to pursue animals. I don’t know this other gentleman, but Mr. Attia should know better.
8x you body weight? I had to of not paid attention somehow. Then I heard 3x so I’d have to have 300lbs on my back. Oh heyll no😮??? I think I need to rewind. I do hills no weight. That’s hard enough
@katnez start with ten pounds in a backpack and shoot for a 15 minute mile. Just walk around your neighborhood. You really don't have to seek out hiking trails or hills to get the health benefits from rucking.
I started wearing a ruck when walking my dogs most days of the week. The benefits ive found is I feel much more stable on my feet. Also more balanced.
Yep, if the dogs are going for a walk the ruck sack is going for a walk!
@@Pidgeys yep a regular dude should carry a regular amount, give or take.
@@Pidgeysyou’re the only one who knows what a regular dude means
It helps maximize functionality! Loved this comment.
Great to see the regular folks picking this up
Dude, seeing your name pop up in the most random comment sections is refreshing. You have been preaching this stuff for so long and I consider myself fortunate to be learning about it while I’m still able bodied. Let’s get after it!
The biggest, fastest gain in strength and endurance in my entire life was over the course of a 3 week period during a deployment work up in the Marine Corps. My 3 mile PFT time went from 21:30ish to 20 flat. Did not run once during that 3 week period. Carried weight from 40-85 pounds for miles every day. I think up to 25Km daily.
Rucked 20% of my bodyweight most weekdays of May for 4-6 kms. Lost 2.5 kg.
Any dietary changes or just rucking?
Very cool. Dude is spot on. I attended SFAS twice and they’d constantly tell us, “We don’t need gazelles, we need mountain goats.”
How much weight did they have in your ruck?
I’m 220. 45 years old. Wear a weighted vest( actually 3). The weight is front and back. Vest total is 100lbs. 3 days a week for 60min. I bike hills the other days. It is the best.
Winter time it is 5 days a week, 100lbs, no matter what the temperature, 0 to -20C. Just do something. Your older self will thank you.
Safe to assume you built up to this weight over some reasonable amount of time? Do you have more on the back than your chest?
@@Travlinmoyes. I started with 20 lbs evenly on my vest which has wt front(chest) and back( Midback). Would walk hills and some flat for 60 minutes until it felt like it was not taxing anymore and would add 10 lbs and repeat until I hit 100lbs. I figure 100lbs is good enough
@@KOutOfMyYard Thank You. I walk 5 miles daily right now without rucking and am just considering adding it.
Thank you for this. I will be 38 in a few weeks. Going to take this hobby up. I usually just ruck on steep incline with my 35lb plate carrier for 2 miles.
But I'm going to take it up a notch this fall.
Try caddying as a job. 6.5-8 miles up and down hills with a bag on each shoulder. Improved my running immensely without having to add more miles.
Boy did I read that wrong.
😂😂😂😂😂
😂😅
Ruh Roh!
😂😂😂😂😅😅😅😅
😅😅😅😅😅
A big problem in the military is that there are times when you have to run with your Ruck on, which is horrible for your knees (obviously)
Then the VA will deny your disability claim for bad knees and feet when you get out 😂
One way to solve that is to strengthen your calves and feet by wearing minimalist shoes. Make use of your feet and calves for shock absorption. I guarantee you will be sporting massive calves and strong ass feet that allows you to run with rucksack.
@@COBBDIESELthis shit right here 😂
Try landing on your forefoot, even with weight, especially with weight.
To dampen the load on your knees. Your feet will hurt, your calves will be sore, but much better than fucking Up your knees.
On flat ground I do that while rucking, bc walking with weight is still too low weight to reach my target Zone 2 heart rate. So I try to tuck walking uphill to stay in Zone 2 while walking
@@TheInsaiyan it's wild how most humans don't know that forefoot strike is the natural running method for humans without shoes.
I go “rucking” about 3-4 times per week, and I do it on a very steep “mule track” (average 33% slope), i dont carry much weight because the steepness of the climb is enough to give me a good workout, same for coming back down. I remember when i started my knees were hurting like HELL when walking back down (and i was generally already in good shape because i always worked out) after just few weeks the knees must have adapted to the effort because i dont feel any pain or discomfort whatsoever anymore.
I had the same experience. When I first started my knees would ache some at first but now that I am used to it I have found I feel much more stable.
I was at the GORUCK Rucking event in Normandy/France last week, we were expecting you there! We have missed you Peter, too bad you couldn't be there at short notice. :(
i do what i guess is a sort of rucking. a couple times a week i wear an empty backpack and walk about 3 miles to a trader joe’s. then i shop for only what i can fit in the backpack and walk back home. usually the weight is between 20-25 pounds. this both limits the food i consume and gives me great exercise. i lost 25 lbs in a few months
I continue to this day "Rucking", in the British Army which I've dedicated 22 years of my life I ran the whole 4 miles with 16 kg (35lbs) nearly ever day. Today at 57 I run and walk with the weight however break it down to 1 min run 1 min walk on hilly and undulating terrain. I do this twice a week and complete it in 40 minutes, I never had knee problems and hopefully never will.
Google AEE Fan Dance race. It sounds like your kind of thing. I'm 54 I run 8 miles twice a week year round with a 30lb Bergen. I've done the Fan Dance 6 times.
I do most of my cardio on an erg I integrated rucking in my 60’s . In the UK part of the selection for the SAS is a 15 mile event across the Brecon Beacons called the ‘Fan Dance’ it’s absolutely brutal . I have now done 7 of these , best time just under 5 hours . The Bergen weight is with 25lbs + food and 4 litres of water .
Pretty impressive.. just it done it once - without the pack! (But love rucking - great tool)
@@movemorenowjames that’s called clean fatigue , I think in some ways it’s harder as it puts a burden on you to push harder . 👍
@@neilcollins5930 “clean fatigue” nice 👌
I recently got into rucking at age 60 generally doing 5 miles with 25 lbs. Going to start taking it up a notch as it is a nice change of pace from more traditional work in the gym.
Watch for potential disc compression at your older age...have you asked your chiro about this?
@jc4evur661 BS
I did rucking for the first time last weekend and I slept like a baby that night.
For best results choose varied terrain, hills and uneven ground.
Tried rucking for the first time the other week after wanting to for years (was inspired by the delta force 40 mile ruck).
35 lbs, 2 miles in 28 minutes w/ incline was a better leg workout than anything else I’ve done. Hopefully I can do 20 miles eventually.
What they don’t tell you is most soldiers backs are fucked when they leave service due to carrying weight.
@@Mr-ye1vuthat’s after carrying 80lb+ every day for miles. Anything below 30% body weight is considered healthy.
@@trippyturtle777 I'm going to second this.
I got rid of my plantar fasciitis by rucking. Now I am able to ruck and run without any pain. It was the only variable I changed.
At the risk of bringing up a controversial topic, I have recently dropped 40 lbs with Zepbound. It was prescribed by my doctor, not as a quick fix or a gimmick, but as a much needed measure to quickly bring my weight down to help lower my blood pressure and better prepare me for my third coronary ablation to treat atrial fibrillation/ flutter. Not to get off on that tangent, I'll just say that as I lost the weight from my skeleton, I put it in my rucking pack to maintain my same overall weight on walks. My knees, hips and back barely felt the difference, and now when I walk without the pack, it feels almost effortless. Four months ago, I could barely walk a half mile without huffing and puffing. Rucking has been a HUGE part of my health recovery!
During school days I had ruck it going to and from my house to school then carrying books to class.
Love this video - I carry 22kg in a day pack on the short walk to my kids school twice a day - the big advantage is when I do a multi day backpacking trip every four months or so I have no issues carrying the weight.
Huge fan of rucking, Dr Attia and Michael Easter … I incorporate rucking, ultra running and lots of callisthenics and weight training. Love the mix
I started rucking about 3 months ago, starting with 15lbs in my hiking backpack and going anywhere from 3 to 7 miles over rough and hilly terrain. I'm utterly grateful there's a park literally 3 miles from me with some great hiking trails. Now, I'm up to 45-50lbs. Wears me out. But, dang, it feels great.
Just discovered your channel, Peter. Great stuff!
I'm considering starting this. I'm a 57-year-old past cross-country runner, but can not jog 10 miles on pavement anymore due to my knees. I'm hoping rucking would allow me to reach my old load without pounding the knees.
Possibly. Start low & slow & gradually increase over time. But I would look into Chase Mountain's mountain-proof knees, program & start his training program, he's got tons of videos online too
Knee wear - to what extent is it modulated by inflammatory metabolic factors? I suspect it’s significant, and if so it suggests Peter could probably continue to run somewhat regularly.
I ruck on my mountain bike. Love the downhill trails.
Equally distributed Rucking heals my lower back. Backpacking hurts it.
Rucking is amazing. Lets Go!
3 time and 8 times number hold true in barefoot versus "traditional" heal strike shoes? I would assume lighter loads in the knees when barefoot + forefoot strike no?
You missed a bit : in Rugby Union the benefit of rucking is you can use your sprigged boots to get a player off the ball if they are on the ground lying on it... so the benefit of rucking is "you can mess the opposition player up big time" so tehnically i been rucking since i was about 5 years old.. just started rucking (walking) : do about 18kgs on a 7km golf course (cart path) at night.. too early to tell the benefits yet...
Very important discussion to be had. Needs more exposure. Sprinting and rucking (not necessarily together) will do wonders for most people.
We just call it a hike in Montana
I have arthritis and walk daily (+10,000 steps) is rucking advisable in this situation?
Rucking gonna be the new thing all the influencers are pushing on IG
Would not be surprised smh
Carry the golf clubs, y’all. Bataan Memorial Death March in March at White Sands is a blast.
Next time the many benefits of edging please 🙏
I wonder who he could have on as a guest to discuss that?
Dr Berg is an expert at this
@@ShajJan-r4uwhat 😂😂😂
@@ashley-o5e😂
I ruck with a 60 pound vest for approximately 1 hour daily. I also deadlift in powerlifting twice a week. My legs are always tired. But, I am not sure if it is interfering with deadlifts or helping it. Any thoughts?
so weird... i just rucked this morning and was thinking of looking up what you had to say about it. you just released this video
So did I…
Ohhh rucking! I think I need new glasses. Been doing it when walking the dogs with 20lbs( rucking that is ). Enjoying it a fair bit, lost over a stone over a few months with help of kettlebells.
What procentage of my body weight should i start rucking at?
10 to 15 percent, build up gradually, increasing weight by a couple pounds every two weeks or so. Increasing any higher than 30 percent body weight increases risk of injury. Maintain good posture and don't slouch.
Dr. Attia, please tell me where you got that shirt.
If you can't, then please give me a clue at least.
Secondly, I love this topic and I'm a regular consumer of your videos - finding them exceedingly helpful.
Thirdly , thank you for reminding me about this rucking practice and I'm going to start doing it again now at my age of 58.
This is something I used to do in my twenties and thirties for fun. I had no idea it had a name...
I get most of my button ups at the thrift store
It's a blue lenin shirt.
Most SOF prep courses counsel against too much rucking, especially at a fast pace as wear and tear is exponentially higher. Thoughts?
Shhh he’s getting royalty’s from the GoRuck corporation. You know the overpriced kid backpacks with US flags all over it…. Which were not made in the USA.
I mean i haven't read that but you are required to do 20km within 3h and that's the bare minimum. Most around the 2h mark. It is required to hit 6 miles at 100 minutes and 8 miles at 128 minutes. Those are baseline minimum standards.
Hi. Can I add a farmer's walk to my daily rucking?
I'm 56 and ruck 6-7 km with 10 kg weight in my rucksack🙏😊.
Is wearing a heavy vest the same idea??
Whats kinda weird though in this message:
Go rucking, we as humans are perfectly adapted for that. But don't go running. We are perfectly adapted for that too, but don't do it. You will likely get injured.
So keep the following things in mind:
- like with rucking, start slow. Even most fit runners run too fast in training. Most running should done at a very gentle pace
- use proper technique; you think you know how to run correctly but you don't. Many running shoes make you feel running with heel strike is natural. Run barefoot on grass. Then switch to a track. Pay attention to how your feet behaves. Then run the same in your running shoes.
- listen to your body. If something hurts a bit. Take a break.
Rucking and farmer carry’s (all types).
I recently started rucking. I know about the benefits of rucking.
However, walking w a load compressing my spine concerns me.
What are your thoughts?
This is not something you need to be concerned with for these weights. If your back hurts after a ruck, good it will get better eventually
I remember years and years ago where there was a short time where runners were putting weights on their ankles when they were running. It was determined later on, knowing that the weights slowed down the running times of the runners, that if you ran (I’m using simple numbers to make a point) 4 miles in an hour wearing weights and the same person ran 5 miles in an hour without wearing weights, it was pretty much the same amount of exercise. Rucking seems to be the new fad now. I’m not saying it as a fact, I’m asking. Using the same analogy as running, if you ruck for 4 miles in an hour and you don’t ruck, but walk 5 miles in an hour, I’m wondering if you’re basically getting the same amount of exercise.
Rucking is touted to burn three times the calories of walking alone. The weight increases VO2 max as well so Im going to allege that you get more exercise in that 4 miles under weight than you would in 5 miles without.
As long as you don’t run or jog with the extra weight. That’s the mistake the military makes in training. Sure you do it in the field. But it should be extremely limited and always fully recovered. PT destroys people with sleep deprivation and limited recovery.
Frankly PT should be over the course of a year or two depending on the lack of conditioning. It should also start doing primary schooling. Every boy and man should be preparing for military capability.
My knees & back won’t hurt after?
I know...I wonder about injury to the spine.
With the weights you mentioned carrying (30% of body weight) are you saying the same weight for males and females? I suspect this could be too much / cause injury for women. My sons (very lean and light in their teens to early twenties) can easily carry far more than me without any training and yet they are of similar weight (50kg). I would find it very hard to hike with 17kg on my back, I have the endurance (I'm a long distance runner), but not the strength. My friend's daughter (young and fit) is a paramedic in a combat unit and she has been having medical difficulties in her pelvis and lower back due to the heavy weights she has to carry over long periods, and I've heard of other young women in the military with similar issues.
Is there any research on how this might affect spine and back health? Has someone recovering from injuries, and finally on the other side of pain, I’m wondering if this is something that should be potentially gradually adopted or avoided altogether
My opinion only....definitely something to start low and increase weight and/or distance and/or slope over time. The goruck company seems to build these pretty well to distribute the load to minimize as much as possible any impact to spine. But, I think the point about 3x load on the body does indicate there is always wear and tear.
Embrace it instead of avoiding it. I do think starting light and increasing weight as you adapt to it probably is a good plan for everyone.
@@shawnfaust2165 seems like a smart approach, would be curious if there is any data on it.
A good backpack should distribute most of the weight onto your hips. That's optimal. Rucking will help to build the muscles that support your spine. It really is a full body exercise.
If I were you, I'd start building your body up with calesthenics, light weight lifting and some begginer level plyometrics training as well as doing some kind of ab work 5 days a week to increase the overall muscular endurance and static strength of your core. You also need to get your base aerobic capacity up to an acceptable level; preferrably something to where you can hold a convo with someone while riding an exercise bike or an eliptical at about 30 to 40% of a machines resistance or walking at a brisk pace up and down hills for about 30 minutes. Once you've built up a base level of strength and endurance again then I would start adding in rucking with a lower weight and lower distance and then slowly build up in weight and distance and overall speed as you adapt to it.
Can’t leopards carry quite significant weight also ?
But I’m terrible running long distances continuously. I can do sprints/dashes though
What is a good target weight, perhaps as a percentage of bodyweight? Peter mentions 30%. Is that a high end target to work up to?
Yes. Carrying thirty percent of your body weight would be a great goal to work towards.
@@nathanclaspell6003start small and work up to this as a max. 10-20 percent would be plenty to see huge benefits.
30% is a solid goal, but the actual limit seems to comfort, rather than a percentage of your bodyweight. i have settled on 60lbs even though i have a vest that holds 100 because i just could not find a way to feel comfortable with that much weight. it just plain hurts to wear the vest at that point.
Sorry, rucking is not the main fitness practice in the US military. Rucking is primarily used when a soldier goes to the field. It is how he or she carries supplies . It just so happens that there is a huge fitness benefit, but the main fitness practice is running. Running is part of a soldiers physical fitness testing.
Join a light infantry/airborne/ranger unit and you will ruck 😂
@ericstephenson145 @ericstephenson145 Absolutely! Actual Ranger qualified personnel serving in Ranger units like The 75th Ranger Regiment is less than 1% of the total Army. Rangers still have to conduct the Army PFT, and the 2 mile run is a component of that test. Airborne!?
He said light infantry, airborne, or ranger. Any form of infantry or special operations unit will ruck a lot. That's what we do - move from one objective to another with lots of weight. You will conduct field ops and ruck from range to range for one to two weeks, every day. Battalion and company level rucks up and down massive hills. Even fire and maneuver exercises are essentially rucking at a faster pace. It is THE activity that people have the most difficulty with. A 160 pound, 300 PFT stud could very well fall out of a long ruck. His body isn't meant for that weight.
Yup, USMC infantry will definitely ruck.
(AND run, just to make the suck more sucky.)
All the reply’s are proving the point, making comments about infantry based units. What % is that of the entire US Military? Remember it’s 5 branches and there are people who get us paid, who make meals, fly things, etc. it’s not the primary mode of fitness. Look at the PT tests for all branches and you can see this.
Have any studies been done on dogs that ruck? I've started getting my brother into hiking/rucking. His dog is half German shepherd, half husky. Hes thinking of getting her a harness with pack for backpack camping trips, shell be able to carry her own supplies
I know dogs and other animals pack all the time. I would ensure his specific dog can do it safely as some German shepherds have hip dysplasia issues.
Thank you
@@darkclownKellen A buddies shepherd was getting tons of complements, but still the hips dipped after he turned ten. Was on a real food diet the whole time, dogs his breed & half his age looked terrible compared to him. Their owners were constantly asking what was being done to have him look so good. Probably the diet, but could also have been luck of the draw with that breed...You'll probably know right around 5 years what you're in for.
Fearfully and wonderfully made...
Rucking is what I did in the Marine Corp., and it sucked every 20 miles of it.
In the US Navy we used our big strong selves! ‘59-‘63.
Thank you for your service❤🇺🇸
As a high country bow hunter, I can tell you that even in a 5 day hunt I drop 2 pant sizes - EASY
Leopards can carry. Horses can travel very long distances too.
Watched it and 10 minutes later bought me some plates to start rucking.
Next experiment: rucking while doing a farmers carry with a kettle bell.
I do that when shopping for food
So… backpacking?
Yes, Rucksack basically translates from a German word for Backpack. Not sure why everyone is making a deal about "Rucking"
Marine “hump” not ruck. It sounds way more fun than it is.
I've never heard of "rucking." But I was U.S. Marine infantry. So I guess I've done it before. 😐
Same - we called it a Force March or a “Hump”.
"The answer is: no, you're hosed." 🤣
I carry 45lb over 8miles per day and I'm ex British Para 62 years of age, and I do it for fun
Impressive
2:24 theres a gorilla watching this with a tear rolling down its face
If only the go ruck bags weren't insanely expensive. My old $30 backpack with a few haha filled with sand will do just fine until i can get a loan 😂
What the ruck
No load in biking. Hahaha. You obviously haven't tried going to the bike park on a downhill mountain bike spending a day on the jumpline. To be fair I rock as often as possible and occasionally I run but it tends to leave me with little aches and pains that I don't get from rocking or biking.
Don't forget to bring lots of rucksnacks.
Almost ran straight to my wife with the video
We aren’t animals… we are humans.
Where do you make the distinction?
@@plastikmaiden we never were animals… we were always humans from the beginning.
It sucks when you have herniated discs
použijte váženou vestu k rozložení hmotnosti, je to bezpečnější
You're all wrong. Rucking is the recovery of a rugby ball once a player has gone to ground. Probably better for fitness too 😉
Yeah in the infantry I never heard anyone call it “rucking”, it was referred to as a ruck march. It’s crazy how all these civilians want to be soldiers when they’re in their 40s and 50s but it was the most unpopular thing imaginable in the 90s.
@mikemix77 More like they want to get in shape and stay in shape.
I ran into a older woman doing this form of exercise when I was mountain biking . This is the high desert with technical climbs that can get steep and loose . She was hiking . Not running .
Now I believe pedaling up with my mountain bike in this difficult terrain is actually the most pure firm of exercise . Its not just a cycling cardio event and just working the legs . This type of technical mountain bike climbing is a full body and cardio workout in one activity . It's interesting the flat pedalers who go for speed on cycling rides who are in good cardio health struggle with this as they lack the upper body strength to accomplish these technical climbs .
I will also hit my vo2 max in short order depending how steep and loose a trail is .
This isn't rucking.
What you’re doing is missing the skeletal loading that happens with rucking.. Unless you actually get off the bike and carry it.. 🙂
@@matthewprather7386 hardtail would load more than full suspension haha
@@matthewprather7386 My terrain is so difficult at times i do have to hike a bike .
TABBING - Tactical Advance to Battle
I ruck with 26kg for 5k
Rucksack, rucking
I run with my ruck, so I guess I'm getting the worst of it...
👏👏👏
We just call it backpacking where I come from, but that words just not “manly” enough. lol.
Rucksack is German for backsack or backpack. Hope this helps.
🌻
“Eccentric” has too c’s and they both make a sound.. The first c makes a hard sound and the second makes a soft sound. It’s like eksentrik. Not ee-sentric.
Peter probably mispronounces it just to get people like me to comment.. 😂
Man I can just never look at you the same way again after that Instagram post with Kevin Spacey. Trashed reputation In one post.
More excuses of people saying sone run.
And plenty of epople do this. Its called backpacking. They carry loads of50-100lbs
Be mindful of disc compresson if you're an older rucker...best to ask you chiro if this is a good idea.
we’re the only mammal that can carry🦘
I got a 70lb weight vest 40 20, rucking is awesome . Just go out it justakes you tougher . Ps don’t workout the next day besides your arms
This claim of humans walking down wild animals… a hunter can’t keep up with a black bear that’s simply walking… nor a brown bear… nor an elk… this hunter should know this? Disagree? Time to head into the back country and try it, or ask any Alaskan or Canadian hunting guide… humans don’t have a chance at beating these animals in a linear distance traveled contest, “short” or “long” time frame.
I don’t know about bears or animals like that in cooler climates… but it seems to make sense that in very hot climates when we can sweat, but the animal cannot and has no method of cooling off when we continue to force it to move, persistence hunting makes sense
Big cats(mountain lions) and other large north american animals can travel hundreds of miles a day. Always a good joke when the powers that be relocate a big cat by a few hundred miles. The mountain lion will be right back where it stated the next day if it wants to be.
The method of hunting that they describe would have occurred through grasslands and desert conditions. The land would have been mostly flat and traversed by humans with the athletic ability comparable to pro level athletes today.
@@albert-gf6qf Exactly the point, yup.
@@nathanclaspell6003 It’s still laughable. Wolves in North America can run down ungulates, perhaps wild dogs can do it in Africa. A human can attempt to repeatedly sneak up on an animal and take it by surprise, but that is not what was claimed. What was claimed was that humans could, like canines, run down large game animals and tire them out by outdistancing them over time. This is classic anthropology types making crap up and then trying to find facts to support a story they contrived in their heads. It’s total nonsense, and only indicates whomever is coming up with this theory does not spend time in the wilderness attempting to pursue animals. I don’t know this other gentleman, but Mr. Attia should know better.
It's called tabbing
Bill Heights
We are the only animals that are good at carrying? Have you ever heard of ants?
That’s technically an insect. He is obviously talking about large mammals.
Donkeys @@johndoe-sh6bi
Just run some fucking hills!
8x you body weight? I had to of not paid attention somehow. Then I heard 3x so I’d have to have 300lbs on my back. Oh heyll no😮??? I think I need to rewind. I do hills no weight. That’s hard enough
8 x your body weight with running. Much less with rucking… I ruck with 45lbs on my back for 45 minutes to an hour. Was weighing 260lbs. I’m now 235lbs
Thank you. Wow congrats
@@katnez they were referring to the shock loads on our knees, not amount of weight to carry if that is the conusion.
@katnez start with ten pounds in a backpack and shoot for a 15 minute mile. Just walk around your neighborhood. You really don't have to seek out hiking trails or hills to get the health benefits from rucking.