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Kettlebell Classes Baltimore MD

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Kettlebell Classes. You will find informative articles about Kettlebell Classes, including "Adjustable Kettlebells + Exercise Circuit" and "Meet the Kettlebell". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Baltimore, MD that can help answer your questions about Kettlebell Classes.


Curves Baltimore MD - Hampden
733 W. 40th Street, Ste. 20
Baltimore, MD
LT Fit Boot Camp
410-215-4383
6425 Harford Rd.
Baltimore, MD
Curves Catonsville MD
625-B Edmondson Ave.
Catonsville, MD
Towson II Bally Total Fitness
1 E Joppa Rd
Towson, MD
Curves Pikesville/Baltimore-Northwest MD
1321 Bedford Ave., Suite B
Baltimore, MD
Planet Fitness-Catonsville
410.975.4850
5425 Baltimore National Pike
Catonsville, MD
Curves Arbutus MD - South
5410 East Drive
Arbutus, MD
Route 40 Bally Total Fitness
6516 Baltimore National Pike
Catonsville, MD
Curves Towson MD
1220 East Joppa Road, Ste. 105A
Towson, MD
Jazzercise Catonsville Emanuel United Methodist Church
(410)340-2798
6517 Frederick Rd.
Catonsville, MD
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Adjustable Kettlebells + Exercise Circuit

How long does it take to change your life? Follow author Robert Fure as he begins a 100 day trek to a fitter, healthier life by following this simple program. Today, we talk your first kettlebell and how to use it on the 100 Days of Fitness program.

 

100 Days of Fitness

  • 100 Days of Fitness: An Introduction
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 2 - Nutrition
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 3 - Exercise
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 4 - Building a Home Gym
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 5 - Supplements
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 6 - Expectations
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 7 - Footwear
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 8 - Food Lies
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 9 - Meet the Kettlebell
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 10 - Sample Circuits
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 11 - Days vs Weeks
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 12 – The Geography of Weight Loss
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 13 - Travel Training
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 14 – Meals, Snacks, & The Pocket Workout
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 15 - What It's All About
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 16 - Endless Push-Ups & Learning the Pull-Up
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 17 – Adjustable Kettlebells + A Circuit
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 18 – Intermittent Fasting & Strength Test
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 19 – 15 Minute Workouts & A Cool Workout iPhone App + Contest
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 20 - Switching It Up
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 21 – Reflections
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 22 – A Week Without a Workout
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 23 – Why We Work Out & The 30 lbs Lost Marker
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 24 - 5 Common Home Gym Mistakes
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 25 – Work Ethic
  • 100 Days of Fitness Special: Men's Health in Movember
  • 100 Days of Fitness: The Muscle Aesthetic
  • 100 Days of Fitness: The Cure for Holiday Pounds

I’ve already talked about the benefits of kettlebell training and sung their praises. They’re an excellent tool that can help you rock out a full body workout, or can be used to target specific body parts with isolation moves. The downsides, however, are cost and weight. Kettlebells are heavy – hey, they’re supposed to be – so just one weight generally doesn’t work for most people to do lots of exercises. If you’re strong, a 24kg kettlebell can be used for almost any exercise. If you’re just getting started, it’s most assuredly too heavy for isolation exercises, though maybe right for full body work. But even then, soon you might need to go up a level – and that’s costly.

You see the dilemma here. One kettlebell doesn’t cut it for most people – and when you have to start small, you outgrow them fairly quickly.

Luckily, there is a solution: the adjustable kettlebell. There are several models out there at varying levels of cost. One brand that caught my attention was the IronMaster Quick-Lock Adjustable ...

Click here to read the rest of this article from Primer Magazine

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Meet the Kettlebell

How long does it take to change your life? Follow author Robert Fure as he begins a 100 day trek to a fitter, healthier life by following this simple program. Today, we talk about using a kettlebell on the 100 Days of Fitness program.

 

100 Days of Fitness

  • 100 Days of Fitness: An Introduction
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 2 - Nutrition
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 3 - Exercise
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 4 - Building a Home Gym
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 5 - Supplements
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 6 - Expectations
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 7 - Footwear
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 8 - Food Lies
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 9 - Meet the Kettlebell
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 10 - Sample Circuits
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 11 - Days vs Weeks
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 12 – The Geography of Weight Loss
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 13 - Travel Training
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 14 – Meals, Snacks, & The Pocket Workout
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 15 - What It's All About
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 16 - Endless Push-Ups & Learning the Pull-Up
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 17 – Adjustable Kettlebells + A Circuit
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 18 – Intermittent Fasting & Strength Test
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 19 – 15 Minute Workouts & A Cool Workout iPhone App + Contest
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 20 - Switching It Up
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 21 – Reflections
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 22 – A Week Without a Workout
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 23 – Why We Work Out & The 30 lbs Lost Marker
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 24 - 5 Common Home Gym Mistakes
  • 100 Days of Fitness: Week 25 – Work Ethic
  • 100 Days of Fitness Special: Men's Health in Movember
  • 100 Days of Fitness: The Muscle Aesthetic
  • 100 Days of Fitness: The Cure for Holiday Pounds

Rumor has it the kettlebell was first created by a Confederate soldier in 1863 when he attached a handle to a canon ball to make it easier to carry. Okay, that’s entirely fabricated, but the kettlebell is often described as looking like a canon ball with a handle – which is a pretty apt description.

In reality the kettlebell is most often associated with Russia, where it’s called a girya, as an old fashioned training tool that whipped strongmen and Spetsnaz soldiers into shape. This antiquated training tool has seen a recent come back in gyms across the country as a way to train the whole body and blast fat away. Though, calling any heavy chunk of metal antiquated is strange, considering a rock will give you a pretty bad-ass workout.

In all seriousness, the kettlebell is an excellent fitness and fat loss tool. They’re available in a variety of weights, though the most common for men is the 24kg model (52.8lb) and a lighter version (to start with) for women. If you have a set of them, ranging in weights, it opens up a whole new variety of exercises you can do, but if youR...

Click here to read the rest of this article from Primer Magazine