Showing posts with label old school strongmen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label old school strongmen. Show all posts

As Promised - The March Dino Files!

New York gym owner and world famous strongman Sig Klein poses with some of his favorite old-school iron. Like Klein himself, these beautiful weights came from Germany - Prof. Attila, Sandow's trainer, brought them to New York!


Hail to the Dinosaurs!

As promised this morning, here's the link
to grab your copy of the March 2019 issue
of The Dinosaur Files strength training
newsletter:

March 2019 Dinosaur Files

http://www.brookskubik.com/dinosaurfiles-march2019.html

The little monster has plenty of great
training tips and workout ideas - and
features two killer articles:

1. A 48-year old Dino's detailed report
on how he trains to be stronger than
ever in his late 40's by using training
methods developed by John Davis and
Doug Hepburn.

and

2. A detailed review of Sig Klein's
training philosophy for older men -
with a detailed review of one of Sig
Klein's actual workouts after he
passed the "40 candles on the
birthday cake" mark.

Good stuff - fast and fun reading -
in a downloadable and printable
PDF format.

Here's the link again:

March 2019 Dinosaur Files

http://www.brookskubik.com/dinosaurfiles-march2019.html

Happy reading - and be sure to let
me know how you like this month's
issue.

Yours in strength,

Brooks Kubik

Look What Just Landed!

The December issue of The Dinosaur Files strength training newsletter has landed - and it's another good one!


Hail to the Dinosaurs!

The December issue of The Dinosaur
Files strength training newsletter just
landed - and it's a good one.

Go here to grab the little monster
in a downloadable and printable
PDF format - with immediate
electronic delivery:

http://www.brookskubik.com/dinosaurfiles-december2018.html

This month's issue has four feature
articles (all written by yours truly).

1. My Amazing Uncle and the
Pendulum of Death

2. How to Build Strength and
Muscle with Abbreviated Training
Programs

3. How William Boone Trained to
Set a World Record in the Jerk

4. Build Strength and Muscle the
Dino Way!

Good stuff - with rock solid training
advice - and several brand new and
very effective workouts.

Here's the link again - sprint on
over and grab it:

http://www.brookskubik.com/dinosaurfiles-december2018.html

Happy reading!

Yours in strength,

Brooks Kubik

Old- School Beats Everyone!

How'd you like to be able to do that?


Hail to the Dinosaurs!

John Wood released a great old-
school training course on Kindle
the other day.

It's called (and this is a GREAT
title):

Power and Health Through
Progressive
Exercise

It covers:

The natural laws of training

Strength training for boxers

How to build punching power
Hand-balancing

Feats of strength

Single and double-arm lifts

Medicine ball training
Plus a whole lot more!

And get this - the author was one
of those guys who walks the walk.

Meaning that he really knew what
he was talking about.

No question about it.

Because way back in 1905, he was
able to lift a 100 pound dumbbell
overhead with either hand - which
was pretty darn good - and is pretty
darn good even today.

Anyhow, the little monster has already
raced up to no. 1 in its category in the
Kindle bookstore - in less than 24 hours -
and that means that old-school training
has beaten everyone else in the past
24
hours.

So let's keep it going - and keep Power
and Health Through Progressive
Exercise at the top of the charts.

Go here to check it out - and if you grab
a copy, as I hope you do, be sure to
leave a review:

Power and Health Through
Progressive
Exercise



Yours in strength,

Brooks Kubik

Old-Time Training Secrets

Fred Rollon, the Human Anatomy Chart, shows us what real-world, drug-free muscle looks like - and how amazingly effective, old-school strength training and bodybuilding can be!


Hail to the Dinosaurs!

Here's a quick heads up about an
excellent resource for real world,
no-nonsense, old-time strength
training and bodybuilding secrets.

David Webster, the longtime and
well-known Physical Culture expert
and former Scottish National Weight-
lifting Coach, wrote a detailed series
of courses on old-time training many,
many years ago.

He called it "The Complete Physique
Course" - which is a pretty good title,
I think - and which kind of shows you
that the program is pretty darn
comprehensive.

They've been out of print and pretty
near impossible to find for many years,
but John Wood is now releasing them
again - on Kindle - in an approved,
authorized edition - and that means
that they're available again - for the
first time in many years.

The Complete Physique Course is broken
into a series of lessons.

Lessons 1 thru 4 cover the following
important topics:

Lesson 1 - Old-school bodyweight
exercises.

Lesson 2 - Old-School bodybuilding
and bodypart specialization programs.

Lesson 3 - Training for sports - with
different programs and workouts for
many popular sports.

Lesson 4 - Olympic weightlifting (with
tons of training tips that have been
pretty much forgotten nowadays -
but that work amazingly well).

You can grab them right here:

The Complete Physique Course,
Lessons 1 and 2




The Complete Physique Course,
Lessons 3 and 4





I think you'll really enjoy these truly
excellent old courses - and I think
they'll give you a very good idea of
what old-school training was all about.

So check them out - leave a review
(reviews help spread the word) - and
let me know how you like them!

Yours in strength,

Brooks Kubik



What Can We Learn from Old-Time Barbells?

Here's a classic photo of World and Olympic Champion Charles Rigoulet with an old-school, globe barbell. The photo is from John Wood and you can see it - and many more - at https://www.oldtimestrongman.com/blog - be sure to check it out!


Hail to the Dinosaurs!

Three quick notes and then we'll talk iron -
as in, what we can learn from old time
barbells.

Notice that I didn't say "old time strong-
men."

I said "old time barbells."

Yes, they can tell us things - sometimes,
very important things.

1. The Legacy of Iron Books 




Trudi and I are planning to move to the
Pacific Northwest in the fairly near future -
and I can't take tons of books and magazines
with me, so we're reducing our inventory.

That includes my Legacy of Iron books,
which cover weightlifting, weight training
and bodybuilding in the late 1930's and
1940's - giving you an up close and
personal look at the champions of the
era and how they trained.

There are five books in the series - and
you can grab all five for just 50 clams
plus shipping and handling. Shoot me
an email if you're interested. You can
reach me at: info@brookskubik.com -
or just PM me on FaceBook.

We don't have many left, so if you want
a set, grab them now.

2. Jowett's Progressive Barbell
Training



I still have a few copies of my modern
reprint edition of George F. Jowett's
very rare old-school training course,
Progressive Barbell Training. You
can grab one for 20 clams plus shipping
and handling. Shoot me an email if
you're interested.

3. Strength and Health



I have many issues of Strength and
Health from the 1940's for sale - if
you're interested, shoot me an email
for prices.

4. What Can We Learn from Old
Time
Barbells?

Back in the old days - as in, 120 to 150
years ago, there were no mass-market
barbells.

If you wanted a barbell back then, you
had to have it made at a local foundry.

And the barbells they made were very
basic.

Instead of plates, they had globes at the
end.

Hence the term "globe barbells."

Sometimes the barbell and the globes were
one solid piece of iron.

Other times, the globes could be screwed
onto the bars. That gave you the ability to
adjust the weight on the bar by changing
from one globe to another.

Of course, you never had very many globes,
so you could only make a couple of weight
adjustments - with big jumps from one
weight to another.

The globes came in  different sizes. Most of
them were round spheres - but some were
egg-shapped.

Some were made of iron. Others were made
of other metals. Brass globes, for example.

And some globes were empty - so you could
add weight by filling them with sand or lead
shot.


But that was a time-consuming and cumber-
some process.

If you've ever tried to fill a beer keg or barrel
with sand or gravel, you know what it's like.

And getting the two globes to be the exact same
weight would have been very difficult, as well -
unless you fiddled around with them for a couple
of hours every time you loaded them up.

So the bottom line was this - your barbells
were pretty much fixed weight barbells.

If you had a couple of them, you might have,
for instance, a 60 pound barbell, a 100 pound
barbell, and a 150 pound barbell.

Or you might have a 100, 150 and 200 pound
barbell.

Or a 42 pound barbell, a 96 1/4 pound barbell,
and a 116 1/2 pound barbell.

Remember, these were essentially one of a
kind items - so there's no reason to believe
they weighed an exact amount.


And here's something else to consider.

There were no uniform specifications for the
size, thickness and length of a barbell.

So you might have barbells that were of
different lengths - and different thicknesses.

Your 80 pound barbell might be one inch
thick and four feet long.

But your 117 pound barbell might be 1 1/2
inches thick and six feet long.

In other words, every barbell was different
from every other barbell - sometimes MUCH
different.

The same was true of dumbbells.

And your dumbbells might or might not come
in pairs.

Ditto for kettlebells and ring-weights.

And if you DID have pairs, they might not
be an exact match.

In short, all your weights were more or less
unique.

And adding more weight was difficult or even
impossible.

If that were the case, what would you do with
them?

How would you train?

Think about it - and send me a short email if
you have any ideas about it.

I'll share your feedback tomorrow - and
also share what I think the answer is.

In fact, I'll share what the answer MUST
have been - and explain why it was a GOOD
thing to train with such challenging equipment.

As always, thanks for reading and have a
great day. If you train today, make it a good
one!

Yours in strength,

Brooks Kubik



My new course on heavy partials is
selling like hotcakes - and readers are loving
it - and getting get results.

One Dino added 25 pounds to his bench
press after just two weeks on the
program.

Two weeks - 25 pounds - that's pretty
good.

Go here to grab a copy:

Dinosaur Strength and Power Course
No. 2 - Heavy Partials

http://www.brookskubik.com/dinosaurstrengthandpower-02.html

P.S. 2. My other books and courses are
right here at Dino Headquarters:



Hard-copy and PDF

http://www.brookskubik.com/products.html

Kindle

http://www.brookskubik.com/kindle.html

P.S. 3. Thought for the Day

"Study old time barbells and dumbbells
closely and carefully. They can teach you
a lot."


- Brooks Kubik

Brooks Kubik's Kindle Books

http://www.brookskubik.com/kindle.html

We have over 25 books and courses in the Kindle store - including these:








 
For even more Kindle books by Brooks Kubik, visit:








Are You Strong - Or Super Strong?

World and Olympic champion John Davis hits a heavy split-style snatch. How do YOU compare to old-school champions like Davis, Grimek and Stanko?

Hail to the Dinosaurs!

How strong are you?

Are you STRONG - or SUPER STRONG?

How do you rank compared to the great
champions of the Golden Age of Muscle
and Might?

If you stepped into a Time Machine that
carried you back to Sig Klein's New York
City gym in the 1930s -- or to the world
famous York Barbell Club in the 1940s --
how would your best lifts compare to
everyone else in the gym?

What are realistic goals for a drug-free
trainee?

What should you be squatting -- pressing --
or deadlifting?

What should you be handling in other
important exercises?

How can you compare your best lifts to
trainees of other bodyweights?

How does your age affect your poundage
goals?

What lifts are good at age 40 -- or 50 --
or 60 -- or beyond?

Are you getting older -- or getting better?

I have a terrific training course that
answers all of these questions -- and
more!

It's called Dinosaur Training Secrets,
Vol. 2 - How Strong Are You?

And it's available in your choice of
hard copy, kindle, or PDF.

You can find it right here:

 
Hard Copy

http://www.brookskubik.com/dinosaur_secrets_02.html

Kindle

Follow this link for all of my Kindle
books - it's right there with the rest
of them:

http://www.brookskubik.com/kindle.html

PDF

Follow this link for all of my PDF books
and courses - you'll see it near the bottom
of the list:

http://www.brookskubik.com/products.html

You'll never have a chance to train with John
Grimek, Steve Stanko, John Davis or Doug
Hepburn. But this course is the next best
thing. It lets you compare your lifting to the
legendary Ironmen of the past -- exactly the
same as if these mighty men were your
actual training partners.

So step up, take action, and grab the course
right now -- and answer the question:

How strong are you - are you STRONG - or
SUPER STRONG?

As always, thanks for reading  and have a
great day. If you train today, make it a good
one!

Yours in strength,

Brooks Kubik

P.S. 1. My other books and courses are right
here at Dino Headquarters:



Hard-copy and PDF

http://www.brookskubik.com/products.html

Kindle



http://www.brookskubik.com/kindle.html

P.S. 2. Thought for the Day:

"Set high goals for yourself - and work
tirelessly to achieve them."


- Brooks Kubik

BEFORE YOU LEAVE . . .

We have more than 25 Dinosaur Training books and courses in the Kindle bookstore - here are several of them - head on over and take a look at the others:






































































Something for Jowett Fans!

George F. Jowett's wonderful course on old-school barbell and dumbbell training is available again in a great-looking modern reprint edition - but we don't have many copies - so if you want one, act fast!


Hail to the Dinosaurs!

Did you know that George F. Jowett
wrote a complete course on old-school
barbell and dumbbell training?

He did.

He called it:

Progressive Barbell Training.

Which is a pretty good title.

It's a very interesting course - but
unfortunately, it's almost impossible
to find.

Has been for almost 100 years.

But not any more!

Way back in 2010 I issued a modern
reprint edition of this classic course.

They're 8 1/2 x 11 - 36 pages - with
a heavy card cover - and it's illustrated
with some very nice line drawings that
show you how to do all of the different
exercises in the course.

It's a very nice course - and a real link to
a grand old man of the Iron Game -
and to old-school barbell and dumbbell
training.

I thought I was out of them - but the
other day I found a mysterious box at
our storage unit - took it home - looked
inside - and found some of those modern
reprint editions of Progressive Barbell
Training.

So I'm offering them to the Dino Nation
on a first come, first served basis.

If you want a copy, do this:

Go to the Dinosaur Training website
and order a copy of Dinosaur Training.

But when you place your order, include
a note in the special comments section
saying that you actually want George
Jowett's Progressive Barbell Training
course.

We'll fill your order by shipping you the
Progressive Barbell Training course -
NOT Dinosaur Training.

But be sure to include the note when you
place your order - otherwise, we'll ship
Dinosaur Training.

If you forget to include the note with
your order, shoot me an email PRONTO -
and let me know that your order was
for Progressive Barbell Training.

Also, pls note - we can adjust the
shipping method for overseas orders -
so if you place an overseas order for
the Jowett course, go ahead and select
the default postage you're given - and
we'll see if we can send it for less - and
if we can, we will - and we'll refund the
extra postage charges.

We don't have very many of these left,
so if you want a copy, I strongly suggest
that you jump on this offer right away.

Here's the link to Dinosaur Training -
and remember, if you want Progressive
Barbell Training, include a note to that
effect with your order:



http://www.brookskubik.com/dinosaur_training.html

Yours in strength,

Brooks Kubik



My Definition of Old-School

A classic photo of John Grimek from John Wood's highly recommended Old Time Strongman site - which focuses on true old school training as I define the term. The top dumbbell is the world-famous Cyr Dumbbell. The middle bell was owned by Apollon. I did one-hand deadlifts and curls with it once - it's pretty awesome. I believe the bottom bell comes from Warren Lincoln Travis - but I may be wrong - if I am, please correct me.


Hail to the Dinosaurs!

The other day I posted on the Dinosaur
Training  - Brooks Kubik and Strength
Secrets Facebook Groups - which you
should join if you're not already a
card-carrying member at them - and
asked:

Who's your favorite old-school strong-
man?

and

Who's your favorite old-school body-
builder?

The results were surprising.

Many members listed people from the
1970's and 1980's.

The guys featured in the muscle mags
when many of us we're growing up.

I suppose that seems "old-school" to
some - although I certainly don't feel
"old" and I started training before
many of the supposed "old-school"
champions were featured in the
magazines.

Heck, when I started training, Arnold
was a teenager living in Europe.

My definition of old-school is a bit
different.

I define old-school as the period of
time before anabolic steroids and
other drugs became commonly used
in the Iron Game.

Steroids started to enter the picture
sometime in the 1950's - with the
Russians - and started to be used
by guys in the USA in the early
1960's.

So I use 1960 as the arbitrary cut-off
for old-school training.

Pre-1960 means old-school.

Post-1960 means modern, drug-based
training.

That doesn't mean that everyone who
trained before the 1960's was squeaky
clean on the drug issue.

Nor does it mean that everyone who
trained after 1960 used drugs.

But it does mean that the culture began
to change - and that we moved from:

1. A time when there no drugs in the
Iron Game (pre-1950 or 1960);

to

2. A time when a small group of people
who were "in the know" used them, and
very few other people even knew about
them (1960 to 1970);

to

3. A time when most people knew that
the top men used drugs, but the best
magazines (Peary Rader's Iron Man, for
example) discouraged drug use, and
some of the most popular and influential
authors of the time (such as Bradley
J. Steiner) STRONGLY discouraged
their use (the 1970's);

to

4. A time when more and more people
used them, and the magazines and
thought leaders pretty much stopped
opposing them (the 1980's and after);

to

5. Today's world, when the Iron Game is
infested with drug use, everyone knows
it, and everyone either ignores it, accepts
it, or condones and approves it.

a. Recognizing, of course, that we do have
drug-free powerlifting and bodybuilding
contests - and that Olympic weightlifting
is fighting to be a drug-free sport - but I'm
talking about the culture of the Iron Game,
and the over-all culture views drug use as
normal and accepted - and acceptable - and
to most, perhaps even necessary.

I define old-school as drug-free training,
and that includes a culture that refuses
to accept drug use in the Iron Game as
standard operating procedure - or as
normal - or as healthy - or as necessary.

So that brings me back to my admittedly
somewhat arbitrary cut-off of 1960.

Old-school is pre-1960.

Old-school is about training - not about
using more drugs that a pharmaceutical
rep peddles.

That's probably not a popular definition,
and it's certainly not a popular position,
but that's how I view things - and I'm not
going to change.

As always, thanks for reading and have
a great day. If you train today, make it
a good one.

Yours in strength,

Brooks Kubik

P.S. Here are some great courses that
focus on old-school training methods:

Dinosaur Strength and Power -
Course No. 1 - Strength Style
Arm Training with Doug Hepburn



http://www.brookskubik.com/dinosaurstrengthandpower-01.html

A complete - and brand new - training course
that teaches you how to build strong, powerful,
and muscular arms - using the training methods
of the legendary Doug Hepburn.



The Bone Strength Project

https://www.oldtimestrongman.com/bone-strength-projectPDF.html

John Wood's unique program for building
your bones in order to increase your
potential for maximum muscle mass.



Dinosaur Strength and Power -
Course No. 2 - Heavy Partials

http://www.brookskubik.com/dinosaurstrengthandpower-02.html

Another way of building your bones -
and strengthening your tendons and
ligaments - a must read for anyone
interested in maximum strength and
power.



The May-June Dinosaur Files

http://www.brookskubik.com/dinosaurfiles-mayjune2018.html

Feature articles include:

The World's Simplest Bodyweight
Program

The Deadlift from Hell

The Valhalla Challenge

Bob Hoffman's Favorite Training
Program

P.S. 2. My other books and courses are
right here at Dino Headquarters:



Hard-copy and PDF

http://www.brookskubik.com/products.html



Kindle

http://www.brookskubik.com/kindle.html

P.S. 3. Thought for the Day:

"Just because everyone else is doing
it, doesn't mean that you should do the
same." 


-- Brooks Kubik

BEFORE YOU LEAVE . . .

We have more than 25 Dinosaur Training books and courses in the Kindle bookstore - here are several of them - head on over and take a look at the others: