View Single Post
 
Old 09-25-2007, 07:21 PM
Cradler's Avatar
Cradler Cradler is offline
Rank: Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Boston
Posts: 379
Send a message via AIM to Cradler
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by mitya View Post
1) What's better after warming up - 15 lifts/curls/iterations with heavy but a manageable weight or 3/4 really tough lifts with a very heavy weight? Many and heavy, or few and very heavy?
I like to do 3x5 or 5x5 with a weight that's tough, but don't overdo it - you don't want to pick something you can't finish your sets with. 15 is too many for mass - if you pick a tough weight you might not finish it all, and if you pick an easier weight it'll do nothing for you. Pick a weight that you CAN do for 3 sets of 5, but will push you to do it.

Quote:
2) How many lifts per exercise should one do? I tend to do 15 or so for warm-up, then up the weights incrementally and do another 2 or 3 lots of 8-15.
Wait, when you say 'lifts', do you mean 'sets' or 'reps'? Reps would be like doing one squat - sets would be like doing five squats in a row, then racking the bar. (Sets are made up of reps, I mean.) If you mean 'lifts' as 'sets', 15 warm up sets is outrageous. Read the sticky on warming up - 0311 has some excellent stuff in there.

Your post-warmup sets (I call them 'working sets' but that's just me) should be 8 reps at the most if you're trying to build size, which sounds like your deal.

Quote:
3) How is it best to organise my week's training: today muscle x, tomorrow muscle y, day after muscle z etc, or should sessions work several muscles using different exercises? If the latter, how many days should I wait before working those muscles again? In essense: how often per week should you work a muscle?
The former is called a split routine, and it's a hard rut to get out of. The latter is much better; doing a routine based on compound movements works much better than isolation. Much, much, much better. That's a huge point. Recovery time is somewhat individual and very much based on workload and on experience, but anywhere from 48-72 hours is usually enough to recover from the previous lift.

Quote:
4) I'm a vegetarian so I work a bit harder than most to keep a strong figure. I do this with copious amounts of pasta, milk and bread. Does this sound sensible? Anything that would help the mix?
I don't know what kind of vegetarianism you follow - can you eat fish? If so, tuna is really high in protein and doesn't contain much fat at all. Same goes for cottage cheese, which is fine for your diet anyway if you drink milk. You should look into a whey-based protein supplement too, which is part of your next question, too.

Quote:
5) Am I right in thinking supplements are for those big into training as a sport, not for those who just use it as a means to get a bit bigger or refined? If not, would anyone recomment any common supplements (perhaps commonly found in sports shops or health shops) to help accelerate growth?
Anyone who's serious about training on any level could benefit from supplements - just don't let them run your diet. Rely mostly on real food, which it sounds like you're naturally inclined to do. Some good supplements -

Whey protein powder (personal recommend is Optimum Nutrition 100% Whey Gold Standard)
Any kind of good multivitamin (this is crucial!)
Some kind of BCAAs aren't a bad thing into either.

Supplements really aren't my racket - actually, there's lots of guys here more experienced than I am at all of this, so keep that in mind - but those are definitely some good all-around things. Multivitamins are good anyway, even if you're not huge into training.

Good luck.
Reply With Quote