Quick, before it's too late!
Let’s talk background.
The “farmer’s” portion of the farmer’s walk derives from (wait for it)
farmers. Yes, the industrious, salt of
the earth people responsible for raising the pigs that you eventually consume
as bacon and the vegetables you most likely aren’t eating. In performing their farmerly duties, farmers
were, at times, require to carry heavy objects in each hand for short, intense
distances. Bales of hay, buckets of
feed, baskets of watermelons as the infamous picture of Chinese strongman
competitors indicates, etc. The point
was, things needed to be moved, and it would’ve taken too much time to load
them into the pickup truck just to unload them a few feet down the road, so it
got picked up and moved.
Heavy weight and short distances: it bears repeating. The farmer’s walk does NOT reference that
time that the farmer was carrying a sandwich in one hand and a beer in the
other and carried it for 3 miles out to the field. As such, if you’re pacing around the gym for
4 minutes carrying 40lb dumbbells, you are NOT doing the farmer’s walk, you’re
just a lunatic. Also, you’re hogging
those dumbbells when someone could use them for ANYTHING else that would be
infinitely more productive.
Even this guy gets the right of way
Somewhere along the line, the idea that the farmer’s walk
was a “grip exercise” came about, and ultimately it has resulted in the
perversion we witness today. It’s the
telephone game come to life in lifting.
Someone observed that the farmer’s walk had really improved their grip,
and someone took this to mean that, if you want a stronger grip, you should do
farmer’s walks, which in turn meant that the farmer’s walk was called a “grip
exercise”. This is akin to calling the
deadlift a grip exercise: asinine, and professed only by the weak.
The farmer’s walk isn’t a grip exercise, it’s an EVERYTHING
exercise. It’s like if the deadlift and
the yoke walk made a baby, only to realize that they were actually brother and
sister and that their spawn was horribly deformed. As soon as you pick up the implements, you
should immediately regret the decision to do so and the rest of your time
moving forward should be motivated purely by rage, self-loathing and the hope
that, when you cross the finish line and put down the implements, maybe one day
in the distant future you’ll be able to live painfree again. Every second of the walk should feel like
agony, and every step should feel like you’re falling. This just plain AIN’T happening with a pair
of dumbbells at a commercial gym.
This is why implements are used for the farmer’s walk in the
first place: the amount of weight needed is going to exceed what can be fitted
onto a conventional dumbbell handle.
Yes, there are some Kroc row handles out there that can be fitted with
300lbs, but most the kids doing “farmer’s walks” with dumbbells are capping out
at the 150lb range, tops. You’re going
to be sprinting with that kind of weight, putting very little stress on your
body and getting about zero of the benefits of the movement. If all you wanted was a grip exercise, why even
walk at all? Why not simply hold the
dumbbells for time? It would be more
productive toward your goal of grip, and you’d look like less of a spaz.
Although wearing this shirt won't help
Additionally, the implements move the weight further out
from the lifter, meaning more control is required to keep them stable so that
faster movement can be achieved. This
speaks even more to the full body aspect of the movement, and why dumbbells
fail. Trying to steer an errant 300lbs
with your wrist is going to develop some massive hand/wrist/grip strength,
while having a dumbbell plopped limply at your side while you go for a stroll
is just going to bruise your hip.
My intention here is to not be an elitist, it’s simply to
point out that anyone hoping to obtain the benefits of the farmer’s walk by performing
these bizarre substitutions is going to be sadly disappointed. The purported benefits to upper back and trap
growth, along with the fat melting cardiovascular improvement and general “man
making” quality is simply non-existent when taking a light weight for a long,
leisurely stroll. This is a strongman
movement, as such, it needs to be intense and heavy, and most likely not last
longer than a minute.
This may be a more familiar idea to some than to others
Don’t get me wrong, long distances can be viable, but it’s
going to make things suck even harder. I
know of a trainee who talks about carrying bodyweight in each hand for a mile
as a challenge. I can’t even fathom the
amount of crazy is takes to accomplish this, but one can at least observe the
subtle difference between this challenge and carrying some dumbbells around the
gym. The intensity is through the roof
for that entire mile.
I even engage in blasphemy and perform farmer’s walks with
straps, because I find that the rest of the benefits of the farmer’s walk
greatly exceeds any grip strength building benefit it can give me, and would
prefer to just train my grip with static holds while I use farmer’s walks to
build up my entire body. Additionally,
since I am no longer limited to moving as far/as long as my grip will permit, I
can push the farmer’s walk to such a degree that, after 2 trips, I am pretty
much done for the rest of my life. This
movement should totally kick your ass, it’s not something that you should be
able to squeeze in in between trips to the drinking fountain.
Ever since I started doing farmer's with straps, I also started practicing this drill...just in case
Ever since I started doing farmer's with straps, I also started practicing this drill...just in case
There are so many viable DIY options to have access to some
sort of farmer’s walk implement that there is no excuse to perform this
movement with dumbbells. You could build
your own implement entirely with just hand tools for $50 using some railroad
ties and plumbing pipe if you want top loaders, or only plumbing pipe and about
$80 if you want side loaders. You could
built handles that attach to barbells that you can bring in your gym bag. You can always just buy some professionally
made ones for slightly over $100. The possibilities are endless, and the result
so much more beneficial.
As a people, let us make a conscious decision to no longer
refer to walking around holding dumbbells as the “farmer’s walk”. Let’s call it something like “stealing
dumbbells” or “carrying groceries” or something that more accurately describes
the action. Additionally, if one simply
wants to improve their grip, let’s tell that person to hold onto something
heavy until they can’t. However, if
someone wants to become a stronger person overall, let us tell them to do the
farmer’s walk. And then, let us laugh
when they puke after their set, before we set up to do the same.
Incredible article. Do you recommend the farmer handles or do you think the vertical bars used by the strongman are better?Incredible article. Do you recommend the farmer handles or do you think the vertical bars used by the strongman are better?
ReplyDeleteMuch appreciated dude. The bars used by strongman ARE farmers handles, unless I misunderstand you.
DeleteThank you very much for responding. By farmer hanldles I mean this model https://www.amazon.com/-/es/Synergee-Compact-Farmer-Walk-Handle/dp/B07VTQBQXJ/ref=sr_1_2?dchild=1&keywords=Farmers+Walk&qid=1621619582&sr= 8-2
DeleteAnd when I talk about strongman vertical bars I mean this other model https://www.amazon.com/-/es/Synergee-Farmer-Walk-Handles-transporte/dp/B07VW85FNQ/ref=sr_1_4?dchild=1&keywords= Farmers + Walk & qid = 1621619582 & sr = 8-4
Likewise, I already made the decision to acquire the second model.