Integrating resistance training and cardio

aphidman

New member
First off I am pretty sure I am over training. For the past 9 months I have been doing resistance training on a maxed out Bowflex and with dumbells 5 days a week / 45 min per day and doing cardio (running or ski machine) 3-5 days a week / 30 min per day. I'm a 6'1" male at 175 lbs (was 207 in the beginning), got as low as 167 lbs at one point, and then decide to try to bulk. Got up to 182 lbs, but was not happy with the results. It looked like I gained more fat back than muscle so I took to cutting again. I am very well toned but not bulky. My chest and abs look good but I am having difficulty building my biceps.

Is my exercise routine counter productive to building muscle? Are just using the weekends as rest days enough?
 
I would really limit the cardio if bulking. The best and most affective thing though is just to eat clean and eat a lot.

If you have maxed out your bowflex you will need something heavier to lift.
 
First off I am pretty sure I am over training. For the past 9 months I have been doing resistance training on a maxed out Bowflex and with dumbells 5 days a week / 45 min per day and doing cardio (running or ski machine) 3-5 days a week / 30 min per day.

So you base your assumption that you are overtrained on what others say is too much training?

Or do you actually feel symptoms of overtraining?

I'm a 6'1" male at 175 lbs (was 207 in the beginning), got as low as 167 lbs at one point, and then decide to try to bulk. Got up to 182 lbs, but was not happy with the results. It looked like I gained more fat back than muscle so I took to cutting again. I am very well toned but not bulky. My chest and abs look good but I am having difficulty building my biceps.

You gained more fat back b/c you consumed too many calories.

And you aren't going to be building much of anything if you are not in a caloric surplus. Are you?

Is my exercise routine counter productive to building muscle? Are just using the weekends as rest days enough?

I must've missed where you listed your routine.
 
My routine:

Thanks for the replies.

My routine. M, W, F on the bowflex with 410 lbs rods, I have no idea what this really equates to. I do 3 sets of 10 on bench press, pull downs, resistance crunches (20 reps), military press, about 120 lbs on chest fly and 170 lbs on leg extension. With dumb bells I do 3 set of 10 with 35 lbs on a preachers bench, and then 52.5 lbs behind the head triceps (both arms at once).

On T, TH, on the bowflex again with 410 lbs, 3 sets of 30 reps on cable row, calf raises, shoulder shrugs, crossover pull down, squats (15 reps), 120 lbs on a lateral cable pull down. With the dumbells I do lateral raises with 20 lbs on each arm.

Do I feel over trained? Not really, but after doing a little on line reading I was under the impression that I should probably let my body rest every other day or so to allow for muscle growth.

I realize that when cutting I won't be bulking any, but when I tired to eat more and bulk, I just didn't seem to get bigger. How long should I allow for bulking and at what point do you cut again, or do you? I guess I really have no idea what I'm doing.
 
My routine:

Thanks for the replies.

My routine. M, W, F on the bowflex with 410 lbs rods, I have no idea what this really equates to. I do 3 sets of 10 on bench press, pull downs, resistance crunches (20 reps), military press, about 120 lbs on chest fly and 170 lbs on leg extension. With dumb bells I do 3 set of 10 with 35 lbs on a preachers bench, and then 52.5 lbs behind the head triceps (both arms at once).

On T, TH, on the bowflex again with 410 lbs, 3 sets of 30 reps on cable row, calf raises, shoulder shrugs, crossover pull down, squats (15 reps), 120 lbs on a lateral cable pull down. With the dumbells I do lateral raises with 20 lbs on each arm.

Do I feel over trained? Not really, but after doing a little on line reading I was under the impression that I should probably let my body rest every other day or so to allow for muscle growth.

Yea, that's not the greatest routine but I've seen far worse.

Here's a fact you need to keep in mind. When you're dieting, you don't want to push things too much. Dieting = caloric deficit.

When you're in a surplus, you're able to tolerate much more volume with your training. Your recoverability goes up with caloric intake.

That said, it's important to match your weight training to your goal at hand.

If you're dieting, the goal is to lift heavy weights relative to your strength and maximize recovery. The real goal is to preserve muscle mass.

This can easily be done with 2-3 days of training that emphasized big compound lifts in the 4-10 rep range.

When you're bulking, you can bump up the volume a bit. I still wouldn't train every single day although it can be done... but it's a matter of planning appropriately.

My favorite split for bulking is a 4x per week upper/lower split where I alternate upper body workouts with lower body workouts.

Each upper day emphasizes things a bit differently.

The first upper body day is heavy horizontal stuff (in the 5 rep range per set) and the lighter vertical stuff (in the 8-15 rep range).

The second upper day is heavy vertical stuff and lighter horizontal stuff.

Horizontal = bench press and rows

Vertical = overhead presses and pullups/pulldowns.

I'll usually emphasize different things on my leg days too. One day for quad dominant stuff and the next day for ham/glute dominant stuff. All the big leg exercises hit most of your leg musculature though so it isn't critical.

In fact, none of this is written in stone. It's just how I like to structure things personally and what has given good results for me and my clients with similar goals.

It seems to be an optimal split in terms of providing enough 'stress' to force adaptation while providing adequate recovery time as well... it's good balance all the way around.

I'm not sure what you think those 30 rep days are providing you, care to explain?

One last afterthought, when you're cutting, there's no need for a ton of isolation movements. Shit, I don't even do that many when I'm bulking.

I realize that when cutting I won't be bulking any, but when I tired to eat more and bulk, I just didn't seem to get bigger. How long should I allow for bulking and at what point do you cut again, or do you? I guess I really have no idea what I'm doing.

Here's the thing...

Bulking is all about finding that caloric sweet spot where you're eating sufficiently to fuel growth but not so much that you're storing a lot of fat. Whenever you're in a caloric surplus, you're going to gain some flub. You have to take the good with the evil if adding more muscle is what you're after.

How you find that sweet spot is through trial and error. When I first started toying around with bulking and cutting, I kept meticulous tabs on things like calories, measurements, photos, weight, etc, etc.

With 'my finger on the pulse' I was able to tweak things as needed.

You can't fast forward muscle growth by eating more and more, which is where a lot of guys go wrong. Or they think that bulking is an excuse to eat whatever the hell they want.

It's neither of these things.

Track the appropriate metrics when you are in a caloric surplus and adjust accordingly. If you aren't gaining enough, bump up your cals. If you're gaining too much, scale back. I'd reevaluate every two weeks or so.

If you're gaining 1 lb per week of muscle, you're lucky. In all actuality, a pound per week total tends to be the sweet spot for many. I know it is for me when I'm doing things right.

When do you cut and when to you bulk?

That's completely up to you. It varies from person to person.

Heck, bulking and cutting isn't even necessary. Some people are content and that's that.

Personally, I'm on a never ending pursuit. It's not so much a particular look I'm going for. I'm simply pursuing refinement, if that makes sense. I don't like the idea of maintenance so I figure why not always be working towards refinement.

The thing with that concept is this: You can't bulk forever and you can't cut forever. Bulking forever will get you fat. Cutting forever will eat into your muscle and wear you down.

It becomes a process of bulking up to a point where you've gained a bit of muscle. I usually bulk up right to the point where I'm starting to get a little uncomfortable with my fat gain. Or to the point I'm sick of eating *enough* to gain. Then I reverse the process slowly and incrementally into a cut. The goal then is to lose the fat that has accumulated while preserving as much muscle as possible. Then back again.

Training revolves around the process too.

I'm rambling but hopefully this has shed a bit of light for ya.
 
Great insight. Thanks a bunch. I can see I really need to take a hard look at my whole routine. I do the 30 rep days just because the exercises are so easy on the bowflex, any less and I don't feel like I have done anything. I can see that I need to think about trading up to better equipment or go to the gym if I am serious about bulking. Problem is working the whole gym routine in (I live in a rural area). I really don't like the idea of maintence either. I like the way I look but why quit. You can always improve. Regardless I am going to try to do the split routine you describe to the best extent I can. Increase my caloric intake and work on finding that "sweet spot" you described. Dang, bulking sounds like harder work than taking it off. Thanks again.
 
You're welcome.

How far is the nearest gym to you? Gyms are worth it. If you have the 'bug', which it seems you do... a gym is the way to go IMO if it's affordable and not terribly inconvenient. I'm not saying you can't have a phenomenal workout from your home. Having a gym at your fingertips simply improves the arsenal from which you can pull from.

I've had some fantastic workouts from home. Even in the absence of any traditional weights.

Personally though, to build the body I desire, I need more than advanced calisthenics can provide me.

And you're right...

It's not easy.

But most things worthy of having... most things that matter never are easy to achieve. That's why it's important to build your passion not on what you hope to one day achieve but rather on the never-ending journey.
 
The nearest gym is really not all that far, about 12 miles. I think I'll give myself a membership for Christmas; or if I can't wait that long maybe Haloween, LOL. Biggest change will be altering the time I exercise. I'm generally up at 0400-0530 to lift and then do cardio in the evening. I'm not sure gyms are open that early. We'll see.

Yea I truly enjoy lifting and building towards personal goals. It is very exciting and rewarding. Its one of the thing I look most forward to daily.

Thanks again for the advice.
 
The nearest gym is really not all that far, about 12 miles. I think I'll give myself a membership for Christmas; or if I can't wait that long maybe Haloween, LOL. Biggest change will be altering the time I exercise. I'm generally up at 0400-0530 to lift and then do cardio in the evening. I'm not sure gyms are open that early. We'll see.

Yea I truly enjoy lifting and building towards personal goals. It is very exciting and rewarding. Its one of the thing I look most forward to daily.

Thanks again for the advice.

If you have the space and budget you could always just buy a some weights.
 
That too. Personally I love the gym. I know guys though who get much better workouts in their basements or sheds. It's a matter of personal preference.

I've often thought about building out a sweet gym and I might now that I'm buying a new house and will have space.
 
Back
Top