- Sep 17, 2019
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I ran cross-country in high school and have been a touring cyclist ever since. That has been great for my lower body, but not my upper.
I find repetition-based exercises (like weights & rowing) to be tedious and hard to maintain, but I think that I finally found an upper body exercise that I can connect to.
I was reading about the Upper Body Ergo. It works the upper body in the same way that a spin-bike works the lower.
Not having an extra $2K lying around, I read about people repurposing their old-school spin-cycles, like my DP AeroCycle. (I replaced the pedals with custom-made handles. ⛮)
It is also known as:
I think that it is the perfect complement to cycling.
*A hand-cycle (for paraplegics) would be a comparable workout, but they are also very expensive.
I find repetition-based exercises (like weights & rowing) to be tedious and hard to maintain, but I think that I finally found an upper body exercise that I can connect to.
I was reading about the Upper Body Ergo. It works the upper body in the same way that a spin-bike works the lower.
Not having an extra $2K lying around, I read about people repurposing their old-school spin-cycles, like my DP AeroCycle. (I replaced the pedals with custom-made handles. ⛮)
AeroCycle by DP
Going a distance with a cyclic form of exercise is a lot more intuitive for me.*It is also known as:
- an arm bike/arm-cycling,
- a hand bike/hand-cycling,
- an inverted bike/hand-pedalling, etc.
I think that it is the perfect complement to cycling.
*A hand-cycle (for paraplegics) would be a comparable workout, but they are also very expensive.