Skip to main content

News & Veiws

The Jacked O’ Lantern Pumpkin Workout

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                It’s almost Halloween — that spooky time of year where sugary temptations close in all around us. If you’re planning a major cheat day on account of the holiday, it can’t hurt to get your sweat on before you hit the streets in search of sweets. (Did you know that the average American child collects between 3,500 to 7,000 calories worth of candy on Halloween night?) Our solution: A workout to help you get jacked with the help of your jack ‘o lantern! Before you carve your pumpkin, why not use it to carve some muscles?
We hit up DailyBurn 365 trainer Prince Brathwaite to demonstrate five fun exercises you can do with just a pumpkin. Perform one round of the circuit for a short and sweet workout, or complete three rounds for a 15-minute full-body blast. Ready? Your muscles are in for a real treat.
RELATED: What 100 Calories of Halloween Candy Looks Like                                                                     The Jacked O’ Lantern Pumpkin Workout

1. Pumpkin Pass-Through

Targets: Legs, glutes, shoulders
How to: Hold a small pumpkin in both hands and stand with your feet hip-width apart (a). Step your right foot out and lunge to the side, bringing your hips back and sinking into your right knee (b). Transfer the pumpkin in your left hand and pass it through your legs, grabbing it with your right hand (c). Holding the pumpkin in both hands, step your right foot back to center, engaging your glutes to stand back up (d). Once you’re standing back up, press the pumpkin overhead (e). Repeat this move for 30 seconds on each side.
Make it harder: Instead of placing your foot back on the ground after you step out of the lunge, keep it lifted and bent in front of you and try to balance on one leg.

2. Pumpkin Side Press

Targets: Back and shoulders
How to: Select two small pumpkins. Stand straight and hold the pumpkins, one in each hand, in front of your torso with your elbows bent (a). Keeping your elbows tight to your torso, rotate your forearms out to the side(b). Next, extend your arms out to the side (c). Now reverse the movements. Bend your elbows, then rotate your forearms inwards so you are back in the starting position (d). Repeat for 30 seconds.
Make it harder: Perform a reverse lunge before moving your arms.

3. Standing Pumpkin Chop

Targets: Obliques and legs
How to: Select a medium pumpkin and stand with your feet hip-width apart. With your arms straight, swing the pumpkin over your right shoulder as you rotate your torso to the right slightly and let your left hip rotate towards the right. Your left foot may pivot onto your toes (a). Next, pretend the pumpkin is an axe (scary, right?) and swing it downwards toward your left hip, rotating your left hip back to the original position (b). Repeat for 30 seconds, then perform on the other side.
Make it harder: For more intensity, ramp up your speed.

4. Squash Squat

Targets: Legs, core, arms, glutes
How to: Hold a large pumpkin in both hands. Squat down and place the pumpkin on the ground (a). Place both hands on the pumpkin and step back with the right leg (b). Step the right leg forward so you are back in the bottom of a squat. Grab the pumpkin securely with both hands, engage your glutes and stand up while swinging the pumpkin overhead, like a kettlebell swing (c). Next, squat down and repeat the movement with the other leg (d). Alternate sides for one minute.
Make it harder: Try stepping both feet out into a full plank when your hands are balanced on the pumpkin.

5. Pumpkin Spice Twist

Targets: Core
How to: Choose a medium pumpkin. Lie on your back with your knees bent and your feet flat on the floor, holding the pumpkin in both hands at your chest (a). Engage your core and sit up, picking up the pumpkin and then tapping it to the right of your hips (b). Now twist to the left and tap the pumpkin to the left of your hips (c). Roll back down to the floor (d). Repeat for one minute.
Make it harder: Over-achievers, pick your feet off the floor to make this move extra challenging.
For more workout moves from Prince, head to DailyBurn.com/365 for live workouts, every day at 9 a.m. ET.
More from DailyBurn:
dailyburn-life-logo.jpgLife by DailyBurn is dedicated to helping you live a healthier, happier and more active lifestyle. Whether your goal is to lose weight, gain strength or de-stress, a better you is well within reach. Get more health and fitness tips at Life by DailyBurn.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

16 Ways to Lose Weight Fast

16 Ways to Lose Weight Fast From Zumba to yoga to ditching junk food, these simple lifestyle changes will help you lose 10, 30, even 50 pounds! JESSICA GIRDWAIN   01, 2018 0:00 1 of 17   Tweak your lifestyle It's a familiar story: You pledge to honor a daily elliptical routine and count every last calorie. But soon, you're eating cupcakes at the office and grabbing happy hour mojitos, thinking,   Oops, diet over . There  is  a better way: Swap the all-or-nothing approach for one or two healthy switch-ups in your daily routine. "Doing this can lead to more  weight loss  than you ever imagined," says Marissa Lippert, RD, author of  The Cheater's Diet . In fact, we talked to readers who knocked off 10, 25, even 60 pounds with some easy tweaks. Borrow their slim-down secrets to transform your body the real-world way. 2...

News & Veiws

Too Much TV Linked to Leading Causes of Death October 29, 2015 | By Health Editor           Photo: Getty Images THURSDAY, Oct. 29, 2015 (HealthDay News) — A new study links watching too much TV with some of the leading causes of death in the United States. Ninety-two percent of Americans have a TV in their home, according to background information in the study. And 80 percent of American adults watch an average of three-and-a-half hours of TV a day, which is more than half of their leisure time. “We know that television viewing is the most prevalent leisure-time sedentary behavior and our working hypothesis is that it is an indicator of overall physical inactivity,” explained study author Sarah Keadle, a cancer prevention fellow at the U.S. National Cancer Institute. “In this context, our results fit within a growing body of research indicating that too much sitting can have many different adverse health effects,” Keadle said. In the...

News & Veiws

The Brilliant Self-Rolling Yoga Mat You Didn’t Know You Needed October 29, 2015 | By Alexis Reliford                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Your yoga practice is about to get...