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Churn Butter
Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2007 8:39 pm
by reinhard
Post any questions/comments/concerns you have about this move here.
Official movement description at:
http://shovelglove.com/movements/churn_butter/
Posted: Thu Oct 25, 2007 1:01 pm
by urbansix
I hate being first.
I started modifying "churn butter" with 10 one-handed churn butters in front, and then 10 to the side. Each side. First started thinking of them as
churning butter while reaching for the phone, but the best name I can come up with is
Perseus Hoist
(haven't tried it naked yet)
Posted: Fri Oct 26, 2007 1:18 pm
by reinhard
I am deeply grateful that you took the plunge and went first -- this forum was beginning to look a little silly
A lot of people have reported doing butter churn one handed. I'm not sure why I persist in using two hands. It's certainly a lot harder with one, and you can't "cheat" by having your dominant arm help out the weaker. I'll have to try to force myself to use one hand next time to see how it feels (I've been doing two handed so long the movement is now almost unconscious).
That's a dramatic (and scary) name you've come up with for it! I wonder how much a severed (Gorgon) head weighs...
Reinhard
Posted: Wed Oct 31, 2007 2:50 pm
by reinhard
I tried the one handed version Friday and remembered why I don't do it regularly: with a heavier sledge, it puts a lot of strain on the elbow. With two hands, the other hand doesn't just "cheat," it stabilizes (not a bad tradeoff, I think). So unless you're very comfortable with the weight your using, I'd recommend sticking with two hands.
Reinhard
Harder with sledge head up?
Posted: Wed Oct 31, 2007 9:17 pm
by matt
For some reason, this move seems harder with the head of the sledgehammer held up, rather than hanging down... does anyone else find this? Maybe it's because you have to use more muscles balancing the weight on top, whereas when it's hanging, it balances itself...
Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 3:31 am
by reinhard
Matt,
I think what you're describing is
tuck the bales. (also known as reverse butter churn).
I would probably agree that it's harder (I do 42 reps butter churn, just 21 tuck the bales), but it also seems to emphasize different muscles. When I do butter churn I feel it in my pecs. Tuck the bales is more shoulders.
Reinhard
Posted: Fri Nov 09, 2007 11:23 am
by urbansix
I have taken your elbow strain advice and gone back to two-handing the butter. Just have to do twice as many to get that burn. Instead of 20 each side I do 40 two-handed now, and it feels good. Finishing off each set with 10 Gorgons to each side - they are straight armed, but shoulder intensive.
Posted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 2:02 pm
by Kevin
I do a move like this one handed, but with the head of the hammer near the ground (so my hand is nearer the end of the handle). I think of it as "busting ice". I've tried to make my SG workout completely consistent with things you might actually
do with a hammer... I'm not sure why. I guess it's just another mind game I play with myself.
urbansix wrote:I have taken your elbow strain advice and gone back to two-handing the butter. Just have to do twice as many to get that burn. Instead of 20 each side I do 40 two-handed now, and it feels good. Finishing off each set with 10 Gorgons to each side - they are straight armed, but shoulder intensive.