This may sound stupid, but do the exercises faster. If it isn't raising your heart rate and causing lactic burn, speed up. This ought to be very aerobic. Maybe you should wait a bit to do this, but once you are very comfortable with the motions and have built the connective tissue strength, you can go at it fast.
How big is your hammer? the difference between an 8 and a 10, when you are doing 50 reps, is 100 pounds of work. And it feels like much more. You can accomplish some of this by leaving more distance between your "forward" and and the head of the hammer.
Follow through with your legs. When you do a shoveling motion, bend your legs. When you chop wood, squat to an almost sitting position quickly like you would do to speed up the maul if you were really chopping wood. Think of churning butter as busting ice and put your legs into it (you already had that idea, didn't you).
FYI, I'm a 180 pound guy. I can bench my weight - not a giant accomplishment - but I couldn't have even come close before I started SG. And I haven't done any weight lifting. I started other bodyweight training since.
noodle wrote:OK, I think I got my answer (half anyway) from the shovelglove physique thread.
But still wondering....if I've been doing this for a week and don't feel sore - makes sense that the soreness comes in the beginning... - should I be lifting a heavier sh?? or is it good not to be sore (ripping muscles to shreds)?