Belfast Telegraph

Parallette bars ... easy on the pocket and able to do wonders for your physique

Don’t be fooled by their size, this gymnastic equipment will deliver your toughest core workout yet, writes Liz Connor

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Gymnasts have some of the best physiques in sport. Their core muscles are whittled into defined peaks and troughs, their backs and shoulders are sculpted and their arms have an ox-like strength, propelling them into the air with fluidity and ease.

The secret to their Michelenge­lo-style proportion­s is simple: using your own body as a weight to develop the lean, functional muscle you see on the likes of Olympic athletes Rebecca Downie and Max Whitlock, rather than throwing heavy weights around in the gym.

While you’ll likely catch them drilling through moves on the rings and the beam, there’s another weapon gymnasts rely on to keep their strength in check. They’re called parallette bars and, if you go to the gym, you’ve probably seen them stacked up next to the weights and kettlebell­s.

“Parallette­s are really just what the name suggests — mini versions of the parallel bars that you may remember from your school gym hall days,” says Luke Worthingto­n, an elite trainer at Third Space gyms (thirdspace. london). “If Louis Smith’s impressive physique is anything to go by, it’s pretty safe to say gymnastic movements can feature right up there with weight training when it comes to exercise choices for building lean muscle.”

While they might look small, innocent and unassuming (and like the bars you’d chain your bike to), they’ll give you a blistering workout that will make you sweat buckets and mumble profanitie­s at your aching muscles the day after. A session will work your upper-body, adding fire to your shoulders, back, chest, arms and abdominals.

Parallette movements are called ‘calistheni­cs’, the technical name for exercises that use your own bodyweight as a form of resistance.

Thanks to Instagram, they’re having a big resurgence on the fitness scene, with influencer­s like Frank Medrano (@frank_ medrano) and Kenneth Gallarzo (@progressiv­e_calistheni­cs) showing off acts that defy gravity on railings, lamp posts and car bonnets. Gymnasts will typically use parallette­s to perform handstands and more complicate­d inversions, but the beginner gym-goer can still reap big benefits. Add a set of bars into push ups, tricep dips, mountain climbers, standing lateral planks and lunges with one leg on the bar. The added elevation engages a wider range of muscles, bringing a higher level of intensity to a workout and training all the right body parts so you can eventually work towards getting your feet off the ground.

Once you’ve mastered the basics, you can try standing between both bars, getting a double-handed grip and hovering your legs off the ground for 10 seconds. With enough practice, you can eventually attempt a tricep dip while suspended in the air.

If you’re thinking of incorporat­ing the bars into a weight training routine, make sure you hit them fresh, preferably before you start repping through bicep curls with a set of dumbbells. “Parallette work should always feature at the beginning of the training session,” says Worthingto­n. “It requires the highest level of motor control and will be the most physically challengin­g — these are not movements you should attempt when fatigued after a hardcore session.” As parallette bars are cheap, portable and easy to use, Worthingto­n says that getting familiar with them can save you money in the long run. “Once you’re able to make the transition to bodyweight-based equipment, you can become free of the confines of gyms and purpose-designed exercise spaces. If you can manoeuvre your bodyweight around a fixed anchor, then anything from a door frame, to a staircase, to a tree becomes your playground.”

Undoubtedl­y the best thing about the parallette­s is that hardly anyone in your gym will have a clue what they’re for, so while everyone else is queuing for the chest press, you can skip the line and get right to it with some elevated press ups. Job done.

 ??  ?? Core exercise: a man using parallette bars in the gym and (below) working out on an outdoor gym bar
Core exercise: a man using parallette bars in the gym and (below) working out on an outdoor gym bar
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