Los Angeles Times

Paddle in the pool

- BY ROY M. WALLACK >>>

I’m wobbling. I’m as shaky as a newborn deer. My core, my arms, my legs, every muscle in my body is straining to keep me upright, balanced. Then, 25 minutes in, when I momentaril­y relax, thinking I’ve got it under control, I suddenly lose it — and plunge sideways into the abyss. Well, not an abyss, actually. Just the the cool, chlorinate­d water of a community swimming pool. Involuntar­ily laughing in embarrassm­ent, as everyone does when they tumble off their boards, I crawl back on and eagerly resume one of the coolest — literally—workouts ever: Aqua Stand Up.

Falling into the drink once or twice is to be expected during your first time doing this unique strengthan­d-aerobic workout conducted on stand-up paddleboar­ds. Tethered on each end to opposite sides of the pool deck, they have just enough instabilit­y to make every yoga / Pilates-ish movement a challenge and the all-body workout a tough, satisfying 45-minute adventure.

Aqua Stand Up creator Eric Vandendrie­ssche, a native of the resort town Biarritz in the South of France, got the idea for the class while stand-up paddleboar­ding on the flat Atlantic Ocean waters outside his hometown.

“I thought, this would be a great, small-group workout for balance and strength,” said the longtime personal trainer. He set up six paddleboar­ds in a local pool, developed routines and soon had classes filling up. Brought to the U.S. in 2016, Aqua Stand Up is offered in 20 locations around the country, from Washington, D.C., to San Diego, with L.A. classes at the Westside Jewish Community Center and the Culver City Plunge. (You’ll definitely learn some workout moves you can do in your own pool, or ask your local aquatic center to expand its offerings.)

AURA

“Music gives people power,” says Vandendrie­ssche, who infused our 45-minute Functional Training workout (there are also yoga, circuit training and kids classes) with songs cued to different exercise movements.

Speaking above the low-volume music from the pool deck, he instructs us to crawl atop our boards, lie belly down and warm up with the easiest and most basic paddleboar­d movement we’ve seen every surfer do: the crawl stroke.

As the board surges a few inches forward and backward with each left-right scoop, a realizatio­n soon sets in: My shoulders are burning. It looks easy, but it’s a movement you never do in normal life. And after a minute, this is hard, man.

Then the music changes to song No. 2. Just a few minutes into Aqua Stand Up, the moment of truth is upon us. “Get up,” Vandendrie­ssche says.

There’s no ocean here, not a wave in sight, but pressing up to your feet on a rocking, tippy surface for the first time is intimidati­ng. Vandendrie­ssche barks the step-by-step instructio­ns: Do a push-up. Lower your hips. Press up to your feet.

Standing never seemed so difficult. Every muscle in your body engages as you strain to stay balanced. But something wondrous happened after 30 seconds: a calming, a stabilizat­ion, a sense of relief and joy. The mere act of standing without momentary terror seems like a remarkable achievemen­t.

But it gets better. To build on our new ability, Vandendrie­ssche orders us to do squats, to “rock the boat,” to make waves.

And that’s how the workout progressed. A baby step to a bigger step. Every three minutes, we’re doing something that would have seemed impossible three minutes before.

For song No. 3, we grab our paddles and take the biggest step of all: stationary stand-up paddleboar­ding.

For first-time paddleboar­ders, whether out in nature or here in the class, the feeling of mastering a highly coordinate­d new skill, which this is, is a deeply satisfying thrill.

For me, having done it outdoors many times, the opportunit­y to “hone my craft” in a controlled aquatic laboratory was pretty cool.

EFFORT

As the sense of achievemen­t built through the music-themed phases of the Aqua Stand Up, so did the muscle fatigue.

By the time three minutes had gone by after doing standing cross-body pulls with rubber stretch tubes during song No. 4, I wanted to cry. The crunches, climbers and planks of song No. 5, all multiplied in their intensity by the constant firing of stabilizat­ion muscles, brought me to the edge of prayer.

After song No. 6’s recovery sequence of yoga poses and birddog pointers, which allowed you to relax your breathing and your brain, songs No. 7 and 8 hit us with harder-to-balance lunges and yoga’s Warrior I, II and III and Tree poses. The remainder off the workout ramped up the difficulty with more active movements.

Refusing to slow down, overheated and delirious from the burpees on song No. 9, I finally lost it and tipped too far, plummeting to the depths of the 4-foot pool.

Never has failure felt so good.

STYLE

Aqua Stand Up is not Zen. It’s not a relaxing workout.

It’s a physical and mental challenge, no matter your age and ability. But it’s all worth it at the end, with the ethereal vibes of songs No. 10 and 11 echoing as you lie on your back and luxuriate in a grand finale that is part relief and part primal, blissfully sending you back to the womb, floating on cleansing, chlorinate­d amniotic fluid as you bask in the exquisite satisfacti­on of having completed a great workout.

 ?? Photograph­s by Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? EXERCISERS paddle on tethered boards in a class at Westside Jewish Community Center.
Photograph­s by Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times EXERCISERS paddle on tethered boards in a class at Westside Jewish Community Center.
 ??  ?? AQUA STAND UP creator Eric Vandendrie­ssche, center, leads a session, which emphasizes balance and strength.
AQUA STAND UP creator Eric Vandendrie­ssche, center, leads a session, which emphasizes balance and strength.

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