William Boone's Training

An article available at Dragon Door:

The Strength Lessons I Learned from an Old-Timer
(Or How to Throw a Hog Over a Fence)
Eric S. Bruesch
On my recent trip to the Carolinas I had a chance to talk to Jimmy, an old family friend. Jimmy has known me since I was a newborn, and in the 30 years I’ve known him to be a well-read man and all-around lover of life. Only on this recent visit did I learn he was also a self-taught strongman in his day.

After catching up on jobs, family, and so forth, I mentioned some of the Party training I’ve been doing. Jimmy got a special gleam in his eye and asked specific questions about standing presses and deadlifts. Then he told me about his old training days on the farm, illustrating his knowledge of several Party principles.

First, Jimmy trained for purely functional reasons. “I didn’t have any use for Charles Atlas or any of those guys,” Jimmy said. “Who cares if you’re 98 pounds? It’s not like I was going to oil up and show off big chest muscles under my overalls. I needed to change tractor tires and throw bales of hay around.”

The only specific equipment he employed was an old barbell, 200 lbs. in weight plates, and lots of canvas bags to hold sand. “All the guys at school, the football players especially, said you have to do three or four sets of ten reps to get strong. But all that did was make me sore, if I was using any kind of real weight.” By no means a blind follower, Jimmy changed his training. “What you do is use a weight you can lift four or five times, and only lift it twice. Then put it down. If you’re putting up a weight until you shake under it, you’re not getting stronger, you’re just getting sore. Those football players walked around flexing their arms for the girls, but they just sort of stared at me when I pushed up 150 pounds with one hand. They said it had to be a trick.”

I confess I gave him a stare, too. He was talking about cleaning and pressing 150 lbs. with one arm! This is a man who stands 5’5" or so with an average frame. I asked why he focused on the one-armed press. “I never saw the point in lying on my back and pushing the weight up,” he said. “I usually worked on my feet, so it made sense to lift standing on the ground.”

Other lifts he favored? -One-armed and suitcase deadlifts, one-armed rows, jerks, and especially cleans-cleaning the barbell, cleaning bales of hay with one or two hands, cleaning large bags of sand. “Anything you use your whole body for, that’s a good lift to practice,” the wise old-timer reminded me. “Most people who work with their hands need to pick up heavy things off the ground without putting their back out. So, that’s what I practiced, and I got good at it.”

But Jimmy’s favorite lift to practice is one I will surely add to my next outdoor ballistic session: the clean and throw. “That one is fun and makes you strong all over,” he said. “Pick up something heavy and throw it. I used to tease the neighbor boy because he never really got the hang of it, but I got to where I threw 200 pound bags about eight feet.”

THE OLD-TIMER’S CLEAN & THROW

Go outside and away from valued property. Clean a KB or a sandbag to your shoulder. Dip the knees, tense your abs and butt, and throw for distance with your lifting arm. Think of a jerk, but direct your force at an upward angle and let it rip. Jimmy preferred most of his lifting one-handed, and that is how he practiced this movement? with a few exceptions.

Jimmy’s wife hovered near us during this conversation, ready to call him out if he exaggerated his exploits. But she confirmed all his claims and added, “One time a fat hog got out of the pen at my daddy’s house? Jimmy chased him for about ten minutes, then wrapped his arms around the hog’s belly and tossed him over the fence and back into his pen.” For those of us unfamiliar with porcine statistics, a “fat” hog weighs in the neighborhood of 250 lbs. and the fence in question would have been about four feet high.

THE OLD-TIMER’S WORKOUT TIPS
Lift every day without exception. Starting the day with a few sets of heavy lifts gets the blood pumping.
Doubles and triples are the norm. Never lift to failure. Do 3-4 sets max for functional strength with minimal soreness and muscle fatigue.
Compound movements are best; standing lifts from the ground are the most practical.
75% of his training was ballistic in nature.
Have fun. Throw stuff. (Farm animals are not recommended. Most of them do not like being lifted, and many kick, bite, or smell.)
These are some powerful lessons from a self-taught strongman!

More great posts.

“Don’t be a pussy.”

Oddly enough this is my mantra when I’m having trouble moving a weight or doing an exercise that I should be able to do.

Only mine is “Sometimes you’ve just gotta stop being a pussy.”

Wow! This thread kicks major ass. I got a kick out of the WildBoarMan.

In regards to slotan’s recommendations, when Waterbury, Staley give set parameters of say 10X3, 4X6, 5X5, etc do they mean to include the warm-ups in the prescribed sets or warm-ups outside the sets recommended. For myself I warm-up for 2-3 sets for the first exercise and then 1-2 sets for subsequent exercises.
Zeus

this thread has inspired me to register and post my whole body routine.

Abs, a few sets each of anything for the front, sides and back.

Clean + Push Press - 5x5

Squat - 5x5

Bench press - 5x5

Pullups to chest - 5x5

someone had said earlier that O-lifts should not be done 5x5. Should I drop it to 5x3?

Great thread. Zeb,thanks for getting it started.

[quote]gamarz wrote:
Great thread. Zeb,thanks for getting it started.[/quote]

Thanks gamarz!

It’s amazing the level of development that you can achieve by training the big movements only.

That is not to say that you should never train arms or do any other sort of specific work. Variety is the key once you have built a base of good size and strength.

My biggest complaint is that new trainees think they need to specialize when in fact what they need is to focus on 5 or 6 of the big lifts for the first two or three years (everyone is different) of training.

I wonder if anyone would be interested in seeing strength standards from days gone by?

ZEB, give us all you’ve got related to this era!

Another thing to remember is that the old tymers did do arm work, but you can bet your rear end that it was done with heavy weights. No 15lb cable curls.

They also picked up awkward objects, much like today’s WSM competors, who have some of the biggest arms in the world.

To me, doing arms is a lot like the Bench press, they are good movements that were perverted by idiots who decided that they were the ONLY movements. Nothing wrong with benching…but Inclines, Dips and Overhead work can not be ignored.
Nothing wrong with curling, but rows, squats, and pulls can not be ignored.

Think of it this way, if on the day you do curls, you also did Back Squats and OHP, you would be working a major portion of your body in addition to the arms, rather than just doing curls endlessly.

Another thing to consider is that the upper arm is mostly tricep, and triceps respond best to max weights. Things like Lockouts, Close grip Bench and Incline,dumbell benches, Overhead work, including lockouts, and dips should be the focus. If you can do a kick back with a 30lb dumbell or you can do Close Grip lockouts with 300lbs, which do you think will make the tri’s grow more?

[quote]IL Cazzo wrote:
Another thing to remember is that the old tymers did do arm work, but you can bet your rear end that it was done with heavy weights. No 15lb cable curls.

They also picked up awkward objects, much like today’s WSM competors, who have some of the biggest arms in the world.

To me, doing arms is a lot like the Bench press, they are good movements that were perverted by idiots who decided that they were the ONLY movements. Nothing wrong with benching…but Inclines, Dips and Overhead work can not be ignored.
Nothing wrong with curling, but rows, squats, and pulls can not be ignored.

Think of it this way, if on the day you do curls, you also did Back Squats and OHP, you would be working a major portion of your body in addition to the arms, rather than just doing curls endlessly.

Another thing to consider is that the upper arm is mostly tricep, and triceps respond best to max weights. Things like Lockouts, Close grip Bench and Incline,dumbell benches, Overhead work, including lockouts, and dips should be the focus. If you can do a kick back with a 30lb dumbell or you can do Close Grip lockouts with 300lbs, which do you think will make the tri’s grow more? [/quote]

preach on, brother Cazzo!
my tris were always okay but never started taking off until I changed from 8-12 reps to 4-6 and started using close grip benches and stuff.

[quote]Laxxone wrote:All of these articles basically reiterate Dan John’s programs, or the “One Lift a Day”

Actually, Dan John’s articles are identical in spirit to these articles. They both draw inspiration from the same sources.

One point re: Westside: keep in mind that many of their lifters use steroids, and I believe Louie Simmons has written about his use of them.

Nothing against them or against roids, but I feel it must be pointed out, since steroids are very much against what old time lifters believed in.

Re: diet, I doubt the old timers drank a lot of skim milk cazzo! Ha ha, raw eggs would probably be closer to the truth.

On the topic of an old school lifter’s diet: I recently finished reading Ric Flair’s autobiography. He broke into wrestling with Ken Patera, who won five gold medals in The Pan-Am Games and a bronze medal in the 1972 Olympics.

After training in wrestling, they’d go lift and then eat. 4 or 5 hamburgers, fries and a couple of milkshakes were not uncommon. Flair complains that whatever Patera ate, turned into muscle, while whatever Flair ate, half of it turned into fat.
They’d have lots of shakes with milk and eggs too.
I doubt Patera worried about fat or carbs or his 6-pack.

The following was written by David Gentle about Reg Park an outstanding Bodybuilder from the 1950’s. Most believe that Reg never touched a steroid. However, even if he did, he surely did not use anything in the early 1950’s!

BREAKING ALL RECORDS

In the course of his training, Reg broke a great number of British records, including the dumbbell press record by lifting 258 lbs in 1953. I asked him to quote some other poundages and he replied, ?In the early 1950?s I would regularly use 185 lbs dumbbells for reps on an incline and flat bench. I couldn?t fit any more weight onto the rods. I could rep out with 510 lbs for squats (authors note: I know the top guys of today can do that or more but during that period a good squat was between 300-400 lbs. With the time scale involved it would be akin to squatting 1,000 lbs. or more) and did a 605 lbs bench press for 2 reps at Buster McShane and Ivan Dunbar?s gym in Belfast. I also bench 500 lbs in March 1953, again in Belfast. I also benched 500 lbs in March 1953, again in Belfast. As well, I could press behind neck with 300 lbs, and also performed alternate presses with 120 lbs of dumbbells and curled 100 lbs. dumbbells. ?I?d ask you to reread those weights and consider just how far ahead they were above most of Reg?s contemporaries.

Prior to the influence of Reg Park most UK trainees would use comparatively light weights for just one set happily squatting with their own bodyweight. Following Reg?s example, top lifters soon raised their standards with bench presses going from 200 to 400 or more.
Reg, along with his father, had their own company selling weights, equipment, books and courses, all to promote bodybuilding for the masses.

A classic Reg Park workout, with one of his training partners, Spencer Churchill, circa 1951, was:
Squats: 5 x 10 x 400 lbs.
Bench Press: 3 x 10 x 320 lbs., 2 x 10 x 350 lbs.
Dumbbell Bench Presses: 5 x 10 x 140 lbs.
Dips Between Chairs: 5 x 12 (with resistance added)
Cheat Barbell Curls: 5 x 10 x 190 lbs.
Swing Bell Curls: 4 x 10 x 170 lbs.
Triceps Extensions on Bench: 5 x 10 x 170 lbs.
French Presses: 5 x 10 x 170 lbs.
Calf Exercises - Donkey Raises: 5 sets
Chins with Extra 60 Lbs. Attached to his Waist
Abdominal Work

(Note that using various isolation movements are a great idea once you have your foundation of size and strength built. It’s about variety after you have built your base!)

Reg usually trained from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., 3 days a week. He gained 25 lbs of muscle in just 10 months on the above schedule. Sleeping 10 hours a night, and taking protein mixes of honey, milk and cream six times a day.

Reg, like all good champions, must have trained on a million different routines and training schedules and soon discovered what exercises and routines gave him the best results. When asked what the secret of his success was Reg replied, "You must have the right mental attitude when working out and drive yourself hard through dedication and some real rough training.

What would be a good Total Body Training program for a newbie? I am considering CW’s TBT.

[quote]rocksteady wrote:
What would be a good Total Body Training program for a newbie? I am considering CW’s TBT.[/quote]

There are a number of good programs the one you listed is top notch!

As a newbie, if I were you I would stick to some very basic movements for the first couple of years. Build a base of size and strength.

For Example:

Squat-6 sets rep range 6 to 12

Deadlift-6 sets rep range 6 to 12

Standing Press-4 sets 6 to 10 reps

Pull-ups-4 sets stop two reps short of failure on each set.

Sit-ups-two sets

Every 8 weeks or so switch to some other full body movements. Keep it interesting and fun!

Do the above program three times per week. Keep your form fairly strict. Add weight whenever possible never sacrificing form.

Buy some Grow! Protein powder consume at least one gram for each pound of body weight. Eat plenty of quality foods, stay full.

Just some basic advice.

Don’t forget to check the search engine for plenty of quality information.

Good Luck,

Zeb