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Connect arrow Train arrow Training Ideas arrow Demon's Drills arrow Parkour Conditioning Gauntlet
Parkour Conditioning Gauntlet Print E-mail
Wednesday, 11 April 2007

A modern use of the word gauntlet is to describe a long and trying course involving a series of difficult tasks that are both mentally and physically taxing. Sounds a little bit like parkour, right? One of the greatest things about parkour is the unique perspective of which a traceur views the environment. By using this same concept, any traceur can develop a circuit of exercises that utilize every day obstacles and apparatuses found in our natural and man made environments.
The Need for More Conditioning in Parkour

Most traceurs do not condition their bodies properly to withstand the great impacts and forces in parkour. While Gauntlets are not a solution on its own to solving this problem, they are a good supplemental training method that can be done anywhere and any time. I have found Gauntlet training to be highly beneficial and enriching to my own personal parkour training. Not only is it empowering to design your own course to condition your body using walls, rails, trees, and more, but the exercises performed in Gauntlets improve parkour skills and fitness levels. In my own Gauntlets, I have increased strength, endurance, creativity, technique, flexibility, problem solving, and more. Because of these reasons, I believe that every serious traceur should design and engage in a 2-4 hour Parkour Conditioning Gauntlet once a week.

Parkour Conditioning Gauntlet Q&A

Q: So what exactly is a Parkour Conditioning Gauntlet anyway?

A: A Parkour Conditioning Gauntlet, or Gauntlet for short is a conditioning method to improve your parkour fitness. Gauntlets are planned courses through the environment that convert walls, parking lots, rails, trees, and other obstacles into exercise apparatuses. Gauntlets involve many different challenges and exercises done in a sequential and continuous manner until the predefined course is complete. Gauntlets should be done with others so that you can push each other through the course. The typical Gauntlet is a mentally and physically grueling course that lasts around two hours. During this time, there should be no screwing around, no lagging, and no distractions in general. Gauntlets are for mental and physical training and should be done with great focus and motivation. Gauntlets should be done at least once a week to supplement other strength and conditioning training. Each week, the Gauntlet should be tweaked and the difficulty increased. This will prevent boredom and promote continual improvement.

Q: Why should I do a Gauntlet?

A: Gauntlets should be done for many reasons. You must get in good shape for parkour! This is an excellent way to do it because it is fun, unique, dynamic, creative, and challenging. It is a great way to improve your physical fitness and mental toughness. It builds a sense of teamwork when you push through the Gauntlet with others. Gauntlets are a lot like parkour, they adapt exercises and conditioning methods to the environment at hand. As a result, parkour skills such as balance, power, coordination, creativity, and problem solving will be increased.

Q: What does a Gauntlet consist of?

A: Beginning with a warm up, Gauntlets go on to utilize bodyweight exercises such as push ups, dips, sit-ups, pull-ups, muscle ups, static holds, and pistols. Gauntlets also include difficult parkour like movements such as shimmying, jumping, stemming, traversing, swinging, climbing, and quadrupedal movement. These movements are not only physically challenging, they also develop balance, strength, endurance, and coordination specific to parkour. In addition, Gauntlets may include other short challenges and transitions designed to practice aspects of parkour such as problem solving, creativity, and stealth.

Q: Where should I do my Gauntlet?

A: First of all, you want to find a location with a variety of obstacles. To fully maximize a diverse and well rounded Gauntlet, the location will also need to be large. Some of the best Gauntlet material to look for includes handicap ramps, trees, a variety of walls and ledges, and stair cases. Good places to start looking are parks, universities, schools, and parking garages. Once you have found a location, your Gauntlet is only limited by your ambition and creativity to use your surroundings.

Q: What conditioning exercises should be included in my Gauntlet?

A: Be sure to start with an easy Gauntlet so that you can increase its difficulty over time. Address the weaknesses of yourself and your group by designing your Gauntlet accordingly. Legs are generally the most neglected body part in parkour so be sure to include a lot of leg exercises! The best Gauntlets are designed to have no wasted time. Design your Gauntlet so that you are always doing something. If you are doing a Gauntlet with a group, design it so that people must do an exercise while waiting for everyone to finish. This increases the teamwork aspect as everyone has further motivation not to lag behind or let others lag behind. See the bottom of this article for ideas on exercises to include in your Gauntlet.

See the exercise lists following the Q&A to view some of the potential exercises to include in your Gauntlet. However, do not be limited by what you see on the list. Strive to be creative and adaptive to the environment you are in.

Q: What else should be included in my Gauntlet?

A: Anything you want! Be creative and make your Gauntlet unique to the environment you are in. Throw in a couple unique challenges like traversing a particularly tricky area of obstacles, climbing to the top of a lamp post, moving through an area as quietly as possible, or getting through a small but unique set up as fast as possible. The possibilities to devise challenges like these are endless and they will help develop problem solving and creativity, important skills to have in parkour. Challenges are important parts of Gauntlets because they can provide a moment of rest to relieve fatigue and lighten the mood after a particularly physically demanding section of the Gauntlet.

Q: Awesome…um, so what now?

A: Go out and design a Gauntlet at your local university, park, or somewhere else. Gather some traceurs together to go through and refine it. Once you have a good Gauntlet, set up a weekly day and time so that everyone can get together to do the Gauntlet. No excuses, just get out there and be productive!

Potential Gauntlet Exercises


For ideas on what to include in your Gauntlet, check out the Exercises section of APK Training. However, there are infinite possibilities when designing a Gauntlet, so do not limit yourself to what is listed on this website.

The Gauntlet at the University of Colorado at Boulder

Gauntlets should be thought of as works in progress. There is always room to improve your Gauntlet. Gauntlets are shaped and formed by the environment they are in and the imagination and experiences of the people who design them. Always strive to increase the difficulty of your Gauntlet over time and refresh its format to keep it interesting.

The following example is a sample Gauntlet at the University of Colorado at Boulder. This Gauntlet takes approximately two hours to complete.

Stage One

We meet at stage one of the Gauntlet and proceed to warm up with jogging, dynamic stretching, broad jump burpees, and QM. 

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Once we are warmed up, we begin stage one of the Gauntlet. We begin by getting on top of the wall and duck walking (1) to the corner where we stop to do ten dips (2). We then waist shimmy the next portion of the wall (3). Next, we do a pistol walk (4). For the last portion of the wall, we do a hang shimmy (5).

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Once we get to the end of the hang shimmy portion (6), we step down and cat balance along the wall (7). Upon reaching the end of the wall, we hop down and horizontally stem between the rail and wall (8).

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At the end of the rail, we hop down and jog over to the nearby handicap ramp. We do broad jump burpees up the incline (9) followed by basic quadrupedal movement along the top part of the ramp and down the stairs (10). Near the base of the stairs, we do twenty push ups (11) and twenty sit ups (12). We then go back to the previously used walls and do five climb ups (13) and a thirty second wall hang (14).

This completes one round of stage one. We do three rounds at stage one. 

Stage Two 

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From stage one, we jog over to a little puzzle (15). One by one, each person must start in a hang position on the wall, get through the black metal hoop, and end up hanging on the other side of the hoop. Then, you must do the same thing in reverse, ending up where you started. This must be completed without touching the ground.

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Next, we sprint 100 meters (16) to the second challenge (17) in between stages. Here, everyone must climb up and down the lamp post.

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After the lamp post climb, we make the short walk over to the start of stage two. Stage two begins with a long traverse (18). You must traverse three portions of the wall and the three pillars that separate them. If your feet touch the ground, you need to rest, or you fall off, you must start again at the point you left off at. The walls are made of stones that stick out anywhere from an inch to not at all. As the picture suggests, many rock climbers train here, leaving behind chalk covered holds.

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Once the traverse is complete, you must do basic quadrupedal movement around the corner (19) to the precision jump circuit (20). The precision jump circuit consists of seven jumps. The wall on the left to the square, the square to the other side of the square, the square to the bench, the 180 hop from bench to bench, the bench to the square, the square to the other side of the square, and finally, the square to the wall that you started on. This is one circuit. The goal is to complete five perfect circuits. A perfect circuit means no wasted steps, hops, or jumps and no falling or slipping off the targets. A perfect circuit emphasizes control, technique, speed, and precision.

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Once five perfect circuits have been completed, we make a short sprint over to an overhang in which we complete an arms only hanging shimmy from one side to the other (21).

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Next, we do walking lunges (22) for thirty meters to a large staircase. We proceed to do two rounds of backwards quadrupedal movement up the two flights of stairs (23) and two rounds of squat hops back down (24). To finish off this area, we cat balance up the side of the stair case (25).

Stage Three 

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Now that stage two has been completed, we jog about 400 meters (26) to a basketball hoop. Here, you must climb up, do either five muscle ups or twenty-five kipping pull ups, and then climb down (27). While waiting for everyone to finish, you must hold yourself in a front plank position. We then jog another 400 meters (28) to the beginning of stage three.

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Once at stage three, we begin at another staircase. We start by doing a hang shimmy and dynos up the multi level side of the wall (29). Once at the top, we climb up and over the wall and do squat hops down the stairs (30). Upon reaching the bottom, we turn around at cat balance up the stair rail to the top (31). We then do forwards quadrupedal movement down the stairs (32) immediately followed by forwards crab walk back up the stairs (33). We then walk down to the bottom of the stairs and do five pistols each leg (34) and five wall climb ups (35). This completes one round of stage three. We do three rounds total at stage three. 

Stage Four 

Stage four begins at the top of the stairs. What we are at is a large parking garage that is about 50 meters by 75 meters with walls and other obstacles encircling the parking garage. Unlike the other stages, stage four is more open ended in its movements. The challenge of stage four is to traverse the entire perimeter of the parking garage without touching the ground. We pretend that the ground is lava. In addition, you cannot touch the vegetation. We pretend that the vegetation is like an electric fence. In addition to simply traversing the car park with these two simple guidelines, we also focus on being as silent as possible.

With these three simple “rules”, we set off around the obstacle rich parking garage. We are forced to use quadrupedal movement underneath tree branches, wall climbs, precision jumps, hanging shimmies, cat leaps, and more. The goal is to complete the entire stage with silence, stealth, speed, and efficiency. There are several tricky parts to the course and chances are, you will not complete it your first time without being “burned by lava” or “shocked by electricity”. This is a great challenge that utilizes many parkour like movements in an imaginary life or death situation. Essentially, it is parkour in its true form, the intent to overcome obstacles in a life or death situation. Obviously, the only difference is our life or death situation is imaginary.

Here is a sample of the obstacles undertaken in stage four. Use your imagination to figure out how you would complete the stage.

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Success! 

Once you have finished your journey around the parking garage, your muscles will be burning, you will be short of breath, and your hands will be torn up. But it is worth it because you have just accomplished a long and difficult course. If you did it with a group and everyone made it, you should be proud of everyone because you pushed each other along the way and improved your fitness and discipline. If you did it alone, you should also be proud, knowing that you alone are capable of pushing yourself through something very challenging. By finishing a Gauntlet, you are becoming more physically adept and developing the strong mental discipline required to be successful in parkour. Congratulations, you have completed a Parkour Conditioning Gauntlet and are on your way toward many more successful parkour and fitness achievements!

 Video Demonstration



Users' Comments  RSS feed comment
 

Display 32 of 32 comments

1. 04-11-2007 17:08

Let me be the first to say that the wait was well worth the finished product... not only the concept of the drill itself but the time and effort that was obviously put into sharing this with the rest of us... thank you
itsme

2. 04-11-2007 19:00

I have been doing this to some extent when I'm out jogging (I find jogging so b-o-r-i-n-g) - using trees to do pull-ups, rails and gutters for balance work (bi- and quadruped), pretty much using what's availible along the route, but this concept really goes takes it to the next level and beyond. 
Thanks for putting this together, and sharing it with all of us! We've been looking for ways to improve our condition, and this looks like a perfect framework in which to do so. I can't wait to share this with some of the Adelaide locals! 
Cheers!
felonius_maximus

3. 04-12-2007 08:08

Excellent article Demon. This is exactly what I do between spots with my parkour group here at VT. Instead of waddling or walking to the other spots, I have them QM or sprint. If we reach an archway, I force them to do pullups to enter. If we reach some sort of wall.... we must cat leap and shimmy across.  
 
I've been trying to plan an actual Gauntlet but the spots here are too spread out.  
 
Man I can't wait to goto CO and run through yours !!! 
leonn

4. 04-12-2007 10:04

That is awesome!!! Well done!!! Don't ever say that your drills aren't great work. This deffinately got the gears turning and my blood pumping!!! Thanks!
Saint 7

5. 04-12-2007 10:14

Too far apart leon? 
 
A little running between stages is ok. Sure there is enough potential to make a stage in some of your spots around campus. You just gotta be creative.
demon

6. 04-12-2007 15:17

Nice work! Thanks for writing that up, we're still working on ours at UW, funny we had the same ideas :)
Undaunted

7. 04-22-2007 11:21

cool.... now lets see a video!! lol jk, i plan to make something gruling... problem is my area is clear cut, and extremly rural... so bout the only real chalanging thing is to run from clinton to saline.....
valigon

8. 04-23-2007 07:08

Nice job Demon, Tell me when you guys plan on doing this, I'll bring some friends of mine from arvada. Jollyjonathan2@gmail.com
jollyjonathan2

9. 04-25-2007 20:56

that looks awesome, thanks for taking the time to compose such a huge article
hak

10. 04-28-2007 07:23

very cool :)
blerta

11. 05-11-2007 19:43

This is DEFINATLY bookmarked on my favorites. Nicely done... two words... 
 
DON'T 
STOP 
 
Keep it up dude. YOU RULE!
Quickplaya

12. 05-26-2007 10:47

Quote
Essentially, it is parkour in its true form, the intent to overcome obstacles in a life or death situation. Obviously, the only difference is our life or death situation is imaginary. 
 
 
I used to establish such rules and conditions (no ground, esp.) when I was just a child, and navigate around as best I could to improve and test my ability to retain mobility even if I had to avoid certain areas in real situations. 
 
That I could anticipate such situations, even as a child, either reflects well on parkour as something we naturally do, or poorly on the quality of my own childhood :)
like_a_child

13. 06-06-2007 11:40

Yeah, actually it would be really nice to see a video of several people together completing this entire gauntlet. To keep the video short, you could cut out the repetitions, but I think that would be good for instruction and would better convey the complete idea. I haven't seen a complete parkour gauntlet training video yet, so if you do it, maybe it would be the first of it's kind. Who knows.
Muhammad

14. 06-06-2007 11:45

Do any of you remember a movie that came out in the 1990's called Slacker? This just reminded me of it.. in the movie there was a clip of some kids doing something like this on a route they must have frequently run. I guess you could say it was documentation of them doing parkour in it's natural form..
Muhammad

15. 10-08-2007 21:05

Great work, article was very informative. I live 45 minutes from the Boulder Campus and will have to see how you put it together. Great Job.
BattleMongral

16. 02-10-2008 16:57

how do you run all over that stuff without being yelled at?

17. 04-05-2008 10:58

hey i found a video of somone doing this gauntlet exercise if anyone wants to see and get a general idea 
http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=XDYXeKy-JKg&NR=1

18. 05-04-2008 14:10

Awesome blog! Must have taken a while :)  
 
By the way, 3 wasn't used in the description but it is labeled in the picture. 
 
Quote
Once we are warmed up, we begin stage one of the Gauntlet. We begin by getting on top of the wall and duck walking (1) to the corner where we stop to do 10 dips (2). We then waist shimmy the next portion of the wall (4). Next, we do a pistol walk (5). For the last portion of the wall, we do a hang shimmy (6).

19. 05-22-2008 10:16

Just read it and it is absolutly sick! I have been inspired.

20. 06-05-2008 13:50

very nice!i made my own gauntlet, bassicly the same, and it game me a nice workout.thanks for creating this idea! :grin

21. 12-13-2008 12:24

nice i liked the stairs

22. 12-20-2008 00:05

I was just here yesterday and I would like to say a few things about this place. 
 
1. Don't do the traverse if the temperature feels cold to you even if you are an experienced rock climber. You will pay. 
 
2. How do you get through those black rings without touching the ground?

23. 01-19-2009 16:52

Well, i as well remember doing this alot as a child on playgrounds and such(staying off the ground).I have used it some in parkour but more have a small routine run, 1st i jog to the park, 2nd i do a rail section where i use every rail and two walls,3rd i jog to a small pavilion where i have the tables arranged for a total of 8 vaults never repeating one,4th i jog around the lake twice(est. 1/2 mile around),5th i do wall runs for about 10 min by the play ground, then i traverse the playground without touching the bottom, then,to end it i shimmy around the wall of the hockey rink(bout 6' walls)

24. 01-19-2009 16:53

oh, and then jog home( about a mile)

25. 01-20-2009 15:07

hmmm... looks very very effective. im gonna tell my fellow tracuers to help me make a gauntlet. thx so much demon!! u da man!! :zzz

26. 01-31-2009 04:41

I'm not sure if you know this... But Your freaking amazing. 
I'm extremely curious to know how long you've been training, and if you only follow your posted regime's.... well I'm about to as well.

27. 01-31-2009 23:03

thanks for large amount of effort you're putting into this for us. 
i've been designing a gauntlet type exercise/training regiment at the local elementary school (playground, building structure) and i'm gonna implement it once most of the winter ice clears.

28. 02-11-2009 19:10

I have just started parkour, but i am already really good for how long i have been parkouring, i take classes at the Boulder Cross-Fit. Its awesome, and i haven't yet parkoured at CU but i hope to soon, so i can go through the Gauntlet.

29. 03-03-2009 19:56

COOL :eek :eek :eek :eek :eek

30. 08-16-2009 20:39

Alright guys I must say that the video blew my mind :upset :upset and I have a quick question for anyone. I live in a kind of suburban area. I just turned 16 and getting my car soon. Any ideas on where I could do some of this stuff...? Like apartment complexes and malls and stuff..?

31. 08-18-2009 10:26

Wow thank you for giving me this idea. I made a small gauntlet around my house and barn and the first thing I do is a turn vault over our deck railing. When I started this morning I would hit my feet. With in an hour or two I can clear it and do a decent turn vault!

32. 10-19-2009 07:26

I've found that playing tag, as silly as that may sound, is a great way to practice parkour as well. You tend to go faster and there is less hesitation between obstacles, and its fun! lol

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