DIY 24″ Plyometric Box

(This box jump photo is a little weird with four legs in the frame!!) At any rate, this post for a DIY 24″ Plyo Box has been in my queue and it’s about time I post it.

Girl Walks Into A Bar(bell)

I have to be honest: I don’t love box jumps. I don’t. I get frustrated when I fail to get in a jumping rhythm by my third consecutive jump. But, I do love how it gets my heart rate up faster than a cheetah on crack. Plus, the movement transfers well to my sports and it gives the equivalent of a Brazilian bedonkadonk lift.

I can’t take full credit for this DIY. It was inspired by a variety of plans floating around the interweb, like this one HERE. This plan is nothing new, I’ve just merely tried to put it in an easily understandable format. There are two versions of the plyo, the rectangular type that can be turned on different sides for different heights, or the “tapered” kind I have here. The rectangular kinds are a bit more bulky, heavier, and less structurally sound (so I hear) but they are easier to build. The type featured here requires beveling for a structurally sound plyo box and it’s easier to handle (although it cannot be used at varying heights.) Special thanks to this guy for all the help and advice.

(Here is the usual disclaimer. DIY at your own risk. I am not responsible for any injuries (or death?) acquired by following the content of this post.) Now, let’s DO THIS!!

(Download the printable PDF of materials and equipment here.) Materials and equipment needed:

Girl Walks Into A Bar(bell)

 

I recommend using a table saw for this project. I don’t have the garage space for a table saw (or the liberal budget) but I was able to rent one from a community tool library. You can search Tool Libraries in your state here. Boulder, CO has an awesome one that we frequent.

Girl Walks Into A Bar(bell)

DIRECTIONS:

  1. Set your saw blade at a 10 degree angle and cut your sheet of plywood along the horizontal midline (refer to diagram below.)
  2. Now bevel cut, at the same 10 degree angle, the remaining long edges (corresponding to the tops and bottoms of each piece.) NOTE: Bevel cut each edge at the same angle and same perspective. If you mess this part up, you’re screwed. :)

Girl Walks Into A Bar(bell)

Girl Walks Into A Bar(bell)

Girl Walks Into A Bar(bell)

3.  Reset your blade back to 90 degrees (straight up and down) and make the cuts for the sides of each piece. You should now have 4 sides of your box with ONLY the top and bottom edges beveled.

Girl Walks Into A Bar(bell)

4. Use a jigsaw to drill holes for handles, if desired.

Girl Walks Into A Bar(bell)

Girl Walks Into A Bar(bell)

5. Now that we have all four sides of our plyo box, assemble it.  Make sure you are on a level surface and using some clamps, ensure that the sides fit snugly together.  (If they don’t, now is the time to sand off any parts that are keeping it from fitting tightly.) Place a bead of wood glue along the two edges that are to be joined and glue the sides together.

6. Predrill your holes with the 3/8” wood drill bit. You’ll want to predrill so that the plywood does not split when you screw the sides together.

7. Using the wood screws, screw into the predrilled holes until tight (don’t overtighten or the wood may split.)

8. Continue for all sides of the remaining pieces.

Girl Walks Into A Bar(bell)

9. Now we can cut out the top. I saved this part for last to ensure that I get an exact size for the top and that the box is stable enough. Flip the partially completed box upside down on the remaining sheet of plywood.  Trace out the size and shape of the top.

10. Set the blade angle back to 10 degrees and cut out the top. Make sure your saw blade is cutting “into” the wood while you follow your drawn lines so that the edges of the top slant inward.

11. Assemble the top by placing a bead of wood glue around the edge where it will contact the sides and glue the top to the box.

12. Using the 3/8″ drill bit, pre-drill at least 3 holes on each side and screw the top in place with wood screws.

Girl Walks Into A Bar(bell)

13. Sand it down with a sander! Pay special attention to all the edges and the handles unless you like splinters.

14. You can now varnish or paint your plyo box and even place a rubber mat on the top.

Done! Jump around! Jump around! Jump up, jump up, and get down.

-jess

Behind The Scenes of “Get Up. Get Fit. Get Out.”

It is finished! It took a hot minute but the fitness video collaboration @deckerra and I did for the Progenex lifestyle video competition is a wrap. The concept of the clip was to portray how working out closes the gap between “I would” and “I will.” It’s, as Ryan put it,

“The documentation of a day in the life of athletes who believe it’s not only about what you do under the bar and in the gym, but what it enables you to do when you step out the door.”

As it turns out, capturing a  series of “money shots” on film is hard work. It’s been well worth the effort, though. Maybe I’m biased but I think it’s slicker than residual snot on a nose hair after a sneeze. Check out WHY we work out!

So much planning and thought went into picking locations, working with weather, and manipulating lighting that I figured, “Why just stop at making a video?! Let’s give a behind-the-scenes glimpse (with special permission from Mr. Ryan Filmmaker) into the making of Get Up. Get Fit. Get Out.

#1
This is what you see in the opening timelapse scene:

But what you don’t see is:

- The “Decker” script is our real handwriting! It was signed on my Wacom tablet and then later animated with the help of YouTube tutorials. The info is out there, you just have to know what you want and go out and get it.

- The cloud timelapse required waking up at still-dark-go-back-to-sleep-o’thirty in the morning. It was made out of 180 total pictures. Since we didn’t have an intervalometer, and we weren’t enticed to drop $136 for it, we calculated that we would need to MANUALLY take 1 picture every 5 seconds for 15 minutes for a mere 5 second clip. My elementary math teachers would be proud. Did I mention we deemed the first timelapse “meh…not dramatic enough” so we had to rinse and repeat the whole process! It’s just so hard to settle for anything less than “BAM.” If you don’t get BAM! the first time, “kick it up a notch.” ;)

#2
In the movie clip, you see this:

Could you tell that my shirt is purposely inside out?! Apparently, all those words were kind of distracting on film. Which brings me to a photog tip: Neutral colors and clothes with smaller prints/designs work best since they are more versatile (color wise) and not as distracting (but if that is the intent, the this product of the 80′s recommends neon.)

 

#3
In the movie clip you see these garage gym scenes:

But what may not have been so obvious is that we lacked fancy video lighting. So, for ALL the shots filmed in the garage, Ryan got creative with placing Home Depot halogen shop lights around whatever he was filming. Hip hip for working with what you have! You know what they say, “It’s not what you can do when the tank is full, it’s what you can do when the tank is empty.” Well our video-making budget may have been empty but, in the words of Kanye, “Who gon stop me? Who gon stop me, huh?”

#4
We were luckier than a rabbit in a cage full of hound dogs to be able to capture the sun-flare goggle shots. The sun was quickly setting behind the mountains at the time. In fact, getting a lot of the shots was a matter of racing and chasing the sun. We were bonafide light chasers.

Which brings me to another tip when making movies or taking pictures: YOU MUST MUST MUST PAY ATTENTION TO WHERE YOUR LIGHT IS. Play around with sun flare (my favorite!), backlighting, and directional lighting. And, psssst! The best time to get your shots is within an hour after sunrise and an hour before sunset when the lighting is the most delicious, hence why photographers call it “The Golden Hour.”

 

#5
This is what you see in the video but if you look closer, you’ll notice my fingers are red. It was colder than a polar bear’s bum but wearing gloves was distracting and it decreased my dexterity, which looked sloppy on film. So, off with the gloves and on with the frostbite. Yet another tip? WHEN PHOTOGRAPHING PEOPLE, PAY SPECIAL ATTENTION TO THEIR EYES AND THEIR HANDS. Hands have the potential to portray a lot of emotion. You ever see a Valley Girl dining al fresco with her BFF in California? You can practically see what she’s saying just by watching those pretty manicured hands.

 

#6
The idea for this shot was derived in the quiet minutes between fully asleep and fully awake. I woke up and thought, “Headlights!” And so this shot was filmed in freezing temperatures, at night, in front of the car’s headlights because… I had a dream! I mean, we had to change things up from the halogen shop lights, anyway, so…

 

#7
In the movie, you see the overhead lunge scene:

Well those shots were filmed on a pedestrian bridge over a highway. Filming these shots took longer than a check out in a Walmart Express Lane because we had to wait for pedestrians to walk out of the frame. It was exceptionally windy that day and so half the time I attempted (rather futilely) to get shelter from the wind by hiding behind a 45lb bumper plate. Rubber – it’s not THAT warm.

 

#8
The trail running shots were filmed at my favorite place to trail run in Boulder. There is a network of trails that start behind the National Center for Atmospheric Research and curve for miles on ridges, to canyons & gulleys, and past meadows.

The segment was filmed up on a ridge so it was extra windy. In between “Cut! Retake! Aaaand… action!” I could be found trying desperately to warm up under my snowboarding jacket. This is the fake smile I give when I feel like I’m f-f-f-f-freezing.

 

#9: The tyrolean scene! It was filmed in Boulder Canyon:

You ever trying hanging from cinched harness on a taught rope over a snow-covered river with a full bladder? Don’t. It’s actually not that comfortable. For this scene I forgot my helmet in the car (shame, shame) so I borrowed Ryan’s, which was two sizes too big ’cause his head has to be big enough to accommodate his super smart brain. So, when we reviewed the clips on scene (always review your clips on scene!) it was discovered that the oversized helmet was CROOKED the whole time (a climbing pet peeve of mine.) That’s when we opted to refilm the whole segment – while hanging in the harness, in the cold, with a full bladder – in less than 5 minutes because the sunlight was quickly diminishing. Dedication and attention to detail? Yes. Yes, I think so.

Crooked helmets makes me feel like my helmet is not secured well to my head. RE-TAKE!

#10
Not sure how I managed to remember to wear a mitt on my right hand and not on my left hand for this scene. And the whole time I was convinced I had a circulatory problem when only one had started getting wet and cold.

#11
The “asleep before your head hits the pillow” scene starring Ryan was achieved in only 5 takes. Apparently, 5 takes of falling backwards on a pillow is all it takes to end up with a brain-sloshing headache. I always loved falling backwards on my bed as a kid and never got a headache. Maybe that explains why my brain is way smaller than Ryan’s. :)   I hope Ryan thinks the mild concussion was worth the shot.

And so there it is! “Get Up. Get Fit. Get Out.” If our submission doesn’t win the contest, it’s still cool ’cause what we both learned about making films is invaluable. This was Ryan’s second edit so win or not, it’s only going get better from here. If nothing else, we at least had fun getting outside and doing all the outdoor things that is the motivation between converting a garage into a gym and waking up at 6:00am in the dead of winter to deadlift!

What’s the motivation behind YOUR workouts? Drop a link to any of your fitness videos – I’d love to see what’s got you fired up.

DIY Slosh Pipe

Greetings from Keystone, CO! I would be out snowboarding but, honestly, riding down ice is so played out (personal opinion here) and sitting in one of their village cafes while blogging sounds more fun. Speaking of fun, what’s the most fun you can have while working out your core and getting the neighbors to think you’ve lost your DIY marbles? It starts with “slosh” and ends with “pipe.” (Mom, if you’re reading… a “slosh pipe” has nothing to do with smoking pot.)

"Fun" is Zercher carrying a slosh pipe

At rescue practice, they tell us (as 6 of us carry a 200 lb litter down a mountain,) “If you’re not working hard, you’re not working hard enough.” So as difficult as a slosh pipe is to carry, I question whether I’m working out hard enough because half my grunts are actually girly glee giggles.

A slosh pipe is a 3-4″ diameter and 8-10′ long PVC pipe filled with water. Any deviation from completely centered sends a little bit of water, then a lotta bit of water, then the whole dang pipe full of water sloshing (get it?) to one side. Good luck keeping those obliques contracted. Even more luck to you trying to get back to centered only to have all the water slosh to the other side. Things get complicated when you start to walk with the slosh pipe because it’s practically impossible NOT to deviate from centered. Anyone able to do otherwise could probably land a high paying job with the circus.

Things start to get really complicated when you try to step forward and down into a lunge. They say you can use a slosh pipe for the same exercises you use a barbell for. But, for the record, I have not attempted to bench press a pipe full o’ sloshing water over my face nor have I attempted anything overhead. I’m just not there yet. (Full disclosure… I dig it.)

I mean, seriously, I haven’t had THIS much fun since Zumba!!! And you can make a slosh pipe for cheaper than dinner and a movie. Giggles and fun with 5 ingredients for less than $30… I’m making this slosh pipe deal sound like a cheap date. But, really, who doesn’t like a cheap date?

Here’s how:
(Here is my DIY Slosh Pipe printable PDF)

WANT SOME TIPS?
1.  If you have petite hands, go for a 3″ diameter PVC pipe. ;)

2. You could build this using hard plastic end caps for both ends. However, the rubber end cap with adjustable steel clamp will allow you to easily pop that end off and adjust the water levels whenever you want.

3. If you live in cold temperatures, add some salt to the water so it doesn’t freeze in your pipe.

4. Don’t sniff the PVC cement.


WANT TO READ MORE ABOUT SLOSH PIPES?
T-Nation’s “Sloshing Pillar of Pain” by Dan John – HERE.
Mark Sisson’s “Build Your Own Slosh Tube” – HERE
Common Sense Warrior’s “Build Your Own Slosh Pipe” by Mike Norris – HERE


HOW ABOUT SOME DISCLAIMERS:
DIY at your own risk. I am not responsible for injury that you may incur as a result of following these building plans nor am I responsible for any injury, or death for that matter, that may result from using a slosh pipe.

Special thanks to Ryan for helping me navigate Home Depot and for taking the time to help photograph.