No More Chicken Legs!

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Mar 21, 2009
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Submitted by Patrick Kraak

I have a Calf training program, which will make even the "no calves at all" people add a few inches!

Here's how it works:
(I would never recommend this Program to a beginner or intermediate!)

I usually train my calves every Tuesday and Friday. But sometimes you have a grow-stop [training plateau] which seems to last forever. That is the moment I fall back on this schedule. But it will hurt like hell! I use it only once and a while, when I really need to.

If you follow this program for 6 weeks, you will not be able to walk normal for that time. But my calves grew in 6 weeks 2 cm. (I'm sorry in Holland we count in Centimeters).

Tuesday:
First warm up your calves with only some calf-raises on the stairs or something for 2 x 20 reps with only your bodyweight.

Then you go to the standing calf-raise machine. And you put the weight on 30kg. (about one third of the weight you can do 15 reps max with). And you start training rep after rep, it will burn like hell but you keep continuing till you have done 100 reps.

At a point (in my case at about 50 reps) you will not be able to break through the pain anymore.

Then just lower your calves and stretch for about 10 seconds. And continue after that, you might do another 20 reps before you stretch again for 10 seconds. When you reach the 100, your calves will be pumped like you never trained before.

Then wait for 3 or 4 minutes (do a lot of stretching at that time, you will need it) and than do 3 sets of seated calf raise for about 20 reps each. And stretch after that once more!

Friday:
I hope the pain has decreased a bit; if not you might skip this training and do it one workout later.

This training will not be as painful as the other one!

First you do toe-presses on the leg press, your reps should be 20, 10, 8, 6 . . . With real heavy weight!

Power is the key-word here!

Then you go to the standing calf raise and go for 20 reps with normal weight first. Then you go real heavy for 6 reps. Than a bit lighter for 15 reps and then heavy again for 8 reps.

Then, as a desert you do some stretching and finish it all off with one set till failure, doing calf raises just with your bodyweight on the stairs (one leg at the time!). Stretch again and enjoy the pain!

If you do this for about 6 weeks, and then fall back to your old program, you'll have calves bigger than they ever were! Try it, it works.
 
Everyone has that one part of the body that is stubborn and won't grow. For me it has always been the calves. During my the many years of training (going on 25 now) I've tried everything for calves. I've had my thighs as large as 31" yet my calves struggled to make 16.5". I even consulted consulted the man with the largest calves I've ever seen; Vic Richards. When he was training at my gym I asked that he give me some "calf guidance". In the end he concluded that I did not have the genitics to acheive any calf size. Would my calves forever be my nemisis?
Nope... fast forward to age 41. I switched my efforts to endurance sports and started cranking out the run miles. I hired a kenitics coach to help me with my form. After some study, he suggested I change my strike. We began to change me from a heal striker to a forefoot striker. Several things happened as a result of this change. 1) I got faster 2) While running faster my effort was less i.e; I could run a 10K at a 6:45 pace at the same heartrate as my 10K heal striking at a 8:00. and lastly 3) my calves got huge.
Calves are a funny muscle. I guess what I'm saying is if one program doesn't work don't give up, there isn't a one-for-all training program.
 
Patrick, I believe the article you posted works short term due to the "shock effect". One can add an inch to their arms, quads, chest/back measurements via doing the same thing. Shocking is a good thing fosho..just so one keeps an eye on overtraining and doesnt go overboard with it. IMO, keeping the base of ones core workout as heavy in the medium rep range and mixing in some high reps is a good attack.

Jaymaan, kudos for achieving that after many years of trial and error. I will add though that genetics usually DO play a heavy role when it comes to calves, and have seen many do literally everything under the sun with no luck. With calves, the primary factor of genetics is the obvious one...the attachment. If a guy has high calves, his chances of having great calves one day is much less vs the guy with a lower attachment. Thats why you can count on 1 hand the number of black guys you have seen with great calves.
 
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