Clean & Minimal AI Powered Fitness Routines
Download AppIntermediate Alpine Skiing Prep
Warm-up + ski-specific strength, balance, and core for the slopes.
Intermediate Alpine Skiing Prep
Warm-up + ski-specific strength, balance, and core for the slopes.
Warm-Up
5 minutes. Raise core temperature and mobilize hips/ankles for carving and absorption.
Circuit A
Controlled reps; focus on knee tracking and hip stability.
Circuit B
Isometric quad endurance and trunk stability (think: strong torso over skis).
Core and Posterior Chain Finish
4 minutes. Reinforce bracing and hip extension for better control and fatigue resistance.
Why Every Drill Mirrors a Ski Turn
Lateral lunges load the hip abductors and adductors through the exact frontal-plane range demanded in edge-to-edge transitions, while wall sits build the sustained quad isometric endurance that keeps you in the fall line without burning out. Single-leg balance directly trains the proprioceptive ankle-to-hip chain that prevents wash-outs on variable terrain.
What Alpine Skiing Actually Costs Your Body
Skiing taxes the quads isometrically for run durations of 1–3 minutes at near-maximal knee flexion angles, while the core constantly resists rotational forces as the lower body carves independently. Hip circles and ankle mobility work target the two joints most restricted by ski boots — stiffness there transfers compensatory load straight to your knees.
Building Slope-Ready Legs in 25 Minutes
This routine follows a specificity-first structure: mobility primes the joints, strength work overloads skiing's key positions, and the dead bug plus glute bridge finish reinforces lumbo-pelvic stability under fatigue — exactly when form breaks down on late-run terrain. To personalize, increase wall sit hold duration by 5 seconds each session as your quad endurance baseline rises.