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Fitness watches are great for running and other continuous activities, but some can also track and even guide you through a strength workout. Today weâre looking at Garminâs strength training features: how to build workouts, how to use them, and even a peek at the new Strength Coach.
Credit: Garmin
Weâll get into how to create workouts in a minute, but first I just want to let you know that there are some strength workouts already available for download, if youâd like to just select one and start doing it right now. Go to either your Garmin Connect app or to Garmin Connect on the web, tap Training & Planning, then Workouts, then Find a Workout.
Youâll be able to choose workouts from a library, and you can search by type (including weights, yoga, and bodyweight cardio). Most of the workouts are short, simple, and donât use much equipment. If youâre experienced at strength training, youâll probably want to create your own workouts or use the coach feature, but these will get you started in the meantime.
Credit: Garmin
As for that coach feature, it works much like the adaptive running coach plans. You can read more here from Garmin, but basically you set it up by selecting Garmin Coach and telling it your goals and schedule. Workouts will then appear for you each day. The image above shows a Push/Pull/Legs workout programmed by Garmin Coach. It let me choose which workout happens on which day, had me set my max lifts as benchmarks (this program uses percentages), and even let me edit the workouts to swap exercises before finally putting them on my calendar.
Credit: Beth Skwarecki/Garmin
Iâm going to walk you through this step-by-step, because I was so confused the first time I tried to build a workout. Again, you can do this either on your phone or on the web. I usually end up creating my workouts on the phone, and itâs not hard once you get the hang of it.
Go to the âMoreâ menu on your phone (or the sidebar on web) and select Training & Planning, then Workouts, and then Create a Workout. From here, select Strength, and youâll be given a skeleton of a workout with a warmup, cooldown, and one slot for an exercise.
To start adding exercises, tap Add Round, which will give you a workout card and a recovery card, both in a little box that says â2 Roundsâ at the top. Hereâs what you do to turn this into a traditional sets-and-reps format. In this example, we want to do four sets of five deadlifts at 200 pounds:
Now you have a repeat that will give you four sets of five deadlifts, with a three-minute rest timer in between. After you finish that, there will be a rest period that lasts until you press the lap button. This is to give you as much time as you need to find your equipment and set up for the next exercise.
Continue adding repeats and steps as desired, and make sure to save the workout when youâre done.
After creating a workout, it doesnât automatically show up on your watch. You need to tap the âsend to watchâ icon that youâll see on the top right of your screen when youâre looking at the workout.
You can also schedule a workout (which will automatically send it to your watch for the scheduled day) by using the three dots menu to add it to your calendar.
There are a few ways to access the strength workouts, but hereâs the easiest: When itâs gym time, hit the button that starts an activity, and rather than selecting Strength, scroll down until you find Workouts. Tap the one you want to do.
Pay attention here: Youâll need to select the workout, tell it you want to do the workout, and start the workout. (Just keep pressing the select button until the workout actually begins.)
The exact details of which buttons do what will vary from watch to watch, but on a Forerunner, your top right button starts and stops the workout, and your bottom right button is a lap button. (During a timed rest, you can press the lap button to skip to the end of that rest and start the next set.) From the top right button, you can also skip a group of sets (say, if the squat rack was busy, you can skip squats) and then use the same menu later to View Skipped and add it back in.
Garmin Forerunner 165 Music, Running Smartwatch, Colorful AMOLED Display, Training Metrics and Recovery Insights, Music on Your Wrist, Black
$249.99 at Amazon
$299.99 Save $50.00
Get Deal
Get Deal
$249.99 at Amazon
$299.99 Save $50.00
I love using the strength workout feature for one main reasonâthe timed rests. Itâs easy to sit around scrolling on your phone between sets, and realize too late that itâs been ten minutes since you did your last deadlift. But when I program the workout as above, all I have to do is hit the lap button after my set. Three minutes later, my watch will buzz to let me know itâs time to do the next set.
Pro tip: Set your rest timer for the longest time you might want to rest between sets. If youâre aiming for three to five minutes, set it for five minutes. If youâre ready to go after three, just hit the lap button to skip the remainder of that rest.
You can also program exercises in other ways besides the traditional sets and reps. For example, set the Target Type to Time to do a five-minute density set. Or do EMOMs (every-minute-on-the-minute intervals) by putting just one card inside a repeat, and setting that card to a one minute target time. Youâll get a beep at the top of each minute.
I donât worry too much about the weights or reps in the app, to be honest. By default, the watch will ask you after each set how many reps you did and how heavy the weight was. Iâve turned that feature off, and I donât even bother to set rep or weight targets in the app. I use the workouts for timing, not to log the details of my workout. (I have a notebook for that.)
I also havenât found the automatic set detection or rep counting to be very useful. The watch is impressively good sometimesâhow did it know I was doing pullups?!âbut itâs just not good enough to be generally useful. It also doesnât recognize a lot of the Olympic weightlifting exercises I do. And the rep counting? Sometimes OK, but more often useless. Again, Iâd rather jot down my reps in that notebook than fiddle with selecting a number on my watch screen after each set.
Full story here:
Fitness watches are great for running and other continuous activities, but some can also track and even guide you through a strength workout. Today weâre looking at Garminâs strength training features: how to build workouts, how to use them, and even a peek at the new Strength Coach.
How to find strength workouts in Garmin Connect
Credit: Garmin
Weâll get into how to create workouts in a minute, but first I just want to let you know that there are some strength workouts already available for download, if youâd like to just select one and start doing it right now. Go to either your Garmin Connect app or to Garmin Connect on the web, tap Training & Planning, then Workouts, then Find a Workout.
Youâll be able to choose workouts from a library, and you can search by type (including weights, yoga, and bodyweight cardio). Most of the workouts are short, simple, and donât use much equipment. If youâre experienced at strength training, youâll probably want to create your own workouts or use the coach feature, but these will get you started in the meantime.
Credit: Garmin
As for that coach feature, it works much like the adaptive running coach plans. You can read more here from Garmin, but basically you set it up by selecting Garmin Coach and telling it your goals and schedule. Workouts will then appear for you each day. The image above shows a Push/Pull/Legs workout programmed by Garmin Coach. It let me choose which workout happens on which day, had me set my max lifts as benchmarks (this program uses percentages), and even let me edit the workouts to swap exercises before finally putting them on my calendar.
How to create strength workouts in Garmin Connect
Credit: Beth Skwarecki/Garmin
Iâm going to walk you through this step-by-step, because I was so confused the first time I tried to build a workout. Again, you can do this either on your phone or on the web. I usually end up creating my workouts on the phone, and itâs not hard once you get the hang of it.
Go to the âMoreâ menu on your phone (or the sidebar on web) and select Training & Planning, then Workouts, and then Create a Workout. From here, select Strength, and youâll be given a skeleton of a workout with a warmup, cooldown, and one slot for an exercise.
To start adding exercises, tap Add Round, which will give you a workout card and a recovery card, both in a little box that says â2 Roundsâ at the top. Hereâs what you do to turn this into a traditional sets-and-reps format. In this example, we want to do four sets of five deadlifts at 200 pounds:
Tap the card that says workout.
Select an exercise (deadlift), a weight (200 pounds), and a target type. In this case, the target type will be Reps (five). Hit the arrow on the top left of the screen to return to the main workout editing page.
For the recovery card, youâll want to change that to Rest rather than Recovery. For that one, the target type should be Time. Letâs set it to three minutes. Return to the main workout screen again.
Now, tap the dropdown at the top of the round and set it to the number of sets you want to do (four). If your watch supports it, you can select Skip Last Recovery to avoid the final rest period.
Before you add another set, go to the bottom of the screen and tap Add Step. Change this new step to Rest (it will be outside of the repeat) and set the target to Lap Button Press.
Now you have a repeat that will give you four sets of five deadlifts, with a three-minute rest timer in between. After you finish that, there will be a rest period that lasts until you press the lap button. This is to give you as much time as you need to find your equipment and set up for the next exercise.
Continue adding repeats and steps as desired, and make sure to save the workout when youâre done.
How to send Garmin workouts to your watch
After creating a workout, it doesnât automatically show up on your watch. You need to tap the âsend to watchâ icon that youâll see on the top right of your screen when youâre looking at the workout.
You can also schedule a workout (which will automatically send it to your watch for the scheduled day) by using the three dots menu to add it to your calendar.
How to use a Garmin strength workout from your watch
There are a few ways to access the strength workouts, but hereâs the easiest: When itâs gym time, hit the button that starts an activity, and rather than selecting Strength, scroll down until you find Workouts. Tap the one you want to do.
Pay attention here: Youâll need to select the workout, tell it you want to do the workout, and start the workout. (Just keep pressing the select button until the workout actually begins.)
The exact details of which buttons do what will vary from watch to watch, but on a Forerunner, your top right button starts and stops the workout, and your bottom right button is a lap button. (During a timed rest, you can press the lap button to skip to the end of that rest and start the next set.) From the top right button, you can also skip a group of sets (say, if the squat rack was busy, you can skip squats) and then use the same menu later to View Skipped and add it back in.
Garmin Forerunner 165 Music, Running Smartwatch, Colorful AMOLED Display, Training Metrics and Recovery Insights, Music on Your Wrist, Black
$249.99 at Amazon
$299.99 Save $50.00
Get Deal
Get Deal
$249.99 at Amazon
$299.99 Save $50.00
Why I like the strength training feature
I love using the strength workout feature for one main reasonâthe timed rests. Itâs easy to sit around scrolling on your phone between sets, and realize too late that itâs been ten minutes since you did your last deadlift. But when I program the workout as above, all I have to do is hit the lap button after my set. Three minutes later, my watch will buzz to let me know itâs time to do the next set.
Pro tip: Set your rest timer for the longest time you might want to rest between sets. If youâre aiming for three to five minutes, set it for five minutes. If youâre ready to go after three, just hit the lap button to skip the remainder of that rest.
You can also program exercises in other ways besides the traditional sets and reps. For example, set the Target Type to Time to do a five-minute density set. Or do EMOMs (every-minute-on-the-minute intervals) by putting just one card inside a repeat, and setting that card to a one minute target time. Youâll get a beep at the top of each minute.
The Garmin strength features I donât use
I donât worry too much about the weights or reps in the app, to be honest. By default, the watch will ask you after each set how many reps you did and how heavy the weight was. Iâve turned that feature off, and I donât even bother to set rep or weight targets in the app. I use the workouts for timing, not to log the details of my workout. (I have a notebook for that.)
I also havenât found the automatic set detection or rep counting to be very useful. The watch is impressively good sometimesâhow did it know I was doing pullups?!âbut itâs just not good enough to be generally useful. It also doesnât recognize a lot of the Olympic weightlifting exercises I do. And the rep counting? Sometimes OK, but more often useless. Again, Iâd rather jot down my reps in that notebook than fiddle with selecting a number on my watch screen after each set.
Full story here: