RKC – Russian Kettlebell Challenge Weekend at San Jose

March 2nd, 2010
by Brandon

RKC - Weekend - Pavel

San Jose RKC Weekend –

After a grueling weekend of learning, re-learning, applying, and re-applying techniques to put all of the RKC candidates onto the road of proficient, safe, and highly effective kettlebell training I almost didn’t want to look at a kettlebell.  Ever.  Again.

Pavel is a commanding dude.  Sticks to what he knows and gets it to hit home with just about anyone he trains.  I have to say, thinking back to the weekend after a week and a half, I’m ready to pick up the kettlebell again.  This is also happens to have coincided with my hands healing up.  Yep.  Ripped four callouses in the first 5 minutes of the weekend.

Format:

The format of the weekend started with a test.  One that I had mistakenly considered to be one of the hardest things I would have to do for the entire weekend (or ever).  Not true, there was much more than just a test and watching technique demos.  We were expected to learn.  Throughout the entire course of the weekend the candidates were being evaluated.  Start on one side of the kettlebell curve of proficiency (in my case, poor) to the other side (moderately better).

Here’s the snatch technique I only slightly improved on just before the RKC snatch test:

Friday:

  • Snatch test: 5 minutes of 100 kettlebell snatches (for me it was a 24kg bell)
  • Swings and Get-ups

Saturday:

  • Cleans and Presses
  • Snatches

Sunday:

  • Technique Review and Testing
  • Grad Workout

There was SO MUCH information that this outline is just a gloss-over.   Nothing was as simple as I thought it was going to be.  My swing took a lot of refinement and over the course of the weekend I imagine it looks better than when it started.

The biggest take-away for me was the coupling of performance excellence and safety.  There’s no reason why safety should be thrown out when you’re pushing yourself hard to achieve your goals.  Safety and performance do not have to be mutually exclusive.

The other big component for me was learning to detect and correct basic movement patterns in people through simple, effective techniques.  Learning to squat correctly is hard for a lot of people, if you can cue them successfully, you can prep them to be safe and enable them to push past performance barriers.  It’s a good feeling.

Team Whitley

Team Whitley

The best thing about the whole experience was the people part.   There were approximately 6 teams of 10 to 12 people led by RKC Team leaders.  My team was lead by David Whitley of irontamer.com. Dry, cutting humor, to the point. There is no glossy with this dude. Either you have it… or you don’t, and here’s what you need to get there.  If you have an opportunity to train with this guy, TAKE IT!

RKC was a great weekend and if you are contemplating training anyone in kettlebells, stop here first: Dragon Door Kettlebells

Thanks to Jordan Vezina RKC II for the help on getting me to the door – I would have preferred to spend more time on my technique (my hands wouldn’t have been as destroyed from the snatch test!!)

POWER TO THE PEOPLE!

Posted in AdventureFit, General Training, kettlebells, Strength | Comments (1)

One Response to “RKC – Russian Kettlebell Challenge Weekend at San Jose”

  1. Bob Says:

    Congrats on your accomplishment. The path to RKC is not easy but rewarding.

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