Everyone leads differently, and you are encouraged to bring your own style and workout/exercises to the PAX.
The below is intended to help formulate your thoughts and provide some general framework should you need/want the structure. There are really only five principles to making sure this is an F3 workout.
The workouts have to:
Many of these may seem self-explanatory but can get lost in the moment.
Think of the workout as small sections of time.
Disclaimer
At the start of your workout, you need to give the disclaimer. (In some regions this is only done when FNGs are there.) Specifically, this is a free, volunteer, peer-led workout. You are not a professional. You also have no knowledge of any injuries or fitness considerations. It is each person’s responsibility to be safe and modify exercises if you need to. We all do it, most important thing is that you don’t get hurt. For reference, here’s the full doc.
Warmup/CoP
It’s best to start with a CoP, jog, or preferably both to warm up the group. Think of muscles like taffy… when cold, snapping happens easier. When warm, nice and smooth.
Your Workout
Put together your plan. Check out the exercise database for inspiration. Lots of great exercises and new Qs frequently find something new here to bring out.
If you’re a planner, “schedule” more exercises than there is workout time. Time will pass faster than usual, most likely.
Usually you’ll want something that’s a time-eater after a warm-up, search for “routine” in the exercise DB and remember the “pearls on a string” concept. You stop, do something, run to another place, so something else.
6 MoM
Near the conclusion, you will need to head back to the start or where you usually do CoT. Here’s where you’ll have some room to do Core exercises. This can be two minutes to six, usually.
CoT
Count-o-rama, name-o-rama, announcements, and shout-out/words of wisdom.
This is probably the trickiest part for new Qs. Calling Cadence in the F3 style serves a number of purposes:
Proper Cadence Sequence
Other Notes
Objective: Focusing on proper form accomplishes two objectives simultaneously. Proper form gives maximum exercise benefit and prevents injury. If you can’t do it, don’t Q it. Once your form suffers, halt exercise. Keep your eyes on the Pax. If you are losing more than 10 – 20 percent, halt and move on to next exercise.
Every good workout deserves virtual mumblechatter. Every region has their own site and own ways of providing history, but the standard fields often include:
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