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The loaded carry is one of the most efficient ways to get more volume, more intensity, more strength training and more conditioning into your training. It's functional by definition, and it's effective at improving cardio and muscular endurance.

There are six basic ways to do a weighted carry.  They are:

Waiters’ walks

In a waiter’s walk, you’ll hold the load at lockout overhead. 

Kettlebells are especially good for this. Lock your shoulder blade in position with your lat and keep your hips and shoulders square and your chest inflated. Brace your core, as if you’re about to be punched.  If you find overhead holds aggravate your anterior pelvic tilt, try to push your tailbone toward the floor and inflate your chest as you walk. Take normal strides and do it for distance. Two to four sets of 100 yards is two to four times too much for most people…

Consciously fire your lats and traps to lock that supporting arm in place with these.

Racked Walks

Walk with the weight in the racked position.  If it’s a barbell, rack it like an O-lift.  If it’s a kettlebell rack it like you were going to press it overhead.  You can ‘baby hold’ a sandbag, or hold it in a Zercher hold, or even rack it one armed like a kettlebell if a core of steel is required.

Keep your chest high and core braced when you do these.

Farmers’ Walks

Hold the weight at one side, at arm’s length. This is the one that allows you to carry the most weight and as such it is in many ways the most punishing and the most effective.

Some gyms have specific farmer's walk bars. If not, you can use anything that doesn't drag on the ground. Using only one weight is sometimes called a suitcase carry. Be careful of your feet doing farmer's walks.

Sumo Walks

Hold a weight in front of you, hanging down at arms’ length.  This is a good one for kettlebells and sandbags, though a weight disc works fine too.  Don’t bend your arms when it gets too much; brace, stand and walk, letting your back do the work.

Fireman’s Carries

You can’t really do these with a dumbbell.  But you can do them with a training partner who’s about your weight, or a heavy bag, or a sandbag, or a gym bag full of laundry. The requirement to brace against the load on one shoulder immobilizes the chest and makes the abdomen and diaphragm work harder to breathe. Add in a few fireman's lifts and a few squats and you have a session that borders on cruel and unusual punishment - but that anyone can learn pretty much immediately!

Bear Hug Carry

Once again, not too effective with a barbell, but can be done with anything you can hug. Get a nice big sandbag and learn all about 'breathing behind the armor' and bracing with this classic and challenging move.

To make this tougher, try not letting your hands meet. That will mean you'll have to use your upper back the whole time to hold the bear-hug position.

Try for sets of fifty to a hundred yards with each of these. You don’t need many sets. If you can do more than four the weight is too light. 

Consider adding in some extra tricks. Mix and match between the methods outlined above.  For instance, try doing a farmer's walk with one hand and a waiter's walk with the other.  The pattern of strain across your upper back will be horrible, but the next time you bench, overhead press or carry the shopping you'll remember it with gratitude!  

Alternatively, you could mix in a time factor.Loaded carries against the clock are a pretty extreme form of torture, but they're also a good way to cram in a lot of work into little time, building fearsome mental toughness at the same time.  My personal favorite is to crossbreed the weighted carry with that other no-nonsense conditioning tool of champions: the hill sprint.  

Uphill weighted carries against the clock?  At least they'll make everything else seem easier!

When you're doing your carries, try to keep your whole body tight, erect and braced. Brace your core and glutes, keep your chest high and your shoulders back and engage your lats and traps so the strain isn't being taken solely by the smaller muscles of your shoulders.  Breathe evenly, slowly and strongly, and concentrate on the next step. 

Loaded carries are a test of mental toughness; they are extremely hard and there’s nothing to take your mind off how difficult and unpleasant they are.  Pick one, stick at it for six weeks and see how you get on; they never fail to produce improvements in both strength and endurance. 

And how long would four sets of 100 yards take?  Including a 2-3 minute rest between each set, between fifteen and twenty minutes.  Not a lot of time to give up to get such a great result!

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