Here an active Judoka (over 3 hrs/week, aside training some soon-to-be-blackbelts). Many martial arts require some lifting of bodies, making it quite a strength-excercise, at least when starting out. Once technique is really developed, it becomes less hard as you don't lift people, you tip them over. But typically people get there after a decade or so when training for their black belt exam.Dutch wrote: ↑November 3rd, 2024, 1:39 pmI recently did a martial arts class over a 4mnth period for 1hr a week and it turned into a fortnight after 2mnths then on the 3rd month I could not be bothered as cycle and rowing training was suffering, recovery was hard. But in my 20s I was heavily into kickboxing and did 3 lessons a week but had to give up weights as I was too tired, and this was the early 90s and I was unemployed and had no worries virtually. So based on this, I know recovery for me is important and not a lot has changed into my 50s, little and often for training but I am lucky enough to get away with the bare minimum and still turn in times and weights I want. I also know I am not the most powerful or the best at long distance as others, but will still hold my own.
For me, the social aspect of Judo is extremely important and it is actually the thing that keeps me going. But falling a lot during training can be extremely hard on your body. Getting used to that takes some time, and again technique plays a big role: knowing how to fall well is extremely usefull to keep going.
Combining it with rowing is indeed challenging. On Saturdays I do an hour of strength training, two hours of Judo, have a long break and then close the day with rowing a HM. I don't do that much on my saturday evenings, although after doing this for over a year, it does get easier.
Having said that, I train polarized, as combining my (daily) rowing with Judo and cycling really requires me to manage the peak sessions and make sure I get some recovery throughout the week. Overdoing it on a single session really can mess up a week of training or more...