Hey everyone on the NTAI Fitness forums! As a 32-year-old office worker from Ghent juggling a desk job and two kids, I never thought I'd dive into something as intense as Hyrox. But with the Belgian scene exploding – especially after that epic event in Antwerp last spring – I signed up for the 2025 Hyrox qualifier in Brussels. If you're like me, scrolling Trends and seeing "hyrox" spike 400% in Flanders, you're probably wondering: Is this HIIT-meets-endurance beast worth the sweat? Spoiler: Absolutely, but it kicked my butt in the best way.
Hyrox is that perfect storm of functional fitness: 8km run split into 1km segments, bookended by stations like ski erg, sled pushes, wall balls, and farmer's carries. It's not CrossFit flashy, but it's accessible – no crazy skills needed, just grit. In Belgium, the community's tight-knit; think post-workout frites and a Stella to celebrate, not some sterile gym vibe. I started training in July, mixing runs along the Scheldt with NTAI-recommended bodyweight circuits. Key tip: Don't skip mobility – those burpee broad jumps wrecked my hips at first.
My 12-week plan? Week 1-4: Build base with 3x/week runs (5-8km total) and strength sessions (deadlifts, squats at 70% max). Week 5-8: Hyrox-specific – simulate stations with household hacks like backpack sleds. Week 9-12: Taper with mock races, fueled by local protein shakes (shoutout to those Belgian whey from Decathlon).
Nutrition-wise, I upped carbs pre-run (pasta nights, anyone?) and added electrolytes – autumn chill here makes dehydration sneaky.
Challenges? The mental game. That 100m lunges station? Pure fire. But joining a Leuven Facebook group turned it social – we swapped tips over virtual coffees. Results: Dropped 4kg, gained endurance (my 5k time shaved 2 mins), and that post-race endorphin high? Better than any Belgian waffle binge.
Fellow Belgians: Who's tackling Hyrox this winter? New to it in Zwevegem or Wallonia? Share your station struggles, fave local tracks, or if it's overhyped. Trainers, what's your go-to progression?
Let's build this thread into a Flemish Hyrox hub!
Hyrox is that perfect storm of functional fitness: 8km run split into 1km segments, bookended by stations like ski erg, sled pushes, wall balls, and farmer's carries. It's not CrossFit flashy, but it's accessible – no crazy skills needed, just grit. In Belgium, the community's tight-knit; think post-workout frites and a Stella to celebrate, not some sterile gym vibe. I started training in July, mixing runs along the Scheldt with NTAI-recommended bodyweight circuits. Key tip: Don't skip mobility – those burpee broad jumps wrecked my hips at first.
My 12-week plan? Week 1-4: Build base with 3x/week runs (5-8km total) and strength sessions (deadlifts, squats at 70% max). Week 5-8: Hyrox-specific – simulate stations with household hacks like backpack sleds. Week 9-12: Taper with mock races, fueled by local protein shakes (shoutout to those Belgian whey from Decathlon).
Nutrition-wise, I upped carbs pre-run (pasta nights, anyone?) and added electrolytes – autumn chill here makes dehydration sneaky.
Challenges? The mental game. That 100m lunges station? Pure fire. But joining a Leuven Facebook group turned it social – we swapped tips over virtual coffees. Results: Dropped 4kg, gained endurance (my 5k time shaved 2 mins), and that post-race endorphin high? Better than any Belgian waffle binge.
Fellow Belgians: Who's tackling Hyrox this winter? New to it in Zwevegem or Wallonia? Share your station struggles, fave local tracks, or if it's overhyped. Trainers, what's your go-to progression?
Let's build this thread into a Flemish Hyrox hub!
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