Spring in Sydney is something special. The mornings get lighter, the temperature creeps up from freezing (by Sydney standards) to genuinely pleasant, and the parks come alive. If there was ever a perfect time to start or restart outdoor training, this is it.
Whether you trained through winter (good on you) or took a few months off (no judgement), here’s how to make spring your strongest season.
If You Trained Through Winter
You’ve done the hard yards. You showed up when it was dark, cold, and miserable. Now it’s time to cash in.
Spring is when you push. Your base fitness is solid from winter consistency, and the improving conditions mean you can train harder and recover better. This is the time to:
- Increase your training frequency by one session per week
- Add intensity: heavier weights, faster intervals, more challenging variations
- Set a specific goal for the next 12 weeks (a race, a strength target, a body composition goal)
- Take advantage of longer evenings for bonus outdoor activity
You’ve earned this. Make the most of it.
If You Took Winter Off
Welcome back. First, don’t beat yourself up about the break. It happened. Now we move forward.
The biggest mistake people make when restarting is trying to pick up where they left off. If you were doing four sessions a week in autumn, you can’t jump back to four sessions at the same intensity. Your body has detraining after a few months off. It’s temporary, but it’s real.
Here’s a sensible restart plan:
- Week 1-2: Two sessions per week, moderate intensity. Focus on movement quality.
- Week 3-4: Three sessions per week, start increasing intensity.
- Week 5+: Full training schedule, challenge yourself.
Spring Training Tips
Hydrate more. As temperatures rise, you sweat more. It’s easy to forget this when it’s only 18 degrees, but you’re losing fluid. Drink water before, during, and after training.
Sun protection. Spring sun in Sydney can be strong, especially from September onwards. Sunscreen, hat, and sunnies for outdoor sessions. Skin cancer is no joke.
Update your gear. If you’ve been training in thermals and long sleeves, transition to lighter gear. Breathable fabrics make a big difference in comfort as it warms up.
Use the Outdoors to Your Advantage
Rushcutters Bay Park is at its best in spring. The grass is green, the harbour is sparkling, and the morning light is genuinely beautiful. That environment isn’t just nice to look at. It enhances your training.
Outdoor training in natural settings reduces perceived exertion, meaning the same workout feels easier outside than it does in a gym. You train harder without realising it. The scenery does some of the motivational heavy lifting for you.
Plus, the varied terrain, grass, hills, stairs, gives you a better workout than any flat gym floor. Every session is naturally more diverse and challenging.
Set a Spring Goal
September to November is 12 weeks. That’s enough time to achieve something meaningful. Pick a goal:
- Train consistently three times per week for 12 weeks straight
- Run City2Surf or a park run without stopping
- Hit a specific strength benchmark (10 proper push-ups, bodyweight squat for reps, first unassisted chin-up)
- Improve a health marker: resting heart rate, blood pressure, waist measurement
Write it down. Tell someone. Put a deadline on it. Goals with deadlines get done. Wishes without deadlines don’t.
Start This Week
Spring doesn’t wait, and neither should you. The best time to start was yesterday. The second best time is now. Come join us at Rushcutters Bay and make this your strongest season yet.