Couple’s Fitness Plan: 8-Week Outdoor Training Program to Get Fit Together in LA

By François | Co-Founder, Focus Camp | May 2026

A progressive 8-week outdoor training program designed for couples in Los Angeles — beach sessions, park circuits, trail hikes, and yoga. Free. No gym required.

What’s In This Guide

  1. Why This Plan Exists
  2. The Science Behind Training Together
  3. Before You Start: What You Actually Need
  4. Phase 1: Weeks 1–2 (Foundation)
  5. Phase 2: Weeks 3–4 (Build)
  6. Phase 3: Weeks 5–6 (Push)
  7. Phase 4: Weeks 7–8 (Peak)
  8. Nutrition: What to Eat and When
  9. Recovery: The Part Everyone Skips
  10. What Happens After Week 8
  11. FAQ

Why This Plan Exists

Okay so here’s the thing.

I’m François. I run Focus Camp in LA with my partner Tina. We’ve been doing this for years — outdoor training, beaches, parks, trails, the whole thing. And the number one reason couples come to us is some version of “we tried working out together and it didn’t work.”

Every time I ask what happened, the story is almost identical. They went to a gym. One person felt lost. The other got impatient. Or they tried running together but one was way faster and it turned into this weird competitive thing instead of something fun. Or they just didn’t know what to do, so they did random exercises for a few days, got sore, and stopped.

I got tired of hearing this story. So I wrote the plan they needed.

What you’re reading right now is 8 weeks of training, laid out session by session. Every exercise. Every set. Every rep. Modifications for when one of you is stronger than the other (and one of you always is — that’s normal). Specific LA locations for every workout. What to eat before and after. How to handle the days when you’d rather do literally anything else. And what to do when the program ends.

This isn’t a “do some lunges and call it a day” article. I wrote this because I’ve watched hundreds of couples go through this exact process, and I know what works, what doesn’t, and what makes people quit in week two.

Let’s get into it.

The Science Behind Training Together

I’m not going to pretend I read every fitness study ever published. But a few things are well-established enough that they matter here.

Kansas State University ran a study a while back — couples who exercised together reported noticeably higher relationship satisfaction than couples who didn’t. Not a small difference. The researchers found that the shared physical challenge created a kind of bond that regular date nights couldn’t touch. Something about pushing through hard stuff together — both sweating, both struggling, both finishing — triggers a chemical response in your brain. Endorphins (the “feel good” chemicals) mixed with oxytocin (the “bonding” chemical). You get closer through sweat. That’s not a metaphor. It’s literally what happens.

But here’s the flip side, and this is important: couples who train together without a plan tend to argue more during workouts than couples who train alone. The reason makes sense when you think about it. Without structure, every session becomes a negotiation. “What do you want to do?” “I don’t know, what do you want to do?” “How many reps should we do?” “I don’t know, how many did you do?” That frustration builds until someone says forget it and now you’re bickering on the beach instead of training.

The plan eliminates the negotiation. You show up. You look at the day’s workout. You follow it. Done. No arguments. No confusion. The plan decides, you both execute.

Other thing most couples get wrong: they try to do identical exercises at identical intensity. If one partner has been training for years and the other is starting fresh, doing the same workout is a recipe for frustration. The experienced person gets bored. The beginner feels embarrassed. Both get annoyed.

That’s why every exercise in this program has two columns. You’re doing the same movement, at the same time, in the same spot. But you’re each working at your own level. You finish together. Both challenged. Nobody left behind, nobody held back.

Before You Start: What You Actually Need

Thirty minutes. That’s it. Sit down together before Week 1 and handle the stuff below. I know thirty minutes sounds like nothing, but this small investment prevents the most common reasons couples quit.

The Goal Conversation

Each of you answers one question: “After 8 weeks, what do I want to feel like?”

Don’t say “lose weight.” Don’t say “get toned.” Those are outcomes you can’t fully control, and when they don’t happen fast enough, you get discouraged and quit.

Instead, try things like:

  • “I want to have energy after work instead of face-planting on the couch”
  • “I want to feel good taking my shirt off at Venice Beach”
  • “I want to hike Runyon without stopping three times”
  • “I want to sleep through the night”
  • “I want us to be doing something healthy together for once”

Write these down. Stick them on your fridge. When Week 4 rolls around and you’re sore and tired and Netflix is calling your name, those written goals are what get you out the door.

Want a deeper framework? Our guide on how to set realistic fitness goals you can actually stick to in 2026 walks through this in detail.

The Fitness Assessment

Nobody’s grading you. But you need to know where you each stand so you can pick the right column in the workout tables.

Each of you — do these five things and write down the results:

AssessmentWhat to DoWhat to Record
Bodyweight SquatSquat with good form until your legs burnTotal reps completed
Push-Ups (knees or full)Push until your form breaks downTotal reps completed
Plank HoldHold with good form — hips level, core tightTime in seconds
1-Mile Brisk WalkWalk like you’re late for somethingTime in minutes
Standing Toe TouchReach toward your toes with straight legsWhere you reach (shins / ankles / past toes)

Keep this somewhere safe. You’ll retest at Week 4 and Week 8. The improvement will surprise you — I’ve seen couples double their plank time and add 15+ push-ups in 8 weeks.

Picking Your Training Days

Three days per week. That’s the sweet spot based on what we see with our clients at Focus Camp — enough stimulus to create real change, enough recovery to prevent burnout and injury.

I suggest Monday, Wednesday, Saturday. Here’s my reasoning:

Monday sets the tone. You’re coming off the weekend, you’ve probably eaten some stuff you shouldn’t have, and training on Monday creates momentum that carries through the whole week. I’ve noticed our Monday sessions at Focus Camp are always the most packed — people know they need that reset.

Wednesday breaks up the workweek. Without a midweek session, there’s a five-day gap between Monday and Saturday. That’s too long. Your body starts losing the adaptation, and mentally you drift. Wednesday keeps the fire going.

Saturday is your long session. More time, less stress, lower stakes. You can make it social — train, then grab brunch somewhere on the Strand. We’ve had couples tell us Saturday sessions became the highlight of their week.

That said, pick whatever three days you’ll actually do. The best schedule is the one you follow. Put these sessions in both your phone calendars. Set reminders. Treat them like you’d treat a flight you can’t miss.

What to Bring

I’ve seen people show up to beach workouts in jeans. True story. I’ve also seen someone try sand sprints in flip-flops and someone else forget water when it was 92 degrees. Don’t be those people.

ItemWhyTip
Athletic shoes (trail shoes for hike days)Foot support, ankle stability, gripOld running shoes are fine for beach — sand destroys them anyway
Water — minimum 1 liter eachDehydration wrecks performance and moodFreeze a bottle the night before. It melts during your workout and stays cold.
Sunscreen SPF 30+LA sun hits different near the water — UV bounces off sand and oceanApply 20 min before starting. Reapply after 90 min.
Small towelWipe sweat, sit on during stretches, double as a propA hand towel works. You don’t need a beach towel.
Phone (timer + music)Rest periods, rep tracking, playlistZiplock bag at the beach. Sand kills charging ports.
Light snackBanana, energy bar, something smallEat 30–60 min before, not during
Hat or sunglassesSun protection, especially on trailsBaseball cap works great for hikes

Full details in our what to wear and bring guide.

When to Train (LA-Specific)

Los Angeles is mostly perfect for outdoor training. Mostly. Here’s what you need to know by season:

Summer (June–September): Before 9 AM or after 5 PM. No exceptions. Midday beach sessions in July will destroy you — sand reflects heat and amplifies it. Morning beach sessions are incredible though. Golden light, cool air, almost nobody around. That’s when I train personally.

Winter (December–February): Mornings near the water are cold — like actually cold, not LA cold. Wear layers you can peel off. Afternoon sessions (2–4 PM) usually hit the sweet spot: warm enough to be comfortable, cool enough to push hard.

Spring/Fall (March–May, October–November): Peak LA. Train any time. Early morning still wins for fewer people and better parking, but honestly you can’t go wrong.

Rain: It happens maybe 15 days a year. Skip the beach when it’s wet — slippery sand is an ankle injury waiting to happen. Move to a covered park area, a parking garage for stair work, or do a home bodyweight session. Our LA outdoor workouts without the gym have plenty of options.

Full seasonal breakdown: best times for outdoor fitness in LA 2026.

Phase 1: Weeks 1–2 — Build the Foundation

What this phase is about: Learning to move together. Building the habit. Figuring out each other’s rhythm. Establishing the movement patterns that everything else in this program depends on.

Rest between sets: 60–90 seconds. Use this time. Talk to each other. Hydrate. Encourage. This isn’t dead time — it’s the part where you actually connect.

Effort level: About a 6 out of 10. You should finish every session feeling like you could do more. That’s on purpose. Don’t try to be a hero in Week 1. The program gets harder. Trust it.

Week 1 — Session A: Beach

Location: Santa Monica Beach, south of the pier near Lifeguard Tower 26. Or Venice Beach, the flat area south of the boardwalk near the skate park. Both spots have flat sand, restrooms nearby, and boardwalk smoothie joints for after.

Warm-Up — 5 Minutes

Walk along the waterline for 3 minutes. Not a casual stroll — walk like you’re late for something. Arms swinging. Brisk pace. Talking to each other. This gets blood flowing and your joints lubricated.

Then standing still:

  • 10 arm circles forward, 10 backward. Big circles. Feel your shoulder blades move.
  • 10 leg swings per leg. Hold your partner’s shoulder for balance — this is your first real partner moment.
  • 5 slow bodyweight squats together. Count out loud. “One… two… three…” Counting together synchronizes you.

Main Workout — 25 Minutes

ExercisePartner A (Beginner)Partner B (Advanced)Sets × RepsRestMuscles Worked
Sand Walking LungesNear waterline, firmer sand, hands on hips, shorter strideSoft sand away from water, hands behind head, full stride3 × 10 per leg60 secQuads, glutes, hamstrings, stabilizers
Partner Sit-UpsFeet held by partner, hands across chest, come up halfwayFeet held, arms extended overhead, full sit-up3 × 1260 secAbs, hip flexors, obliques
Sand Bear CrawlKnees on ground if needed, 8 meters, slowFull crawl (knees hovering), 12 meters, steady3 rounds60 secShoulders, core, quads, coordination
Plank Hold (face each other)Knees down, 20 secondsFull plank on toes, 25 seconds3 rounds45 secCore, shoulders, glutes
Sand Walk/SprintWalk fast 15 meters, walk backJog/sprint 25 meters, jog back4 rounds60 secLegs, cardiovascular system

Partner Finisher: Wheelbarrow Walks

One person gets on their hands. The other grabs their ankles from behind. The person on hands walks forward while the other walks behind holding the ankles. 10 meters, then switch. 2 rounds each. You will laugh during this. That’s not a side effect — it’s the goal.

Safety Note

If there’s more than a 50-pound weight difference between you, do this on flat grass instead of sand, or substitute with a partner plank hold (both hold plank side by side, alternating taps on each other’s shoulder).

Cool-Down — 5 Minutes

Walk along the water for 2 minutes. Let your heart rate come down. Then find a flat spot and stretch:

  • Partner hamstring stretch: Sit facing each other, legs extended. Hold each other’s wrists. One person gently leans back while the other leans forward. Hold 20 seconds, switch.
  • Partner chest stretch: Stand back-to-back. Reach your arms back and hold hands. Gently pull forward to open your chest. 15 seconds.
  • Synchronized breathing: Stand facing each other. Inhale together for 4 counts. Hold for 4. Exhale for 6. Do 5 rounds.

Week 1 — Session B: Park

Location: Griffith Park, near the softball fields on Crystal Springs Drive — flat grass, shade trees, restrooms. Or Pan Pacific Park, the open grass near the playground if you’re closer to Mid-City or WeHo.

Warm-Up — 5 Minutes

Walk briskly around the park’s edge for 3 minutes. Then:

  • 10 hip circles per leg (stand on one leg, draw big circles with the other knee)
  • 10 arm swings (reach across your chest, then open wide)
  • 5 inchworms (stand tall, fold forward, walk hands out to a plank, walk hands back, stand up)

Main Workout — 25 Minutes

ExercisePartner A (Beginner)Partner B (Advanced)Sets × RepsRestMuscles Worked
Park Bench Step-UpsLow step/curb (6–8 in), bodyweightStandard bench (18 in), bodyweight3 × 10 per leg60 secQuads, glutes, balance
Incline/Standard Push-UpsHands on bench, knees bent if neededStandard on grass, full range3 × 1060 secChest, shoulders, triceps, core
Walking Lunges on GrassBodyweight, shorter stride, hold partner’s shoulderFull stride, arms overhead3 × 10 per leg60 secQuads, glutes, hamstrings, core
Partner Squat Face-OffHold wrists, comfortable depthThighs parallel, 2-sec pause at bottom3 × 1260 secQuads, glutes, core, upper back
Bench Tricep DipsFeet flat, knees bent, 6–8 inch rangeLegs straight, upper arms parallel to ground3 × 1060 secTriceps, shoulders, chest

Partner Challenge: Wall Sit Contest

Find a tree trunk or a wall. Both of you sit against it — back flat, thighs parallel to ground, knees at 90 degrees. Hold it. Time yourselves. The first person to drop calls out the time. The other keeps going. Write down both times. You’ll try to beat these in Week 4.

Cool-Down — 5 Minutes

Walk slowly. Standing quad stretch (hold partner’s shoulder, pull heel to glute, 20 sec per leg). Chest stretch using a tree (15 sec per side). 10 deep breaths together.

Week 1 — Session C: Trail

Location: Runyon Canyon (enter at Fuller Avenue — main entrance, street parking on Fuller or Curson). Or Temescal Canyon (park at Temescal Gateway Park on Sunset Blvd — $12 parking, worth it). Runyon gives you the Hollywood Sign view. Temescal has a waterfall and more shade.

Warm-Up — 5 Minutes

  • 10 bodyweight squats
  • 10 calf raises (find a curb or rock edge, rise up on toes, lower slowly)
  • 10 leg swings per leg (hold each other’s shoulder)

Main Workout — 30 Minutes

The Hike Up — 15 Minutes

Start uphill at a pace where you can still talk to each other. This is the rule: if you can’t hold a conversation, you’re going too fast. Slow down.

Partner B carries a small backpack with 2–3 extra water bottles (about 3–5 pounds). This balances the effort — Partner A works hard at their pace, Partner B works hard because of the extra load. You both end up at the same effort level.

At the Viewpoint — 5 Minutes

Stop at the first major overlook. Don’t sit down. Do this circuit together:

  • 10 bodyweight squats (count together)
  • 10 push-ups (Partner A on a flat rock or knees if needed)
  • 20-second plank (face each other if the ground allows)

Rest 1 minute. Look at the view. Breathe. Then do the circuit one more time.

The Hike Down — 8 Minutes

Moderate pace. This is active recovery — your heart rate drops gradually, and the eccentric muscle work of walking downhill builds strength in your quads and around your knees. Watch your footing. Downhill is where most trail injuries happen.

At the Bottom — 2 Minutes

Partner hamstring stretch, standing quad stretch, 5 synchronized deep breaths.

Week 2

Same three sessions as Week 1 with one change:add 2 reps to every exercise.If Week 1 was 3×10 lunges, Week 2 is 3×12. This is progressive overload — your body adapts to stress, so you slightly increase the stress. On trail day, increase uphill time from 15 to 17 minutes. Add one extra round to the viewpoint circuit.

Phase 2: Weeks 3–4 — Build the Engine

What changes: Intensity goes up. New movement patterns. Cardiovascular endurance becomes a bigger focus. You start challenging each other more directly.

Rest between sets: 45–60 seconds. Shorter rest keeps your heart rate up.

Effort level: 7 out of 10. Breathing hard by end of each set. Sentences get shorter.

Week 3 — Session A: Beach

Warm-Up — 5 Minutes

Same waterline walk, but add 5 burpees at the end. Partner A does squat thrusts (no jump). Partner B does full burpees.

Main Workout — 30 Minutes

ExercisePartner A (Beginner)Partner B (Advanced)Sets × RepsRestMuscles Worked
Sand Lunge + Torso TwistLunge, gentle twist toward front leg, no weightLunge holding 1L water bottle, twist it toward front leg3 × 10 per leg60 secQuads, glutes, obliques, core rotation
Partner Plank High-FiveKnees-down plank, reach and tap partner’s handFull plank, reach and tap partner’s hand3 × 10 taps/side45 secCore stability, shoulders, anti-rotation
Sand Crab Walk10 meters, take your time15 meters, faster pace3 rounds60 secTriceps, glutes, hamstrings, shoulders
Sand BurpeesSquat thrust (no jump at top)Full burpee with jump3 × 860 secFull body, cardiovascular system
Partner Wheelbarrow Walk8 meters, switch roles12 meters, switch roles3 rounds each60 secShoulders, core, arms, back, grip

Partner Finisher: Sand Sprint Relay

Mark 30 meters in the sand. One partner sprints to the marker and back while the other does plank jacks. When the sprinter returns, they tag their partner and switch. 4 total rounds. On the last round, race each other. Loser buys post-workout smoothies.

Cool-Down — 8 Minutes

Walk along the water. Partner-assisted stretching: one person lies face-down, the other gently presses their calves (15 sec) then hamstrings (15 sec). No bouncing — steady pressure. Switch. 10 synchronized breaths.

Week 3 — Session B: Park

Warm-Up — 5 Minutes

Brisk walk + 10 jumping jacks + 10 arm circles + 5 squats.

Main Workout — 30 Minutes

ExercisePartner A (Beginner)Partner B (Advanced)Sets × RepsRestMuscles Worked
Bench Bulgarian Split SquatRear foot on low step (6–8 in), shallow rangeRear foot on bench, full range3 × 8 per leg60 secQuads, glutes, hip flexors, balance
Push-Up Circuit5 incline (bench) + 5 regular5 regular + 5 decline (feet on bench)3 rounds60 secChest, shoulders, triceps (all angles)
Park Bench Mountain ClimbersHands on bench, slow, 20 totalHands on ground, fast, 30 total3 rounds45 secCore, shoulders, hip flexors, cardio
Partner Pistol Squat AssistHold partner’s hands, shallow rangeDeeper range, minimal partner support3 × 6 per leg60 secQuads, glutes, balance, ankle mobility
Sprint Intervals on GrassJog 20 sec, walk 40 secSprint 30 sec, walk 30 sec5 roundsAs writtenCardiovascular system, legs, mental toughness

Wall Sit Rematch

Same tree as Week 1. Beat your Week 1 time. If your partner drops first, kneel in front of them and count: “You’ve got 10 more seconds. Keep going.”

Week 3 — Session C: Trail

Warm-Up — 5 Minutes

Dynamic stretches + 10 squats + 5 inchworms.

Main Workout — 35 Minutes

Hike Up — 15 Minutes. Faster pace than Weeks 1–2. Partner B still carries the weighted pack.

At the Viewpoint — 7 Minutes. 4 rounds: 15 squats, 10 push-ups (Partner A on knees if needed), 25-second plank. Alternate who picks the exercise first each round.

Hike Down — 8 Minutes. Moderate pace. Focus on where you step.

At the Bottom — 5 Minutes. Partner yoga flow: Stand facing each other. Reach arms overhead together (inhale). Fold forward together (exhale). Come back up. One partner places hands on the other’s back for a gentle forward-fold assist. Switch after 30 seconds. Sit back-to-back on the grass, cross-legged. Both inhale and sit tall. One partner gently leans back into the other. 30 seconds, switch. 10 synchronized breaths.

This is where yoga and fitness classes in Los Angeles philosophy meets outdoor training. The breathing activates your parasympathetic nervous system, drops cortisol, and speeds up muscle recovery.

Week 4

Same sessions as Week 3 with these progressions: Beach — add 2 reps to everything, sprint relay goes to 5 rounds. Park — push-up circuit goes to 4 rounds, sprint intervals increase to 25/35 seconds. Trail — uphill time: 18 minutes, viewpoint circuit: add 5 reps to each exercise.Retest your five assessments.Compare numbers. This is your first milestone.

Phase 3: Weeks 5–6 — Push Your Limits

What changes: Real challenges. New exercises, shorter rest, higher intensity. You’ve built the foundation — now we test it.

Rest between sets: 30–45 seconds. Your body is adapted.

Effort level: 8 out of 10. Breathing hard. Talking limited to short phrases.

Week 5 — Session A: Beach

Warm-Up — 5 Minutes

Jog along the water for 3 minutes. Then 10 burpees (each at your level) + 10 dynamic lunges.

Main Workout — 35 Minutes

ExercisePartner A (Beginner)Partner B (Advanced)Sets × RepsRestMuscles Worked
Sand Sprint IntervalsSprint 15 sec, walk 45 secSprint 30 sec, walk 30 sec5 roundsAs writtenLegs, cardiovascular, fast-twitch fibers
Partner Water Jug PassChest pass, 3m apart, 15 throwsOverhead pass, 3m apart, 15 throws3 × 1560 secChest, shoulders, triceps, core
Sand Bear Crawl Race10 meters15 meters3 rounds (race!)60 secShoulders, core, quads, coordination
Sand Lateral Shuffle8m left + 8m right, low stance12m left + 12m right, deep stance3 rounds45 secInner/outer thighs, glutes, ankles
Partner Plank Drag-ThroughKnees-down plank, drag bottle throughFull plank, faster pace3 × 8 per side45 secCore anti-rotation, shoulders

Partner Finisher: Beach Circuit

Both of you together — no switching, no resting until both rounds complete: 5 sand burpees side by side → 10 partner sit-ups → 15m partner wheelbarrow (switch at 7.5m) → 20-sec synchronized plank. Rest 90 seconds. 3 rounds.

Week 5 — Session B: Park

Warm-Up — 5 Minutes

High knees (30 sec), butt kicks (30 sec), lateral shuffles (30 sec), arm circles (30 sec), 10 jumping jacks.

Main Workout — 35 Minutes

ExercisePartner A (Beginner)Partner B (Advanced)Sets × RepsRestMuscles Worked
Park Bench Box JumpsStep up explosively, step downJump onto bench, step down (don’t jump down)4 × 860 secQuads, glutes, fast-twitch fibers, cardio
Push-Up to Partner ClapRegular push-ups, clap between setsClap push-ups, touch partner’s hands mid-air3 × 1060 secChest, triceps, shoulders, explosive power
Walking Lunge + RotationBodyweight lunge, gentle torso twistLunge holding water jug, rotate jug across front leg3 × 10 per leg60 secQuads, glutes, obliques, core stability
Bench Dip to Leg ExtensionKnees bent, extend one leg at top, hold 2 secLegs straight, lift one foot at top, hold 2 sec3 × 1060 secTriceps, shoulders, core balance
Sprint Relay on GrassJog pace, 30m out and back, 4 roundsSprint pace, 30m out and back, 4 rounds4 rounds each45 secCardiovascular system, legs, mental toughness

Partner Challenge: Partner Carry

Piggyback. Partner A carries Partner B for 15 meters. Switch. 2 rounds each. If weight difference makes this unsafe, substitute with partner wheelbarrow walk for 30 meters. Carrying another human builds grip, core, legs, and trust. You have to communicate the whole time.

Week 5 — Session C: Trail

Warm-Up — 5 Minutes

Dynamic stretches + 10 squats + 5 inchworms + 10 high knees.

Main Workout — 40 Minutes

Hike Up — 18 Minutes. Challenging pace. Add 30-second burst intervals every 3 minutes — power-hike as fast as you can during the burst, recover at normal pace until the next burst. Partner B: 5–7 pounds in the pack.

At the Viewpoint — 10 Minutes. 4 rounds: 20 squats, 15 push-ups, 35-second plank, 10 jump squats (Partner A: fast air squats). Time the whole circuit. Write it down.

Hike Down — 8 Minutes. Brisk. Watch footing.

At the Bottom — 4 Minutes. Try acro “bird” pose (one partner lies on back, feet up; other stands at feet and leans forward until supported). If too much, do partner boat pose: sit facing each other, hold wrists, lift feet, touch soles together. Hold 20 seconds.

Week 6

Same sessions as Week 5 with progressions: Beach — sprint intervals increase to 20/35 seconds, beach circuit finisher goes to 4 rounds. Park — box jumps: 4×10, sprint relay: 5 rounds each, partner carry: 25 meters. Trail — uphill: 20 min, bursts: 45 sec, viewpoint: add 5 reps to each exercise.

Phase 4: Weeks 7–8 — Bring It All Together

What changes: Peak phase. You’ve earned this. Two months of showing up. These are the hardest and most rewarding sessions.

Rest between sets: 30 seconds. You’re fit enough now.

Effort level: 9 out of 10. Everything you’ve got.

Week 7 — Session A: Beach

Warm-Up — 5 Minutes

Jog + 10 burpees + 10 dynamic lunges.

Main Workout — 35 Minutes

ExercisePartner A (Beginner)Partner B (Advanced)Sets × RepsRestMuscles Worked
Sand Sprint Pyramid10m, 20m, 30m (walk back)20m, 30m, 40m (jog back)2 full pyramids60 sec betweenLegs, cardiovascular, mental toughness
Partner Bear Crawl PullCrawl while partner holds ankles lightlyCrawl while partner pulls back with moderate resistance3 × 10 meters60 secShoulders, core, quads, grip, full body
Sand Burpee to Broad JumpModified burpee + 2 small jumpsFull burpee + 1 max broad jump3 × 860 secFull body, explosive power
Partner Plank RowKnees-down plank, drag bottle throughFull plank, heavier jug, faster pace3 × 10 per arm45 secCore, lats, biceps, anti-rotation
Wheelbarrow Race12 meters18 meters3 rounds each (race!)60 secShoulders, core, arms, legs

Partner Finisher: The LA Couple Challenge

Both of you. Together. No resting until each round is done: 10 sand burpees (side by side) → 20 partner sit-ups → 30m partner wheelbarrow (switch at 15m) → 40-sec synchronized plank. Rest 60 seconds. 3 rounds. Stand during rest — don’t sit.

Cool-Down — 10 Minutes

Walk. Full partner stretch routine — hamstrings, quads, calves, chest, shoulders. Lie on the sand side by side. Synchronized breathing: inhale 4, hold 4, exhale 6. 2 minutes.

Week 7 — Session B: Park

Warm-Up — 5 Minutes

High knees, butt kicks, arm circles, hip circles, 10 jumping jacks, 5 burpees.

Main Workout — 35 Minutes

ExercisePartner A (Beginner)Partner B (Advanced)Sets × RepsRestMuscles Worked
Bench Jump CircuitStep up explosively + 3 small jumps at topJump onto bench + tuck jump at top4 × 860 secQuads, glutes, calves, fast-twitch fibers
Push-Up Ladder1,2,3,4,5 (incline). Back down: 4,3,2,12,4,6,8,10 (decline). Back down: 8,6,4,22 full ladders15 sec between setsChest, triceps, shoulders, muscular endurance
Partner Pistol SquatHold partner’s hands, go as deep as you canFull pistol, partner helps only at bottom3 × 6 per leg60 secQuads, glutes, balance, ankle mobility
Sprint Intervals20 sec sprint, 40 sec rest30 sec sprint, 30 sec rest6 roundsAs writtenCardiovascular system, legs, mental toughness
Partner Carry RelayCarry partner 15m. Switch. 2 rounds eachCarry partner 25m. Switch. 2 rounds each2 rounds each60 secFull body functional strength, core, trust

Final Wall Sit Contest

Same tree. Final attempt. Beat your Week 2 time. Beat your Week 4 time. If one partner drops, kneel and count: “30 more seconds. 20 more. 10. 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 — done.” Record both times. Final benchmark.

Week 7 — Session C: Trail

Warm-Up — 5 Minutes

Dynamic stretches + 10 squats + 5 inchworms + 10 high knees.

Main Workout — 45 Minutes

Hike Up — 20 Minutes. Strongest pace yet. Burst intervals every 2 minutes: 45 seconds of power hiking or jogging, then recovery until the next burst.

At the Viewpoint — 12 Minutes. 4 rounds: 25 squats, 20 push-ups, 45-second plank, 15 jump squats (Partner A: fast air squats), 10 partner burpees (one does burpee while other holds plank, then switch — 10 total each). Time it. Write it down.

Hike Down — 8 Minutes.

At the Bottom — 5 Minutes. Full partner yoga: Sun salutation flow facing each other. Synchronized. Partner twists. Partner boat pose (20 seconds). Savasana — lie side by side, eyes closed, breathe together for 2 minutes.

Week 8 — The Final Week

Week 8 is Week 7 with one rule:go all-out.Every sprint is maximum. Every set is to your true limit. Rest periods exactly as written. On Session C (the final trail), time your circuit one last time. Compare to Week 6. Compare to Week 4. After the last hike, do your partner yoga one final time. Lie side by side. Eyes closed. Breathe together for 2 minutes. Then get up. Look at each other. “We did that.” Because you did. Eight weeks. Twenty-four sessions. And you did it together.

Nutrition: What to Eat and When

You can’t out-train a bad diet. I see this constantly — couples train hard for 8 weeks, eat whatever they want, and wonder why they don’t see visible changes. Nutrition is roughly 70% of your body composition results. The training creates the stimulus. The food determines the outcome.

Pre-Workout (60–90 Minutes Before)

Fuel your muscles without feeling heavy.

FoodWhy It WorksHow Much
Banana + peanut butterFast carbs from banana + sustained energy from healthy fats1 banana + 1 tbsp PB
Oatmeal + berriesComplex carbs for steady energy, fiber for digestion½ cup oats + ½ cup berries
Toast + honey + bananaQuick carbs, easy to digest2 slices + 1 tbsp honey + ½ banana
Greek yogurt + granolaProtein + carbs combo, gentle on stomach¾ cup yogurt + ¼ cup granola
Rice cakes + almond butter + bananaLight, fast-digesting, good carb-fat combo2 rice cakes + 1 tbsp AB + ½ banana

Avoid Before Training

Big meals, fried food, high-fiber stuff that causes gas (beans, broccoli), and dairy if you’re sensitive to it. Hydration: 500ml water in the 2 hours before. Sip, don’t chug.

During Training

Water. That’s it. If you’re going over 60 minutes or it’s above 85°F, add a pinch of sea salt to your bottle — replaces electrolytes without the sugar bomb of sports drinks.

Post-Workout (Within 60 Minutes)

Rebuild muscle. Replenish energy. Start recovery.

FoodWhy It WorksHow Much
Grilled chicken + rice + veggiesComplete protein + carbs + micronutrients4–6 oz chicken + 1 cup rice + 1 cup veggies
Eggs + toast + avocadoProtein + carbs + healthy fats for hormone production2–3 eggs + 2 slices toast + ½ avocado
Protein smoothieFast absorption, portable, easy1 scoop protein + 1 banana + ½ cup berries + 1 cup milk
Tuna sandwich on whole grainLean protein + complex carbs1 can tuna + 2 slices bread + lettuce/tomato
Bean + rice bowl with salsaPlant protein + complete amino acids + carbs1 cup beans + 1 cup rice + salsa

Make cooking together on training days a ritual. When fitness and nutrition become a shared routine instead of individual chores, compliance skyrockets.

Full nutrition plan: nutrition strategies for outdoor fitness in Los Angeles.

Daily Nutrition Principles

No calorie counting needed. Just follow these:

  • Protein at every meal. Palm-sized portion. Chicken, fish, eggs, beans, tofu, yogurt, protein powder.
  • Vegetables at every meal. Half your plate. Low calorie, high nutrient, high fiber.
  • Carbs around training. Eat your carb-heavy meals before and after workouts. On rest days, eat slightly less carbs, slightly more protein and vegetables.
  • Water all day. 2–3 liters. Clear or light yellow urine = hydrated. Dark yellow = drink more.
  • 80/20 rule. Eat well 80% of the time. Enjoy treats 20% of the time. Perfection isn’t sustainable.

Recovery: The Part Everyone Skips

Training breaks your body down. Recovery builds it back stronger. Skip this and you’ll both be sore, cranky, and done by Week 4.

Sleep

The single most important recovery tool. 7–8 hours. During sleep, your body releases growth hormone (repairs muscle) and consolidates motor patterns (makes exercises feel easier over time).

Help each other sleep better: Keep the bedroom cool (65–68°F). Dim lights an hour before bed. No phones in bed — the blue light kills melatonin. Go to bed at the same time. Shared sleep routines create accountability, just like shared training routines.

Active Recovery on Rest Days

Don’t sit on the couch all day. Move gently:

  • Walk together 20–30 minutes
  • 10-minute gentle yoga flow
  • Swim or aqua session — see our aqua fitness comparison for why pool sessions are elite recovery
  • Foam roll or tennis ball on tight spots

Stretching After Every Session

Not optional. The cool-down stretches are part of the workout. Stretching after training reduces soreness, maintains flexibility, improves blood flow to recovering muscles, and gives you 5 extra minutes together.

Partner-assisted stretching beats solo stretching because your partner can apply steady, controlled pressure you can’t create alone. It also builds physical trust and communication.

Full recovery guide: recovery techniques after workouts.

When to Skip (and When NOT to)

Legit reasons to skip:

  • Fever or illness below the neck
  • Sharp pain during a movement (dull soreness after is normal; sharp pain during is a stop signal)
  • Less than 4 hours of sleep
  • Severe emotional stress — sometimes a walk together is better than a hard workout

NOT legit reasons:

  • “I don’t feel like it.” (Go anyway. You’ll feel better after.)
  • “It’s cloudy.” (You won’t melt.)
  • “I’m sore.” (Light movement actually helps soreness.)
  • “Bad day at work.” (Training fixes bad days better than Netflix.)

What Happens After Week 8

Option 1: Repeat at a higher level. Both partners move to the advanced column. Add a weighted backpack. Increase distances. Cut 15 seconds from all rest periods. You’ll be surprised how much stronger you are.

Option 2: Join Focus Camp. Our outdoor sessions run 500+ times a year across LA’s beaches, parks, and trails. Professional trainers (me and Tina), progressive programming, community accountability. The Focus Camp Program gives you 20 sessions a month — functional strength, HIIT, yoga, aqua, beach work, and more.

Option 3: Go hybrid. Start with private coaching sessions to fix form issues and address specific goals. Then transition into the full program together. This is what I recommend to most couples — it’s the fastest path to long-term results. See our group vs private comparison for details.

Option 4: Train for something specific. Use your new base to prep for an event:

  • A hiking challenge (Mt. Whitney, Grand Canyon)
  • A 5K or obstacle race
  • A beach volleyball league
  • Surfing or paddleboarding
  • Rock climbing — our rock climbing at 40 guide works great for couples

Frequently Asked Questions

We’ve literally never worked out before. Can we actually do this?

Yes. Every exercise has a beginner modification. If you can walk and do a squat, you can start. Take longer rest periods — add 30 seconds to everything in the program. Don’t worry about keeping up with the advanced partner. Move together, not identically.

What if one of us is way fitter?

This is the most common concern. The two-column system handles it — same exercise, different intensity. The fitter partner adds reps, adds load (backpack, water jug), or cuts rest time. Sand and hills naturally level things. If the gap is really big, start with a few private coaching sessions to build the beginner’s baseline first.

Can we only do 2 days a week?

Do Session A (beach) and Session C (trail). Skip Session B (park). You’ll still see results — slower, but real. Consistency with 2 beats inconsistency with 3.

How much does this cost?

The program is free. LA beaches, parks, and trails are free. If you want professional coaching later, check our services page.

What about rain?

It’s LA. Maybe 15 rainy days a year. Move to a covered park area, a parking garage for stairs, or do a home bodyweight session. See outdoor workouts without the gym.

Can we bring our kids?

Park days, yes — they can play nearby. Beach days, if they’re old enough. Trail days depends on the kid and the trail. But I’d recommend getting a sitter for at least one session a week. You need focused couple time. Protect it.

Is this safe for people over 50?

Every exercise has a low-impact option. Sand is joint-friendly. Trail hiking builds bone density. High-impact moves (jumps) only appear in the advanced column and are optional. If you have specific health concerns, start with private coaching. Also: how to start exercising at 50, 60, or 70 in LA.

What if we miss a week?

Don’t double up to “make up” for it. Pick up where you left off. If you missed more than a week, repeat the last completed week. Life happens. The program handles it.

How do we stay motivated after the initial excitement wears off?

Track your numbers — sprint times, plank holds, rep counts. Seeing real improvement on paper is the best motivator. Make it social — post photos, invite other couples, or book a group session to feel the community energy. Re-read your goals from the fridge. They’re there for a reason.

What about eating on rest days vs training days?

Training days: eat more, especially carbs around your workout. Rest days: eat slightly less carbs, more vegetables and protein. Don’t starve on rest days — your body is recovering and needs fuel. Just shift the balance. Details in our nutrition guide.

Will this help us lose weight?

This program builds muscle, improves cardio, and increases daily calorie burn. With the nutrition guidelines, most couples see visible changes by Week 4–6. But don’t focus on the scale — focus on how you feel, how your clothes fit, and how much stronger you are. The scale lies. The mirror doesn’t.

Ready to Start?

You have the plan. You have each other. Pick your three days. Do the assessment. Pack your bags. Show up on Day 1.

If you want professional guidance and a community that goes way beyond 8 weeks — that’s what Focus Camp is for.Book Your First SessionSay Hi

See you on the sand. — François, Focus Camp

Real workouts. Real connections. Right here in Los Angeles.

Last updated: May 2026

Facebook
X
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Telegram
WhatsApp

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Contact Focus Camp for Healthy Life