Goruck Sand Kettlebells

Given that fitness is more and more of a priority for most people nowadays, finding the sort of apparatus to help you achieve these goals is often an objective for us here at The Coolector and the guys at Goruck are always fine proponents of such wares. Their latest release, their excellent Sand Kettlebells, are a fine example of this fact in action and if you’re looking for a versatile fitness tool this summer, look no further.

The Goruck Sand Kettlebells vary in weight from 6KG up to 24KG and in price from $39 to $59 so you don’t have to break the bank in order to keep fit this summer. Goruck has taken all of their learned lessons and are proud to introduce their fantastically functional Sand Kettlebell. With overbuilt construction and a multi-step closure system, the kettlebells are purpose built to withstand constant abuse from workouts all year round.



FITNESS FIRST

Boasting an endurance focused design and heavy duty padded handles is a great design feature of these Sand Kettlebells from Goruck as it allows the weight to swing and shift in your hand with ease. It is versatile for your at home training, you can fold it up (empty, needless to say) for training on the go, or use it for added weight in your Rucksack when doing an outdoors workout this summer or fall – or even winter, you madman.

The Goruck Sand Kettlebells (from $39) has a Scars Lifetime Guarantee, which is commonly known as the best guarantee on the market and the heavy duty padded handle, which is proudly NOT rubberised with reinforced neoprene padding sewn into each of them make these about as robust and workout ready as they come. They have a reinforced Ballistic bottom which ensures extra abrasion resistance at primary impact points and a double Velcro top Closure with additional zipper panel for seamless top.

The versatility of Sand Kettlebells from Goruck is pretty much endless. You can use them for training, pack them unfilled when traveling, and add them to rucksack to up your rucking weight. Ever banged up your wrist and arms from an iron kettlebell? Or lost balance trying to learn the turkish getup? Sand is more forgiving, definitely better for beginners. Also infinitely scalable. No broken noses, no bloody toes (where you or your kids kick it on accident).

Leo Davie
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