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Banded Hip Extension

Build powerful glutes and hamstrings with proper hip-hinge mechanics that translate directly to step-ups and climbing on the trail. Perfect for reducing knee stress and improving hiking efficiency. Key benefits: Trail-ready movement patterns • Knee-friendly step-ups • Glute activation • Core stability Great as pre-hike activation or strength-building exercise during recovery.

5 min
Beginner
Strength

Banded Hip Extension (Banded Good Mornings)

Equipment Needed

  • Resistance band (available from Rogue Fitness or similar brands)
  • Various resistance levels available - choose what feels appropriate for your current strength

Why this equipment matters: Resistance bands are versatile tools perfect for home use. Beyond this exercise, they're excellent for mobility work, and can even assist with developing push-ups and pull-ups as you progress in your movement journey.

Setup & Starting Position

  1. Begin with proper posture:
  • Feet positioned underneath your hips
  • Glutes engaged
  • Kneecaps relaxed (not locked)
  • Shoulders externally rotated
  • Shoulder blades relaxed and drawn down toward your back pockets
  • Apply the "two-hand rule" for core positio
  • neck in a neutral, slightly ramped position
  1. Band placement:
  • Place the band around your shoulders first (this ensures you start in the correct position)
  • Pull the band down and position it securely under your feet

Movement Pattern

The key principle: Move your glutes first, then fold over.

  1. Initiate the movement:
  • Push your glutes/hip back first
  • Only after moving your glutes back should you begin to fold forward at the hips
  1. The descent:
  • Hinge at the hips while maintaining a neutral spine
  • Keep your core tight and solid throughout
  • Avoid excessive lumbar spine flexion or extension
  1. The return:
  • Drive through your glutes
  • Engage your hamstrings to pull yourself back up
  • Maintain that solid core throughout the entire movement

Why This Exercise Matters for Hikers & Backpackers

Direct trail application: This movement pattern translates directly to step-ups and climbing motions you'll encounter on the trail. When you master this hip-hinge pattern and learn to load your glutes and hamstrings properly, you're developing the same muscle activation patterns that will:

  • Minimize knee stress during step-ups on rocks, logs, and steep terrain
  • Improve hiking efficiency by using your powerful posterior chain muscles
  • Enhance stability on uneven surfaces

Movement quality focus: The band provides both resistance and proprioceptive feedback, helping you feel the correct movement pattern. This awareness of how to initiate movement from your glutes first is crucial for safe, efficient hiking mechanics.

Programming Suggestions

Use as activation

This exercise works excellently as part of your pre-workout or pre-hike activation routine

Focus on quality

Start with lighter resistance and perfect the movement pattern before progressing

Listen to your body

As with all movements, work within your current capacity and progress gradually

Key Takeaways

Movement initiation matters

Leading with your glutes sets up proper loading patterns

Core stability is essential

Maintain a solid, neutral spine throughout

Trail-specific benefits

This directly improves your step-up mechanics and reduces knee stress on the trail

Progressive approach

Master the pattern first, then add resistance or repetitions as appropriate for your recovery journey

Remember: This isn't just an exercise - it's movement education that directly supports your goal of returning to confident, capable hiking and backpacking.

Related Practices

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Shared focus area

Glute Bridges

Master the foundation of posterior chain strength. Progress from basic bridges to single-leg and weighted variations. Essential for uphill power and knee protection on the trail. Key benefits: Glute activation • Hip stability • Uphill power • Knee protection Multiple progressions from beginner to advanced - build the strength that carries you up mountains.

Shared focus area

Single Leg Romanian Deadlift

Unilateral hip hinge movement that builds posterior chain strength and balance. Emphasizes core bracing, hip-back initiation, and maintaining square hips throughout the range of motion. Critical for single-leg stability on uneven hiking terrain.

Shared focus area

Single Leg Squat

Build unilateral leg strength with eccentric emphasis for downhill control. Essential movement pattern for every step on the trail - from rock steps to steep descents. Key benefits: Downhill control • Unilateral strength • Knee protection • Trail-specific power Multiple support options and progressions - master the movement that mimics every hiking step.

More Strength practice

Alternating Reverse Lunge with Blocked Knee

Alternating Reverse Lunge with Blocked Knee Build unilateral leg strength and hip stability with perfect form. Master the step-up movement pattern essential for rock navigation and uphill hiking power. Key benefits: Unilateral strength • Hip stability • Step-up power • Core integration • Knee protection Focus on heel drive, squared hips, and neutral spine - the foundation of safe, powerful hiking movement.