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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.

5 min
Intermediate
Strength

Single Leg Squat with Support

Why This Exercise is Essential for Hikers

The single leg squat with support is one of the most hiking-specific exercises you can do. Think about how often you use this exact movement pattern on the trail:

Downhill control

Every downhill step requires single leg strength to control your descent

Uphill power

Stepping up on rocks, logs, and steep terrain

Uneven surfaces

Navigating varied terrain where each leg works independently

Load management

Controlling your body weight plus pack load on one leg

Key focus: This exercise is particularly valuable when performed eccentrically (emphasizing the lowering phase) to build downhill strength and control.

Equipment & Support Options

Option 1: Trekking Pole Support (Most Hiking-Specific)

  • Use your actual trekking pole for support
  • Mimics real hiking conditions
  • Easily adjustable support level

Option 2: Box/Bench Support (Beginner-Friendly)

  • Provides a target depth and safety net
  • Start with higher boxes, progress to lower ones

Option 3: Band/Cable Support

  • Crossover Symmetry bands or similar
  • Cables in a gym setting
  • Allows for variable assistance throughout the movement

Option 4: No Support (Advanced)

  • Progress to unassisted single leg squats
  • Ultimate goal for most hikers
  • Requires mastery of supported versions first

Technique & Setup

Foundation positioning:

  • Glutes engaged from the start
  • Three points of contact on your standing foot
  • Slight tension throughout your body
  • Knee tracking directly over your toe throughout the movement

Movement pattern:

  1. Initiate with glutes: Think "glutes first" to properly load hips, hamstrings, and quads
  2. Sit back: Move your hips back and down (similar to regular squat cues)
  3. Controlled descent: Use 4 seconds to lower down
  4. Hold: 2-second pause at the bottom
  5. Drive up: Use glutes, hamstrings, and quads to return to standing
  6. Minimize support: Use only as much assistance as needed

Key Technique Points

Knee position

Keep knee in line with toes - don't let it drift inward or outward

Hip loading

Sit back with your hips to engage posterior chain muscles

Foot stability

Maintain three points of contact throughout

Range of motion considerations:

Hiking-specific depth

You don't need huge range of motion for trail applications

Quality over depth

Focus on perfect form and stability rather than maximum depth

Progressive depth

Start conservative, increase range as strength and control improve

Progression Pathway

Level 1: High Box with Support

  • Box at knee height or higher
  • Significant support assistance
  • Focus on movement pattern and stability

Level 2: Lower Box with Reduced Support

  • Gradually lower box height
  • Reduce reliance on support
  • Increase hold time at bottom position

Level 3: No Box, Light Support

  • Full range determined by your control
  • Minimal support assistance
  • Focus on eccentric (lowering) control

Level 4: Unassisted Single Leg Mini Squat

  • No external support
  • Controlled range of motion
  • Hold and return under full muscular control

Eccentric Emphasis for Downhill Strength

Why eccentric training matters:

  • Downhill hiking is primarily eccentric muscle action
  • Builds strength in the lengthening phase of muscle contraction
  • Develops the control needed for steep descents
  • Reduces risk of knee pain and injury on long downhills

How to emphasize eccentric:

Slower lowering

Take 4+ seconds to descend

Controlled holds

Pause at various depths during descent

Focus on muscle engagement

Feel your glutes, hamstrings, and quads working to control the movement

Trail Applications

Direct carryover to hiking:

Steep descents

Control and stability on long downhills

Rock steps

Stepping down from boulders and large rocks

Uneven terrain

Managing variable step heights and angles

Load management

Controlling body weight plus pack on single leg

Injury prevention

Building strength patterns that protect knees and ankles

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Knee drift: Allowing knee to move inward or outward from toe alignment
  2. Over-relying on support: Using assistance to do the work rather than for balance/confidence
  3. Rushing the movement: Skipping the controlled eccentric phase
  4. Ignoring hip loading: Focusing only on knee bend rather than proper hip hinge
  5. Progressing too quickly: Advancing before mastering current level

Programming Suggestions

Muscle Engagement Focus

What you should feel:

Glutes

Primary driver of the movement

Hamstrings

Supporting the hip hinge and eccentric control

Quads

Controlling knee position and assisting with return to standing

Core

Stabilizing throughout the movement

Learning the contraction: The key is developing awareness of how your glutes and hamstrings contract to bring you back up. This muscular coordination is exactly what you need on the trail for powerful, controlled movement.

Key Takeaways

Trail-specific strength

Directly translates to hiking performance and safety

Eccentric emphasis

Critical for downhill control and knee health

Progressive support

Start with assistance, work toward independence

Quality focus

Perfect form trumps depth or support level

Frequent practice

Include in almost every leg training session

Real-world preparation

Builds exactly the strength patterns you use while hiking

Remember: Every single leg squat you perform is preparing your legs for the specific demands of the trail. This exercise builds the unilateral strength and control that keeps you confident and capable on any terrain, whether you're climbing up or controlling your descent down.

Related Practices

Continue with practices that sit near this one in the trail map.

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Shared focus area

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.

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.

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.