Wilderness Fitness Podcast with Dr. Rob Minturn PT, CSCS

Dr. Rob Minturn PT, CSCS

This podcast will be packed with information to better serve your own wellness and enhance your wilderness experience. The show will be a combination of solo and guest sessions covering topics such as: resistance training, cardio training, mobility, sleep, nutrition, stress management and pelvic floor considerations.

  1. FEB 27

    Ep 70: Kids, Hunting, Tag Applications w/ Alex Gruin of East 2 West Hunts

    Join the WiFI Physio Fitness Camp HERE for a TON of free mini workouts, stretching guides, and hunting season prep tips More information on the website HERE Follow along on Facebook HERE and Instagram HERE In this episode, we sit down with a Michigan native to talk hunting, family, western tags, and building a life around the outdoors. We kick things off with one must-visit destination in Michigan for anyone coming through, then dive into his background — from working in the fitness industry, to transitioning into health/wellness space, all while running E2WH. Beyond work, we get into personal adventures including elk, musk ox, deer, and desert hunts, and how family and fatherhood shape the way he approaches the outdoors. What You’ll Hear in This Episode: The Lifestyle How hunting fits into everyday life Raising kids around the outdoors Kids & Hunting Applying for tags as a young kid and thinking long-term Considerations before bringing kids on a hunt Critical ways to cultivate a lasting interest in hunting as they grow We wrap the episode with resources to help you level up your hunting knowledge — from Instagram highlights and posting deadlines, to website articles, the podcast library, and the 360 Sportsman Masterclass. If you’re serious about western tags, raising hunting-minded kids, or simply building a well-rounded outdoor life, this episode delivers practical insight with real-world experience behind it. Be sure to follow E2WHunts on Instagram HERE Check out the latest articles HERE Explore the 360 Sportsman Masterclass for deeper dives HERE Become a member to Alex's Western Hunt Basecamp community HERE

    1h 3m
  2. FEB 20

    Ep 69: Control the Controllable

    Join the WiFI Physio Fitness Camp group HERE for more free resources Control the Controllables: Mountain Hunting Performance & Rehab In the mountains, chaos is guaranteed — weather shifts, animals disappear, travel gets delayed, and your body feels different at 10,000+ feet. You can’t control the wind or the terrain. But you can control the fundamentals that determine how you perform when it matters. This episode breaks down the core controllables that directly impact mountain hunting performance and injury resilience: stress management, nutrition, exercise consistency, and sleep. 🧠 Stress Management Mountain hunting is a nervous system sport. Chronic stress impacts: Heart rate and coordination Lifting performance Pain sensitivity Inflammation levels Short-term cortisol is useful. Chronically elevated cortisol isn’t. Controllables: Mindfulness, breath work, yoga Working with a mental health therapist Eating enough (especially carbs) Avoiding prolonged aggressive calorie deficits If your nervous system is fried before season, the mountain exposes it. 🍞 Nutrition Carbs are jet fuel. If your workouts feel miserable, check your intake before blaming your program. From a rehab standpoint: Protein = workers. Calories/carbs = building materials. Underfueling leads to low-grade inflammation and easier injury flare-ups. Controllables: Track protein (at minimum) Eat whole foods (from the ground, tree, vine, or animals that swam, walked, or flew) Consider hiring a coach 🏋️ Exercise Have you followed a structured program consistently for 3+ months? Mountain durability is built through progressive training — not random workouts. Rehab requires the same long-term commitment. Controllables: Commit to a structured plan Remove daily decision fatigue Progress your training intentionally Hire a coach if needed Exercise is optional. Consistency is a choice. 😴 Sleep Sleep is the ultimate force multiplier. Less than 6 hours: Higher injury risk Increased perceived exertion Slower reaction time Impaired cognition Increased pain perception In the mountains, that’s costly. Controllables: Establish a consistent bedtime routine Make small, sustainable changes Prioritize 7+ hours 🎯 The Takeaway Control what you can control. If you consistently manage stress, fuel properly, train intentionally, and sleep enough, you give yourself a massive advantage in the mountains. If you ignore the basics, the mountain will magnify it. No one is responsible for your habits but you. ***************************************************************** Check out the website for more information about what I do HERE Follow along on Facebook HERE and Instagram HERE If you’re interested in working together, you can start by answering a few questions HERE to help guide our initial call to see if we’re a right fit for each other.

    37 min
  3. FEB 5

    Ep 67: I'm Back

    After a four-month break from releasing podcast episodes, this episode is a reflection on what that pause taught me—about time, fitness, business, and living season to season, especially here in Alaska. I open up by sharing how surprisingly good it felt to step away for a minute. Not just from podcasting, but from constant consumption in general. That break created space to shift from always learning to actually implementing—applying ideas, refining systems, and focusing on other areas of my business and personal life that needed attention. A major theme throughout the episode is that time is precious. Developing new routines is hard, and it takes intention to protect your time. I talk about investing in things like a public speaking course, yoga, and rehab for my back—choices that didn’t always feel productive in the traditional sense, but paid off in long-term growth and health. Living season to season has a way of making time feel like it’s flying by, and that reality forces you to prioritize what really matters. From there, I dive into fitness—specifically the balance between structure and unstructured training. There’s a time to follow a plan and push hard, and a time to move freely, explore, and maintain. Focusing too heavily on one aspect of fitness often comes at the expense of another. You can’t have it all at once. Cardio-dominant endurance athletes don’t always have the strongest physiques, just like strength-focused lifters can struggle with endurance or mobility. The key is alignment: mobility should support strength, strength should support cardio, and everything should serve your hunting goals. That conversation naturally leads into seasonal fitness, especially in Alaska. Our long, dark winters and active summers demand different approaches. Alaskans don’t want to be stuck in the gym all summer—and they shouldn’t be. There’s a season for pushing hard and building capacity, and a season for maintaining and enjoying movement outdoors. Both are valuable. The episode wraps up with a giveaway to celebrate 3,000 downloads, along with clear instructions on how to enter, and a few closing thoughts. The big takeaway: give yourself permission to step back when needed, respect the seasons of your life, and be intentional with how you spend your time—in your personal life, your work, and your fitness. Join the WiFI Physio Fitness Camp Community HERE

    21 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

This podcast will be packed with information to better serve your own wellness and enhance your wilderness experience. The show will be a combination of solo and guest sessions covering topics such as: resistance training, cardio training, mobility, sleep, nutrition, stress management and pelvic floor considerations.