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Dumbbell Farmer Walks
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Home ›
Forearms ›
Dumbbell Farmer Walks
Dumbbell Farmer Walks
ForearmsDumbbellCarryFunctional
Your Goal General Fitness
Sets
2–3
Reps
10–15
Rest
60s
How To Perform
1
Set up in the starting position with proper posture and core engaged.
2
Initiate the movement from the target muscle — not momentum.
3
Move through the full range of motion with control.
4
Pause briefly at peak contraction before returning.
5
Lower or return to start slowly — 2-3 seconds on the way back.
Pro Tips
Focus on feeling the target muscle working rather than just moving the weight.
The last 2-3 reps of a set are where growth happens — push through them with good form.
Rest 60-90 seconds between sets for hypertrophy, 2-3 minutes for strength work.
Overview
This legs exercise using a dumbbell places direct tension on the legs, with Glutes picking up the supporting work. The movement pattern makes it well suited for both beginners building a base and experienced lifters adding volume.
Muscles Worked
Legs
75%
Glutes
42%
Hamstrings
32%
Calves
22%
Common Mistakes
Using too much weight and sacrificing form to complete the movement.
Rushing through reps — speed kills the time under tension that drives results.
Neglecting the eccentric phase — lowering with control is where a lot of the growth happens.
About Training Your Forearms
The forearms control grip strength and the movement of the wrist and fingers, and well-developed forearms improve performance on nearly every pulling, carrying, and pressing exercise. The main muscles are the wrist flexors on the inner forearm, the wrist extensors on the outer forearm, and the brachioradialis, which also assists in elbow flexion.
Forearms receive a great deal of indirect work from deadlifts, rows, pull-ups, and any exercise that challenges your grip, which is why many lifters never train them directly. To bring up lagging forearms or maximise grip, direct work helps: wrist curls and reverse wrist curls train the flexors and extensors, reverse curls build the brachioradialis and forearm thickness, and loaded carries such as farmer's walks build crushing grip strength and overall robustness.
Forearms are dense with endurance-oriented muscle fibres and tolerate — even prefer — higher rep ranges and frequency. Training them in the 12 to 20 rep range several times per week, often at the end of a pulling or arm session, produces steady gains. Because grip is involved in so much of your training, stronger forearms translate directly into being able to hold heavier weights for more reps across the board.
Use the popular forearm and grip exercises below to round out your arm development and build a stronger, more capable grip.