Fitness & Walking

I Walked Past This Free Outdoor Gym for Two Years. Today I Finally Used It.

There’s a free outdoor gym in the middle of the park where I walk every morning in Reno. Pull-up bars, bench dip stations, inclined benches, push-up rails. A complete set of fitness equipment sitting in the sun.

I walked past it for two years without stopping.

Today I finally used it. My Apple Watch Ultra tracked everything.

Parcourse fitness circuit at my Reno park — wide view of multiple stations along the walking path

What Is a Parcourse?

A Parcourse is an outdoor fitness circuit — a series of exercise stations spaced along a walking path. You walk between stations and stop to do a movement at each one. Cardio and strength in one continuous loop.

These were everywhere in the 1970s and 80s. Cities installed them in parks across the country as a way to get people moving without a gym. The one in my Reno park is a GameTime Parcourse FitCenter — same equipment you’ll find in parks from San Diego to Seattle.

Free outdoor gym equipment in the middle of the park where I walk every morning

I actually remember one from my time in San Diego — the Perrier Parcourse Fitness Circuit at Morley Field in Balboa Park. 18 stations spread along a trail. I walked past that one plenty of times too.

Most people my age remember these. Most people walk right by them now.

What I Did Today

Parcourse Series 2 Strengthening station sign showing exercises I used today

I didn’t do a full circuit. I picked four stations and ran through them once as a quick add-on to my regular walk:

  • Bench dip — 8 reps
  • Bar push-up (hands on low horizontal bar) — 8 reps
  • Knee lift (hanging from pull-up bar) — 8 each leg
  • Bench curl (inclined bench) — 8 reps

Total time on the equipment: 5–7 minutes. Then I finished the walk.

The Apple Watch Numbers

MetricValue
Workout Time0:43:50
Distance2.21 mi
Active Calories332 cal
Total Calories445 cal
Avg Heart Rate117 BPM
Peak Heart Rate130 BPM
Elevation Gain120 ft
Avg Pace19’48″/mi
Temp / Humidity70°F / 30%
Effort5 — Moderate

Mile splits: Mile 1 — 114 BPM. Mile 2 — 119 BPM. Final stretch — 124 BPM.

The Parcourse circuit pushed my heart rate up noticeably in the second mile. The mile splits tell the story — I was working harder at the end than the beginning.

For context, my regular walk on the same route runs about 277–286 active calories. Adding 5 minutes of Parcourse work pushed it to 332. That’s a meaningful jump for a few minutes of equipment work.

What’s in Your Park

Parcourse Series 1 Stretching station — the kind of equipment hiding in your local park

If you’re walking in a neighborhood park and you’ve never looked around, look around. There’s a good chance something like this is sitting there ignored.

The equipment isn’t fancy. Some of it is from 1994 — the copyright date is right on the signs. But pull-up bars are pull-up bars. A bench dip station is a bench dip station. The physics haven’t changed.

You don’t need to do the full circuit. Pick two or three stations. Add them to the walk you’re already doing. See what happens to your numbers.

Honest Notes

Parcourse station sign — equipment is old but solid

The Parcourse pushed my heart rate higher than my Walk & Strengthen card stops do. The hanging knee lift in particular — gripping the bar and lifting your knees — gets your breath going fast. That’s useful information.

The equipment is old but solid. No wobble. Bench dip station was fine. The inclined bench for the body curl was comfortable.

I skipped the log hop station. Not worth the ankle risk at 65. For added joint support on the walk I lean on copper compression knee sleeves, and good footwear matters — my go-to is the Brooks walking shoes.

What’s Next

I’m going to add a Parcourse stop to a future Walk & Strengthen card. The equipment is right there on my route — might as well use it.

If you want to follow along, drop your email below. The Walk Easy card deck is free and it’s a good starting point before you add Parcourse stations.

Get Card 1 Free

A complete walking workout with 5 strength stops built in. No gym, no equipment. Straight to your inbox.


Health Disclaimer: I’m not a doctor or certified trainer. Everything here is personal experience. Talk to your doctor before starting any new exercise program.

Affiliate Disclosure: This post may contain Amazon affiliate links (jbrsd1-20). I only recommend products I personally use.

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