Bottoms-Up Kettlebell Carry

An upside-down kettlebell carry that challenges grip, rotator cuff stability, and scapular control while reinforcing tall posture and clean shoulder positioning.

Muscles Targeted

Rotator cuff, scapular stabilizers (serratus anterior, mid/lower traps), forearm flexors/extensors, and trunk stabilizers.

Key Benefits

  • Builds shoulder stability under real-life movement
  • Improves grip endurance and forearm strength
  • Trains clean scapular positioning with upright posture
  • Great “bridge” between rehab and heavier lifting
Start lighter than you think — bottoms-up gets challenging fast.

Equipment Needed

Kettlebell (start light). Optional: open space or hallway for carries.

How to Perform Bottoms-Up Kettlebell Carry

  1. Hold the kettlebell upside down with the bell stacked over your wrist.
  2. Keep ribs stacked over pelvis and shoulder blade gently set (no shrugging).
  3. Walk slowly with controlled steps while keeping the bell steady.
  4. Stop if the bell starts wobbling — reset and continue.
  5. Repeat on the other side.

Programming Options

  • 2–4 carries per side
  • 10–30 seconds or 10–30 yards per carry
  • Rest 45–90 seconds between carries

Why This Variation Works

The upside-down position forces continuous micro-adjustments at the wrist, elbow, and shoulder, which builds stability and control without needing heavy load.

When to Use It

Warm-ups, finishers, shoulder stability days, overhead-athlete routines, or as a strength-focused carry option.

Frequently Asked Questions

What if my wrist collapses back?

Go lighter and focus on stacking the bell over the wrist. Shorter carries are fine early on.

Should I shrug to “hold it up”?

No — keep the shoulder down and stable. Think “tall posture” rather than “shrug up.”

Is this better than a normal farmer carry?

Different tool. Bottoms-up is more stability-demanding; standard carries are great for heavier loading.