Healthy Living Muskogee Summer 2020 Edition | Page 7

won't be sharing stuff." Weights and equipment are wiped down after each use, she said. "Then when I run the UVs in the evenings, then I know we've gotten everything," Keane said. Other gyms are also responding to the pandemic. Oak Strong Physical Fitness owner Shane Scott said the gym limited its classes to nine people even before COVID-19 closed the building. Center members took home equipment and were given sheets listing fitness routines to do while the gym was closed due to the pandemic. Members also were challenged to run 50 miles during April. When Oak Strong reopened, class sizes were limited to nine people for a few weeks. Even at full capacity, Oak Strong makes sure participants are spaced six feet apart, Scott said. "We work predominantly in an open area," he said. "We have two huge bay doors that we open to keep it ventilated." The gym specializes in high intensity physical fitness, with instructors leading classes that include cardio work and weight lifting. Scott said the gym stocked up on antibacterial sanitizer and spray before COVID-19 hit. "It's been good, people are coming back to the gym once they know what we're trying to do," he said. Healthy Living 7