Wellness & Mobility

Dalmatian Morning Mobility: 5 Stretches I Do Before Leaving the House

A simple routine I built over years of living by the Adriatic — no gym, no equipment, just stone floors, sea air, and fifteen quiet minutes before the day begins.

By Ana Kovačević  ·  June 19, 2026  ·  8 min read

Ana Kovačević

Wellness writer based in Split, Croatia. I write about movement, rest, and living well on the Dalmatian coast. Not a doctor — just someone who has spent a long time paying attention to her body.

Every morning in Split starts the same way for me. The shutters are still closed, the city is just waking up, and before I make coffee or check my phone I roll out a thin cotton mat on the kitchen tiles and spend about fifteen minutes moving. Not exercising. Not training. Just moving — slowly, deliberately — in a way that tells my joints: yes, today is another day, let us begin gently.

I have done this for years. I started because my lower back was complaining after long writing sessions and a neighbour — a retired physiotherapist who spent his whole career at the Split clinic — told me the problem was not my back but everything around it. "Your hips do not move," he said, in the direct way of older Dalmatian men. "Fix that and your back will thank you."

He was right. And over time those five movements he showed me became the foundation of something I now consider non-negotiable, like morning coffee or the walk down to the riva.

"Fjaka — that Dalmatian art of mindful rest — taught me that stillness and movement are the same discipline. You have to know how to stop before you can know how to move well."

Why Morning Mobility Matters More Than You Think

During sleep, synovial fluid — the liquid that cushions your joints — redistributes unevenly. Your body is still, your connective tissues cool and stiffen slightly, and your nervous system is running on a lower setting. The first hour after waking is when your joints are at their most vulnerable and, paradoxically, most receptive to gentle input.

Think of it like the old wooden boats in the harbour. They creak and resist when first pulled from the water, but given a little warmth and movement they settle into their purpose. Your joints are the same.

You do not need thirty minutes. You do not need a mat (though cool stone floors work perfectly). You need intention, breath, and these five movements.

The 5 Stretches

1 Supine Hip Rotation (Figure-Four)

Lie on your back with knees bent. Cross your right ankle over your left knee, flex the right foot, and gently press the right knee away from you. Hold for 8 slow breaths. You will feel this in the outer hip and glute — exactly where most desk workers are chronically tight. Repeat on the left side. This single movement, done daily, was responsible for about 60% of my lower back improvement.

2 Cat-Cow Spinal Wave

Come to hands and knees. On an inhale, let the belly drop, lift the chest and tailbone — cow. On an exhale, round the spine completely, chin to chest, tailbone under — cat. Move slowly for 10 full breath cycles. The goal is not range of motion; it is the rediscovery of every segment of your spine. Feel each vertebra participate. By the end you will be warmer and your spine will feel three centimetres longer.

3 Standing Hip Circle

Stand with feet hip-width apart, hands on hips. Make large, slow circles with your hips — imagine you are stirring a very slow, very deliberate pot of peka. Ten circles clockwise, ten counter-clockwise. This wakes up the hip flexors, the QL muscles of the lower back, and the stabilisers around the sacroiliac joint. It also looks wonderfully strange if anyone happens to walk past your window.

4 Doorway Chest Opener

Stand in any doorway. Place forearms on the door frame at roughly shoulder height, elbows bent to 90 degrees. Step one foot forward and gently lean your chest through the opening until you feel a broad stretch across the chest and the fronts of the shoulders. Hold for 6 breaths. People who sit and type — which includes almost everyone reading this — spend hours with their shoulders rolled forward. This reverses that compression.

5 Seated Thoracic Twist with Breath

Sit on the floor with legs crossed or extended (a chair works fine). Sit tall, place your right hand on your left knee, your left hand behind you. On an inhale, grow taller. On the exhale, rotate gently to the left, looking over your left shoulder. Hold for 5 breaths, then switch sides. The thoracic spine — mid-back — is where most adults have almost no rotation. Restoring it reduces neck tension, improves shoulder mechanics, and makes breathing feel effortless.

The Dalmatian Element: Doing Less, Better

There is a word in our dialect — fjaka — that describes a particular state of pleasurable, unhurried stillness. Tourists sometimes mistake it for laziness. It is not. It is the conscious choice to be present and slow, to resist the compulsion to rush. I think of my morning mobility practice as movement-fjaka: slow, present, without agenda.

The Mediterranean lifestyle is often praised for its diet — the olive oil, the fish, the herbs from the hillsides above Kaštela. But what often goes unmentioned is the physical culture of daily, non-exercise movement: the walks along the riva, the stairs in the old town, the afternoon rest that lets the body recover. Flexibility and joint health are not gym achievements here. They are a way of living.

What to Do When the Stretches Are Not Enough

For most people, consistent daily stretching is transformative on its own. But there are periods — after illness, after long sedentary phases, during high-stress seasons — when the tissues need more support than movement alone can provide.

I went through one of those phases two winters ago. The weather was cold and grey for weeks (yes, it does happen even in Split), I was working intensively on a writing project, and I noticed my joints feeling stiffer and more reluctant than usual. My neighbour the physiotherapist — now retired and dedicated entirely to growing tomatoes — suggested I look at nutritional collagen support in addition to keeping my movement practice.

After some research, I found a product I have used consistently since. I mention it below because several readers have asked, and because I only recommend things I actually use. The affiliate note at the top of that section is there for legal transparency — it does not change what I think of the product.

Affiliate disclosure: The link below is an affiliate link. If you purchase through it, I receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend products I personally use and believe in. Full disclosure policy is here.

Personal Recommendation

Hydrolysed Marine Collagen Powder

A high-quality hydrolysed collagen supplement I have taken consistently for over a year. It dissolves completely in my morning coffee with no taste and no clumping. I noticed meaningful improvement in joint comfort and morning stiffness within about six weeks of daily use. If you are committed to your flexibility practice and want to give your connective tissue the building blocks it needs, this is the product I recommend.

  • Hydrolysed for maximum absorption
  • Unflavoured — dissolves in hot or cold drinks
  • Marine sourced, sustainably produced
  • No fillers or artificial additives
  • Third-party tested
View Product →

Frequently Asked Questions

Questions I receive regularly from readers.

Done at a comfortable pace with proper breathing, the five stretches take between 12 and 18 minutes. I typically spend about 15 minutes. If you are short on time, movements 1 and 5 (hip rotation and thoracic twist) give the most benefit per minute — do those at minimum.
I am not a medical professional, and this is not medical advice. If you have diagnosed back conditions, please consult your physiotherapist or doctor before starting any new movement practice. That said, gentle mobility work is generally considered beneficial for most types of chronic back tension — the key word being gentle. Never push into pain.
No. The stretches are valuable on their own and will produce results with consistent daily practice. The collagen supplement is something I personally use as an addition, not a requirement. Many people see significant improvement in flexibility and joint comfort from the movement routine alone.
Most people notice they feel noticeably better on the day they do the routine compared to days they skip it — that immediate difference is motivation enough to keep going. Structural changes — genuine improvements in range of motion and reduced morning stiffness — typically become apparent after 3 to 6 weeks of daily practice. Consistency matters far more than intensity.
Both have merit. Morning stretching prepares your joints for the day and is easier to make a consistent habit. Evening stretching helps the body release tension accumulated during the day and can improve sleep quality. I practise in the morning because the habit anchors to my coffee ritual — that consistency is more valuable than the theoretically optimal time of day.

About This Site

DalmatianWell is a personal wellness blog written by Ana Kovačević from Split, Croatia. It covers everyday movement, nutrition, rest, and the kind of slow living that the Dalmatian coast does naturally and the rest of the world is slowly remembering.

The writing here is personal and opinion-based. It does not constitute medical advice. I am a writer who pays close attention to her own body and shares what she learns — nothing more, nothing less.

Some articles contain affiliate links. When they do, it is disclosed clearly at the top of the recommendation section. I never recommend products I do not personally use.

Contact

For reader questions, collaboration enquiries, or just to say hello from wherever you are in the world:

Email: hello@gentleharvest.cfd

I read every message. I do not always reply quickly — the riva does not wait — but I do read everything.