Are you into going for a walk every day?

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27 May 2017, 11:31 am

I usually do every day; it's a good time to consolidate my thoughts, as well as relax and get some exercise, though I have the added benefit of living in a quiet area.


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IdahoRose
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27 May 2017, 11:59 am

I go for walks almost every day, as long as the weather permits. I'm trying very hard to lose weight, so it's important.



Dear_one
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27 May 2017, 12:09 pm

It takes several hours a day to walk your way to fitness. The older I get, the more I notice that I have to do some strength and flexibility work too. Overall, I much prefer exercise built into my daily routine. Chopping wood is a dandy, and carrying water might be, too.



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27 May 2017, 12:14 pm

I just learned how easily I can get to the Willamette River walking trail. I'll walk more now.


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27 May 2017, 12:20 pm

I think the Willamette river is the bravest river in the world, because it rhymes its name with dammit. :-)



jrjones9933
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27 May 2017, 12:36 pm

Dammit, Willamette, I love you!
The river was deep, but I swam it.
Willamette

and so on...


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27 May 2017, 1:24 pm

Bigmen once trod the land. If they now did, they should pound your home to crumbs. I go by foot to buy food; otherwise I abide my home. The heavy weight of man shall pound out beneath him from all the smallest beings the life. Though he steps happy, yet all else feels sad; he pounds the grass, murders the beetle; stirs the earth; frights the deer. May he abide his home.



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27 May 2017, 2:07 pm

No, I wish I had the whatsy (determination, stick-to-it-tive-ness, whatever) to walk everyday, cuz I truly love it (and I usually can't look-around / take-in, enough)----and, I often get-off the bus a few blocks from my destination, cuz I know how good walking is, for everybody, but.....

I DO exercise----and, have often wished I could get a stationary bike, for when there's inclement weather (I can't STAND the HEAT, during the summer - it just makes me faint, all-the-time, cuz I have such low blood pressure). I'm also wanting to bowl and / or swim (but, I can't afford the fees, right now)----cuz, then I'm exercising without knowing I'm exercising, cuz it's FUN (I don't like to exercise, if that's what it's called; meaning, I wanna do it, but not know that's what I'm doin' LOL).





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27 May 2017, 2:29 pm

Bicycling is better. The slow pace of walking get boring. Walking equals more likely to sprain ankle



auntblabby
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27 May 2017, 3:14 pm

I try to get a vigorous exercise walk up and down the hills of my local neighborhood, once per day, about 40 minutes' worth.



naturalplastic
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27 May 2017, 3:50 pm

[[/i]



Last edited by naturalplastic on 27 May 2017, 3:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.

naturalplastic
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27 May 2017, 3:51 pm

jrjones9933 wrote:
Dammit, Willamette, I love you!
The river was deep, but I swam it.
Willamette

and so on...


Ohhh! BRAD!! !! :heart:



skiddlebugz
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28 May 2017, 12:19 pm

This_Amoeba wrote:
Bicycling is better. The slow pace of walking get boring. Walking equals more likely to sprain ankle


Haha, this is very true. I actually was thinking of riding my bike instead of walking today. :lol:


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28 May 2017, 12:33 pm

I'm all in favour of bicycling, and "waste" 80 km per week on mine, but they do have larger hazards than a sprained ankle. One woman I knew gave up her car, and thought she'd learned all about riding as a kid, and about traffic as an adult. One night she was riding downhill and saw a big pothole, too late to swerve. Any experienced rider would have jumped it, at least by the front wheel, but she slammed on the brakes and flipped. I always wear a helmet with a mirror.

The front brake can cause a somersault even without a pothole, so it pays to practice. The safe approach is to use the rear brake just a little bit, so you know it will slide if it is getting too light. Then you can squeeze on more front brake until the back skids and you have to steer to stay ahead of it, but not have to deal with it lifting off to warn you as well.

I'm not coordinated enough for any other sport, but get fascinated with how to get through traffic quickly, yet seldom using the brakes instead of coasting when a stop is required anyway. An experienced rider actually uses half as much oxygen as a beginner, when following them at the same average speed, although pedalling efficiency is a large fraction of that as well.



auntblabby
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28 May 2017, 5:25 pm

I miss being able to ride my 'bent around but since the rear tire exploded in the summer heat a few years back, haven't been able to afford to rent a cargo van to haul it to the bike repair place in the next county.



Dear_one
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28 May 2017, 5:36 pm

auntblabby wrote:
I miss being able to ride my 'bent around but since the rear tire exploded in the summer heat a few years back, haven't been able to afford to rent a cargo van to haul it to the bike repair place in the next county.


That is the second-easiest repair to do yourself. One time Jacquie Phelan, hot-shot mountain biker, got a flat tire while out on a training ride. She called one of her male friends to come take care of it, as she had a dozen times before. A complete overhaul used to cost her a pizza and a six-pack. Instead, he told her to ask the garage she was calling from for the most basic, hard-to-use patching supplies, and coached her through the repair. Replacing a tire and tube is far easier. They are so well made now that I don't even use tire irons any more, just a wrench or the quick-release if the hub has one.