Did I write TOMORROW...........?You mean you're going back to bed?

Did I write TOMORROW...........?You mean you're going back to bed?
I read that all the time, but doesn't it just wear out the joints faster? Won't you need a knee replacement or two at 60?Cycling for your joints.
It worse when walking, I have less knee and hip discomfort. Your knees do less work pedaling especially with thin wheels. I usually pedal on a little downhill and coast.I read that all the time, but doesn't it just wear out the joints faster? Won't you need a knee replacement or two at 60?
Well the other kind of bed activity, burns 3-4 calories a minute.Just sleeping will burn off 500 calories a night. So sleep more.
I think joint health is pretty complex equation, doing too little will wreck them, doing to much can wreck them, so I think doing reasonable amounts of all types of exercise is probably your best bet.I read that all the time, but doesn't it just wear out the joints faster? Won't you need a knee replacement or two at 60?
It's a common observation that a modern efficient road/race bike doesn't make the ride easier, just faster. This means the rider works just as hard as before, but goes faster cuz the bike is more efficient. Consider that the same calories per hour, yet you cover more ground during that hour. This is how I interpret your comment "a good distance" - not necessarily more time but more miles, though of course the longer you ride, the stronger you get.-A modern road bike is THE MOST EFFICIENT form of transportation today...still. When you look at calories/distance, it still wins (last time I checked). So you do have to ride a good distance to get a good benefit.
Indeed. If by MTB you mean technical trails or single track, the climbs are much steeper, you can't go slow like you can on a road bike because you need a certain minimum speed to get over the rough/loose terrain. And far less efficient than road cycling, both up the hills and down. MTB riding overall is much more punchy like sprint interval training. And more fun, I think.-mountain biking burns more calories, but is also harder on the elbows and shoulders, and harder to find a place to go ride
I love cycling and hate running, but also find that running gives the most / best workout in the least amount of time. Especially if you include steep hills, stairs or trails in your running. So I run at least once per week for that reason and to work different muscles than cycling nearly every day.-In my experience as a former amateur mountain bike racer, and runner...even if I burn more calories biking, I will always lose more weight running. I think there is a secondary effect to running that motivates your body to shed excess weight. I have done MANY intervals biking or on an elliptical that burned 1.5x the calories as compared to running, but I have always been leaner when running.
Agreed. The benefits of exercise in terms of physical health are substantial. However, the benefits of exercise go beyond physical and include mental health. Reduction of anxiety and stress, and afterward a healthy relaxation and better sleep. Also I find normal moderate exercise curbs appetite even as it burns calories. Strenuous/vigorous/extended exercise does the opposite, but by this I mean levels that few people use, for example training for Iron Man or similar ultra endurance events.... Exercise is still super important though, 20 minutes a a day, to the level of losing your breath slightly and sweating, can help stave off many diseases including muscle wasting (sarcopenia) and dementia.
-A modern road bike is THE MOST EFFICIENT form of transportation today...still. When you look at calories/distance, it still wins (last time I checked). So you do have to ride a good distance to get a good benefit.
-Bicycling has some regenerative effects on the health of knees...I don't know enough to go into details, but I have had two knee reconstructive surgeries, and biking is GREAT rehab and maintenance health.
I’d disagree on the last statement that running vs cycling burns more calories. The intensity chart below is incorrect for many cyclists one persons intensity is another person’s warmup ride.walking vs biking
This chart is for 30 minutes of exercise:
Intensity Biking (calories and speed) Walking (calories and speed) Light 240 calories — 10–11.9 miles per hour (16–19.15 km/hr) 154 calories — 3.5 miles per hour (5.6 km/hr) Moderate 285 calories — 12–13.9 miles per hour (19.3–22.4 km/hr) 179 calories — 4.0 miles per hour (6.4 km/hr) High 357 calories — 14–15.9 miles per hour (22.5–25.6 km/hr) 250 calories — 4.5 miles per hour (7.2 km/hr)
I think the above chart assumes road cycling. Mountain biking on true mountain bike trails uses the upper body more.
Livestrong.com says about the same thing.
Running vs cycling is a different story, running burns more.
What do you think?
I was comparing casual bicycling on a neighborhood street versus walking on the same exact street.
Obviously mountain biking is going to burn more calories I would think. Thanks for your post.![]()
at least you can't put more calories in your mouth then, so there could be truth in that....Just sleeping will burn off 500 calories a night. So sleep more.
Lots of really good info here...especially the simple energy balance equation.
I don't have much to add, but a couple things I didn't see.
-A modern road bike is THE MOST EFFICIENT form of transportation today...still. When you look at calories/distance, it still wins (last time I checked). So you do have to ride a good distance to get a good benefit.
-Bicycling has some regenerative effects on the health of knees...I don't know enough to go into details, but I have had two knee reconstructive surgeries, and biking is GREAT rehab and maintenance health.
-mountain biking burns more calories, but is also harder on the elbows and shoulders, and harder to find a place to go ride
-In my experience as a former amateur mountain bike racer, and runner...even if I burn more calories biking, I will always lose more weight running. I think there is a secondary effect to running that motivates your body to shed excess weight. I have done MANY intervals biking or on an elliptical that burned 1.5x the calories as compared to running, but I have always been leaner when running.
Advice from a dorky engineer that maybe should have been a health coach ;-)