Solitary
New member
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2008
- Messages
- 123
- Reaction score
- 192
Aha! So this is why we only see pictures of you with Brutus in front of you!
It's worse than you know: Brutus ISN'T in the picture.
Aha! So this is why we only see pictures of you with Brutus in front of you!
I'll add another data point, since I recently started keeping track of this information. I have a modern Schwinn exercise bike, and when I pedal balls to the wall over a one hour period I generate about 260 watts. I wear a polar heart rate monitor that "talks" to the exercise bike, and it tells me I burn about 860 calories per hour. My heart rate red lines at this exertion level in the high 170's or low 180's. I am 32 years old, so my maximum heart rate is approximately (220-32) 188, which is amazingly accurate as per the Polar Heart Rater Monitor. If I go in short bursts as hard as I can my MHR goes to 192.
So what am I saying? When I hike my exertion level is much, much, much less than when I am on the exercise bike where I burn 860 calories per hour. Therefore I would postulate that hiking 3 MPH up an Adirondack peak might get me in the ballpark of 860 calories and equivalent exertion level as to when I am on the bike. I am 32YO, 5' 10", 143 pounds.
I used to think I was in very good shape, and I am now humbled (and motivated) by the gentleman who can maintain 320 watts for 60 minutes. That is some serious a-kicking! Nice work!
I usually loose between 3-6 pounds on a long day of hiking.
A pound is 3500 calories. To actually lose 3 to 6 pounds (permanently) you'd have burned 10,500 to 21,000 more calories than you took in that day. I'm thinking you're 3 to 6 pounds is primarily water weight and an empty digestive track, which would return to normal within a day or two. At that point you could weigh yourself.
Yeah, I learned that the hard way. Never weigh yourself after a hike. I dropped 10 pounds in one hike once, and was on top of the world! Man, I really do sweat a lot.
The water loss is not only sweat. The body burns glucose then converts stored glucose in the form of glycogen in the liver and muscles into glucose. This metabolism releases water in the process. As you rehydrate and eat carbs you will return to your previous weight as your glycogen stores are restored.
Like Chip said a pound is 3500 calories so if you burn or eleminate 1000 calories a day you will burn two pounds of fat a week. However, there are many confounding variables in all this...
A pound is 3500 calories. To actually lose 3 to 6 pounds (permanently) you'd have burned 10,500 to 21,000 more calories than you took in that day. I'm thinking you're 3 to 6 pounds is primarily water weight and an empty digestive track, which would return to normal within a day or two. At that point you could weigh yourself.
Strange, but I usually weigh more the morning after a big hike, (which usually includes a big meal and a few cold ones! ) but then the day after that I am down a pound or so.Right, that makes sense. I drink a lot while hiking, but don't eat all that much. The pounds are usually put back on within a day or two.
Strange, but I usually weigh more the morning after a big hike, (which usually includes a big meal and a few cold ones! ) but then the day after that I am down a pound or so.
This might also be affected by your salt intake. Excess salt can cause you to retain water for a day or so.Strange, but I usually weigh more the morning after a big hike, (which usually includes a big meal and a few cold ones! ) but then the day after that I am down a pound or so.
I can lose 2-3 pounds in a hour from sweat
Tim
Strange, but I usually weigh more the morning after a big hike, (which usually includes a big meal and a few cold ones! ) but then the day after that I am down a pound or so.
Cascade over a hardened trail?How many calories do you think one burns/hour in the winter hiking a 4k peak?
Cascade over a hardened trail?
Allen in 2 feet of heavy unbroken snow?
The answer to each and every question one may ask regarding health or physiology always starts with the same 2 words:
It depends.
Enter your email address to join: