I’ll be the bad guy (gal ) and add a controversial view. While I will definitely agree that hiking is a great activity mentally and physically, and walking in the woods beats walking in a mall any day, I don’t think hiking in itself makes one healthier. There’s more needed on a day to day basis to make the hiking activity beneficial.
For example – society in general is becoming obese, not just overweight, but extremely overweight. Maybe there are statistics out there but some forms of recreational activity seem to have less overweight participants than others. How often do you see overweight runners, bikers (mountain or road bikers not motorcycle), swimmers perhaps? Now compare it to participants of motorcycling, boating, golfing. It might be eye opening to take a group of 100 who regularly participate in a form of activity and record the proportion in each group that are overweight. Maybe even compare the portion of each group that is in good physical condition and mental health. I’d be interested in how the group of 100 hikers would fare.
For example – society in general is becoming obese, not just overweight, but extremely overweight. Maybe there are statistics out there but some forms of recreational activity seem to have less overweight participants than others. How often do you see overweight runners, bikers (mountain or road bikers not motorcycle), swimmers perhaps? Now compare it to participants of motorcycling, boating, golfing. It might be eye opening to take a group of 100 who regularly participate in a form of activity and record the proportion in each group that are overweight. Maybe even compare the portion of each group that is in good physical condition and mental health. I’d be interested in how the group of 100 hikers would fare.