I alternate between biking and brisk fitness walking. The walking gets some weight bearing exercise in.
I alternate between biking and brisk fitness walking. The walking gets some weight bearing exercise in.
Lisa
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Climbing (or sprinting) out of the saddle is weight bearing (besides being strength building). It's still non-impact and less than full body weight (some is always in your hands and the other leg), so it's not much use for building bones, but it has all the other benefits of weight bearing exercise.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
Exactly. It's weight bearing for muscles, but I wouldn't count on it to help with bone density. Believe, I know. No matter how many 15% grades I've climbed, the bones are still thinning. Well, until I started medical intervention.
Yes, my legs are stronger, but the bones aren't.
Begging to differ, I don't see where weight lifting, pilates, yoga differ from cycling in terms of building bone strength, as they equally do not have "impact".
It definitely builds muscle. hell yes. They won't pump up as much - they will first get lean and efficient - and of course it will be limited to your legs - but you build calorie-burning meat.
maybe for the bones, MTB'ing would do it. Or riding cobblestones.
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The research I have read says that mountain biking is slightly positive for building bone density, but you still need to do weight lifting!
Agree with Robin and Lisa. Adding weight training and some weight bearing exercise, like walking, running, etc. are essential to keeping your bone health.
Riding hills will make your muscles stronger but you also risk muscle imbalances (been there, don't want to go there again). Also, upper body and core strength is important.
Lynette, good job making it up that hill. By the way, it gets easier, just keep at it.![]()
When you do exercises like leg presses, step-ups and squats (that stress the legs, pelvis and spine), you're lifting more than your body weight, so the bones get slightly compressed. When you do upper body work with free weights in a standing position, then your spine and legs are again supporting significantly more than your body weight. Just like muscle, the way you build bone is by slightly breaking down what you already have, so your body builds it back stronger.
With yoga, you're doing body weight only, and with Pilates if you use resistance it's not a lot, plus it generally isn't along the length of the spine or legs. Same thing with upper body work in a weight machine (that is, it can be a lot, but you're not using legs or spine). So your bones don't get stressed beyond what they do in "real life." That's the difference.
Last edited by OakLeaf; 10-14-2008 at 04:00 AM.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
So are pushups not weight bearing? (since you're only pushing your own weight up?)
:S
Here's a nice description of lots of activities and how they fit in the continuum
http://www.nof.org/prevention/exercise.htm
I don't think anything that is non-impact has a lot of effect on building bone density - but it all has other benefits including better balance and increased muscle tone, which both help to prevent bone breakage too. So no, cycling up hills, yoga, pilates, pushups and weight lifting do not build bone mass, but all can be useful for your overall health and for preventing the falls that cause fractures. Having strong muscles can help to protect weak bones!
Last edited by Eden; 10-14-2008 at 10:36 AM.
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