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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
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    Colorado
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    My goal is to burn at least 1000 calories..

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    So I am planning on trying to burn about 1000 calories every weekday and close to 2000 on each weekend day. I hope to achieve this with running, riding my bike and doing some high intensity weight workouts. On weekends I spend a lot of time backcountry skiing. I do work full time plus..( have been working overtime). My goal is lose to some more weight ( I have lost close to 20 pounds as of last March) and get stronger for MTN biking season. Just wondering if I am being too ambitious. What kind of workouts do some of you do on a daily basis? I have been working on this goal since last Wednesday and it is kind of challenging depening upon my workday ( I work as an OT in a rehab departmentso I spend a lot of time on my feet moving people around.)

    Also just curious as to what kind of nutrition plan/dietary guidelines do you follow? I have been trying to be mainly Paleo. I still do eat my oatmeal with some protien powder in the morning.

    Just curious what my fellow TE friends do.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Katy, Texas
    Posts
    1,811
    dear solo biker,

    Good luck with your very (perhaps overly ambitious goal). All I can say is that taking 4 years to lose the weight I did, my typical workout these days is an hour of weights and resistance and an hour of fast HR on the treadmill 3 x a week alternating with long distance biking (50 miles a go each time this month) at 15-17 rpm. For either of those two workouts, 2 hours at the gym or 3 hours on the bike, my maximum calorie burn has never gone higher than 400 calories and hour. On this program I can do 5-6 days a week for 5-6 weeks before I burn out and have to take a week to ten days full out recovery. My average calorie deficit is 300-500 calories a day, which means that I am eating enough to maintain my current activity level and continue a slow steady weight loss. I am currently focusing in a bit more on the long distance riding since I will be doing a cross country south to north along the Mississippi in May and June.

    Perhaps instead of focusing on how many calories you aim to burn through exercise, it would be helpful to also take a look at how many calories your body requires for your weight, body fat %, age and level of activity and fitness, and aiming to burn x amount more than that, or alternatively consume x calories less than you require for body maintenance.

    If you burn tremendous of calories without balancing out your diet, you risk continuing damage to the muscles, organs and nerves. It might be better to set some more realistic goals in terms of calorie burn and make sure your diet (paleo, semi vegetarian, normal whole food emphasis on less beef and more fish, whatever) helps the whole balance.

    Some sort of a calorie counting monitor is helpful. You can find charts for calories burned vs. cardio rate by using a heart monitor. I use a bodybugg which is an armband mounted monitor with a membership in a computer site that has the ususual amenities of being able to enter measurements, activity levels and download the calorie burn from the monitor. They also have various eating programs and a pretty good selection of recipes and tips plus access to a data base of calorie count for regular foods, an ability to track your measurements and progress but there are many others.

    I would be interested in how it all goes for you. Yay for the 20 pounds lost and here's to the next twenty and some added core arm and leg strength from weight and resistance training. Like me, you might very well just be at the point where although you are not actually losing mssive amounts of weight, but you are replacing bady fat weight with lean muscle mass which is always a good thing.

    Just my thoughts- I am not an expert, nor a nutritionist, nor a sports coach, ust raining the brain of thoughts that you posting brought forward.

    marni

    Perhaps rather than setting
    marni
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  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Central NJ
    Posts
    866
    I think the most important thing is for you to set up a healthy lifestyle that you can follow for the rest of your life. Is 1k calories a day realistic for that? I would start by tracking your calories (Myfitnesspal.com is a great way to do it) to see how your diet is playing into your weight loss. Everything in moderation. You don't want to end up injured from overuse and not be able to exercise at all. Slow and steady. Good luck!
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  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
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    14,498
    According to my Garmin, which seems pretty accurate, it takes me about a 16-17 mile run or three hours of moderately intense cycling to burn 1000 calories. Are you talking about ALL your calories over BMR, or just your workouts??
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
    Location
    Austria
    Posts
    364
    What Marni said.

    From my personal weight-loss experience and without being an expert of any kind, I don't find it helpful to view exercise as a way to burn x amount of calories. Exercise helps with weightloss for various reasons, but a reasonable calorie defizit for weight loss is better achieved by nutrition. Personally, I would consider a 1000 calorie deficit far too high and would aim for some hundred calories deficit (10-15% of your total metabolic rate).


    Edit - you asked about diet: I try to eat a balanced diet of natural or "real" food, with a focus on eating enough protein, 3-4 meals a day, organic if possible. But I am thinking about giving Paleo a shot. If only I wouldn't love my oatmeal-breakfast and yoghurt so much
    Last edited by Susan; 02-27-2012 at 01:11 AM.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    You need to think about what is sustainable over a long period of time. While it is tempting to use large amounts of exercise as a way to control/lose weight, I can guarantee that eventually, as Marni said, you will burn out and in the end, perhaps not achieve your goal. All the things people have posted are good strategies.
    I might look at portion control and when you are eating, in addition to everything else mentioned. But, I think the most important thing is to remember that when our quest to lose weight becomes like a job, it's not healthy.
    When I had to lose 25 pounds, it took me close to a year. But, 30+ years later, it's still gone.
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  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
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    6,984
    How much weight are you trying to lose? Or maybe it's not really weight, but more clohing size. After all, muscle weighs more than fat.

    I just would like to add that when I was unemployed, I was cycling over 2 hrs. daily. Yes. So I was cycling 45 km. daily most of the time. It included a couple of reasonable hill ascent --8-10% grade.
    This type of increased cycling was over 8 consecutive months...which means not including winter since I did cycle but 50% less daily. Then there were 1-2 days I increased to 60 kms. per day.

    My diet didn't really change. I think I might have lost 3-4 lbs. It swung back and forth, but then I only weighed myself a few times per month. I wasn't aiming to lose weight. Just had some time and needed to keep motivated while job searching.

    You have very high expectations of self @ burning 1000 calories daily plus your regular work at OT.
    Last edited by shootingstar; 02-27-2012 at 04:57 AM.
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  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Colorado
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    Thanks for all of your comments. I don't think I have too much more to lose. I am 5' 6" and weigh about 140. It would be nice to lose about 5 more pounds. I eat pretty clean...no junk food/processed food with the exception of energy bars of some sort on the weekends while backcountry skiing. I have pretty good endurance...can ski tour for many hrs without needing to rest. I am very goal driven. I guess I was just giving myself something to shoot for just so my training/exercise more of a purpose behind it... I would gladly take any other suggestions.


    I do wear a HR monitor which I know is not completly accurate but it does give me a rough idea.

    Thanks again!!

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Location
    Big City
    Posts
    434
    Quote Originally Posted by Susan View Post
    But I am thinking about giving Paleo a shot. If only I wouldn't love my oatmeal-breakfast and yoghurt so much
    Do it. Follow the 80/20 rule - 80% of the time you're good, 20% you're not. So cheat on your breakfast if you have to. Once a week I go out with the girls and have some kind of ridiculous wheat and sugar laden dessert. I regret it for a day afterwards (especially since I'm celiac), but at the time... so delicious.

    I will say I haven't lost a pound on Paleo. But I'm a full pant size smaller (probably actually two sizes, since I was like a 4.5 and now my 2s are too loose) and everything I own fits better.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
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    Quote Originally Posted by Susan View Post
    If only I wouldn't love my oatmeal-breakfast and yoghurt so much
    You know, I thought breakfast was going to be hard, and it probably would be if I cut out all the processed foods, but as far as eliminating grain, it turned out to be easy. I just have everything I used to add to make my cereal nutritious and palatable, but skip the cereal. Fruit, nuts, chia seeds, raw sprouted protein powder and milk analogue, and I barely even notice not putting in a couple of flakes.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Central Indiana
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    I think one other thing to consider is that effect that intense or high-volume exercise has on your appetite. When I had the time and energy to ride 5k+ miles a year (on top of yoga and some resistance training), I was hungry all the time. Plus, I had to eat a fair amount to even sustain that level of activity. I find it far easier to lose a few pounds with more moderate exercise as it seems easier--at least to me--to maintain a modest calorie deficit.
    Live with intention. Walk to the edge. Listen hard. Practice wellness. Play with abandon. Laugh. Choose with no regret. Continue to learn. Appreciate your friends. Do what you love. Live as if this is all there is.

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  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
    Location
    Austria
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    Quote Originally Posted by OakLeaf View Post
    You know, I thought breakfast was going to be hard, and it probably would be if I cut out all the processed foods, but as far as eliminating grain, it turned out to be easy. I just have everything I used to add to make my cereal nutritious and palatable, but skip the cereal. Fruit, nuts, chia seeds, raw sprouted protein powder and milk analogue, and I barely even notice not putting in a couple of flakes.
    Thanks Westtexas and OakLeaf for your input. I'm thinking about Paleo not from a weight-loss, but more from a health-perspective (doesn't mean that a few less pounds would hurt me all too much ). I'm hypothyroid and from what I've read eliminating Gluten or even all grains could be helpful.
    But as I already eat very health-conscious, it would be quite a commitment for me further limiting my food options by cutting out grains, certain vegetables, milk... and, depending on how far you want to go, even nuts and seeds.

    Sorry for the thread-hijack - maybe I should better start a Paleo-yes/no thread?

  13. #13
    Join Date
    May 2010
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    Denver
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    I'd also worry about what happens when you STOP burning 1000+ calories a day. You'd really, really have to be conscientious with food and diet to taper down from that or it can be really easy to rebound right back up to that weight.

    "I never met a donut I didn't like" - Dave Wiens

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
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    I'd also worry about what happens when you STOP burning 1000+ calories a day. You'd really, really have to be conscientious with food and diet to taper down from that or it can be really easy to rebound right back up to that weight.
    +1
    I hope you'll find a good long-term solution solobiker.
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  15. #15
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
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    the dry side
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    Quote Originally Posted by solobiker View Post
    Thanks for all of your comments. I don't think I have too much more to lose. I am 5' 6" and weigh about 140. It would be nice to lose about 5 more pounds. I eat pretty clean...no junk food/processed food with the exception of energy bars of some sort on the weekends while backcountry skiing. I have pretty good endurance...can ski tour for many hrs without needing to rest. I am very goal driven. I guess I was just giving myself something to shoot for just so my training/exercise more of a purpose behind it... I would gladly take any other suggestions.


    I do wear a HR monitor which I know is not completly accurate but it does give me a rough idea.

    Thanks again!!

    I'd look at the food piece of things. I recently went from 130 to 121, from 30% body fat to 21%. The main thing I did was nutrition tracking and ramped up my cardio. My goal was to lean out so I was pushing a little less me around skiing and biking. The food tracking thing was huge. I was thinking "sure I eat pretty healthy" but to be concrete about portion size and calories was rather enlightening. Also what I learned about the relationship between base calorie needs, and what you can earn through exercise, was also enlightening.

    The main tool I used was a smart phone app, MyFitnessPal. Now I know a lot of folks dis these apps as approximate at best, but it sure worked for me. I used my age, starting weight and desired weight to set the parameters for the nutrition guidelines it used. The database is huge, the bar code scanner is great, and even adding the scratch stuff I make at home ( I do this a lot!!) wasn't much of an issue. I followed the calorie guidelines pretty much to the t and was even able to follow my intake of protien carb and fats and make adjustments when needed. It was a very educational process and I'm really glad I did it. Plus leaning out like I did - can't complain about that.
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