Open discussion on walking
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What are the best hiking trails in Europe? listening to E. Michael Jones walking in Bavaria makes me want to go for hikes there. I am lucky to live in Norway as the nautre is beautiful. What other landscapes should I consider to go hiking in?
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@Norwegian-Mugabe said in Open discussion on walking:
What are the best hiking trails in Europe? listening to E. Michael Jones walking in Bavaria makes me want to go for hikes there. I am lucky to live in Norway as the nautre is beautiful. What other landscapes should I consider to go hiking in?
Do you prefer hilly or flat terrain?
Slovenia is great. Small and very beautiful country. Great landscape around Bled, Soča valley, Triglav national park etc. Croatia too.
The Netherlands also have some beautiful national parks if you like it more flat. Bavaria and Austria are great, too.
Although I only live about 4 hours from the border, I've never been to Switzerland. But it should be very nice for hiking there too.
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@Luke Thanks for the info. Slovenia seems like a hidden gem. Those places looks like they are from a fairytale.
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@Norwegian-Mugabe said in Open discussion on walking:
@Luke Thanks for the info. Slovenia seems like a hidden gem. Those places looks like they are from a fairytale.
It's really nice. I was there for two weeks in 2019. Also very nice people. And if you ever go into a city there, they are very clean, unlike Germany where everything is full of trash.
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@Luke Immigration is the main reason for trash in Germany. You can see a very clear split in European cities based on immigration levels.
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Walking is great, love areas that are walkable :). Having someone else drive you is an aristocrat trait and I hate the car obsession in America. Not having a car is an example of the horseshoe theory for the poor and the very rich.
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@LinDaiyu nice hahahah
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The thing with walks is that when you get off your own personal beaten tracks, even in your city or town, that not so familiar imagery adds up and then... You're back home and everything looks fresh and new.
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@Sugar @Norwegian-Mugabe @Caray
what do you listen to when u walk?
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@Aryan_Racist Nothing. I contemplate it however if it's a serotonin-fuelled doomer nightwalk. Some light talk radio station is fine. But I like to spend the nights indoors or in company.
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@Aryan_Racist I just listen to the sounds in nature. I think you will not recieve all the same stress-release benefits if you listen to classical music or podcast while walking. It is a delight to listen to: the wind, the birds, and to the energy of water.
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Have any evolutionary biologists written about how birdsong might sound beautiful because it signals resources? This might in part be the reason we are so fond of trees too. Beautiful trees need sufficient water and light to grow. The energy that is stored in trees has been vital for humans since before we became homo sapiens.
It struck me today that your typical bird is much more musically gifted than the median man. The rhythm and tempo of the birds are truly breathtaking. It is also odd that birds with so limited mental capacity are in need of such complex music for mating. When I listen to birds, I feel that they sing to us. I assume we are the only ones able to appreciate the stunning beauty of birdsong. -
"During the 1870s and 1880s, America's most popular spectator sport wasn't baseball, or football—it was competitive walking. Inside sold-out arenas, competitors walked around dirt tracks almost nonstop for six straight days, risking their health and sanity to see who could walk the farthest—500 miles was standard"
https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/20575443
The Last Great Walk by Wayne Curtis.
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I have been walking more this year and I feel better. Has anyone else been walking more? if so, what benefits are you experiencing?
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Yea walking is extremely underappreciated.
Walking will override terrible metabolism and get things moving in the right direction. One of the fastest drug free ways to lose weight without feeling terrible in the end. Just need to make time.
Dropped ~30lbs in 3months averaging 2hrs/5mi a day. Ate around maintenance calories +/-200. Most importantly, I didn't feel like shit or have to deal with rebound that comes with crashing calories to get the same fat loss rate.
A 'W' all around.
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@Jaffe You are right that losing weight without cutting calories is a much better long-term approach. Walking also makes you feel good. The increase in testosterone and lowering of cortisol improves life as much as anything else. The key is to create an upward spiral and keep going
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The more I walk, the more time I spend in the sun. I think this is to a large degree, where the benefits of walking come from. I think treadmills are a curse. Light is key to hormonal production, so this might explain how that Colorado fucker doubled his T-levels in one month.
I think the studies on jogging and high-intensity cardio overestimate the benefits of such activity. If you take a group of middle-aged or older people who perform jogging, then you are studying people who already have better health than the control group. People who jog are also bound to take better care of their diet. I genuinely think walking and low-intensity swimming are the finest forms of cardio. Jogging demands too much of the body and boosts the likelihood of injury more than necessary. Moreover, mainstream science miscalculates the implication of stress. Long slow-paced hiking trips in beautiful stimulating environments with good food have to be the best form of cardio.
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i suggest biking, its fun especially on hills
if u go fast it mitigates most of the stressful effects of running like impact force on joints
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@Norwegian-Mugabe said in Open discussion on walking:
I think treadmills are a curse.
I think that treadmilling is an inferior form of walking. It dulls the mind and requires very little thinking. The gyms have treadmills with built-in access to the internet so that one can watch something while one mindlessly walks on the treadmill.
I like the image below in that it reminds me of the old RPF.
The Sense-Think-Act Cycle is used in programming of robotic devices. (see)
With treadmilling, one is stuck in an endless loop and there is very little need to adjust the details of of each step to the environment. In contrast, when I am walking outside I am navigating the terrain and actively thinking. This is one of the reasons that trees and other vegetation do not need a brain; they do not move.
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Adequate walking, sleeping, meat and dairy is probably all you really need to be healthy. I have bought a couple pedometers to track my steps, but keep losing them, so I've had to resort to counting my steps again. Of course, I don't count every step like a madman, but only every other step. At the end of my walk I multiply that number by 2 to get the total number of steps.