No calories burned for snow blowing???

chetfreeman
chetfreeman Posts: 9 Member
edited November 12 in Fitness and Exercise
The MFP database has no calories burned for snow blowing???!!!. I guess all MFP users live down south and what with global warming it's not needed. Fortnately other websites do.
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Replies

  • auddii
    auddii Posts: 15,357 Member
    Try using a shovel instead.
  • girlwithcurls2
    girlwithcurls2 Posts: 2,281 Member
    Snow blowing=walking
  • arditarose
    arditarose Posts: 15,573 Member
    auddii wrote: »
    Try using a shovel instead.

    lol
  • belimawr
    belimawr Posts: 1,155 Member
    edited January 2015
    auddii wrote: »
    Try using a shovel instead.

    No joke, this is the way I always do it, just for the exercise. I always break a sweat, even in a t-shirt on a 20 degree day.

    Just be careful, of course, lift properly.
  • chetfreeman
    chetfreeman Posts: 9 Member
    Actually I do blow most of the snow with my blower, not my lips. I just don't have enough hot air. I try to avoid using a shovel except for the places the blower doesn't do. LOL. But now I need the calorie burn rate for blizzard blowing. We're supposed to get 20 to 30." If you equate snow blowing to walking you must do your walking at 10 mph.
  • mommyofjan
    mommyofjan Posts: 65 Member
    It's probably close to push mowing the lawn. Good luck with the snow that is coming!
  • LazyNightOwl
    LazyNightOwl Posts: 166 Member
    I had to shovel this morning and broke a sweat in my jacket, very uncomfortable feeling...yuck!
  • diegops1
    diegops1 Posts: 154 Member
    I shovel, but if I wanted a snow blower, I would hire the big bad wolf instead of spending several hundred(thousand?) dollars on a gasoline powered device. Huff & puff ;-)
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    OP I think you are too concerned with a minor, one time, calorie burn from a snow blower...
  • kmash32
    kmash32 Posts: 275 Member
    edited January 2015
    If you really want to know google it. There are several sites that list it. (Sorry can't figure out how to cook and paste URL with tablet)

  • meritage4
    meritage4 Posts: 1,441 Member
    I'd put it similar to lawn mowing.
  • missiontofitness
    missiontofitness Posts: 4,059 Member
    I wouldn't log it period.
    Without a HRM (which would probably be innacurate, due to the vibration of the snow blower), it's impossible to know how much you actually burned during it, and risk overestimating your exercise calories.

    Log purposeful exercise.
  • spencch
    spencch Posts: 4 Member
    A number of variables, including your own weight and the depth of the snow (more difficult to snow blow 18 inches of snow than 4). One of the on-line calculators have put the calories burned at 305 calories/hour for someone that weighs 150 pounds.

    That seems a reasonable estimate for the amount of work involved.
  • dbmata
    dbmata Posts: 12,950 Member
    The MFP database has no calories burned for snow blowing???!!!. I guess all MFP users live down south and what with global warming it's not needed. Fortnately other websites do.

    You're walking behind a motorized stroller.

    There's no calorie burn for it, come on.
  • bwogilvie
    bwogilvie Posts: 2,130 Member
    edited January 2015
    I don't log blowing snow with my self-propelled, 2-stage snowblower, because I'm basically just walking along behind it slowly and steering. There is somewhat more work involved when I pull it backwards (faster than shifting into reverse), or pushing it into a particularly dense patch, but not that much. I just figure that it's part of my normal routine. I do log shoveling snow, since that's real work.

    If I were using a one-stage snowblower without a motorized drive, I would log it as walking.
  • mcltre36
    mcltre36 Posts: 9 Member
    edited February 2015
    Depends on the amount of snow you are blowing. A couple inches would be just like a lawn mower - A couple feet is a different story if you are pulling and pushing the blower into the the bank. I just spent 2 hours cleaning a 4 car driveway after 2 feet of snow - and its nothing like pushing a lawn mower or walking behind a motorized stroller...
  • dbmata
    dbmata Posts: 12,950 Member
    No, doesn't depend. It's a motorized stroller for adult men.

    Granted, they're fun, but yeah... no... not a workout. Not hard to do, and about as minimal an effort one can put into snow play.
  • JoRocka
    JoRocka Posts: 17,525 Member
    mcltre36 wrote: »
    Depends on the amount of snow you are blowing. A couple inches would be just like a lawn mower - A couple feet is a different story if you are pulling and pushing the blower into the the bank. I just spent 2 hours cleaning a 4 car driveway after 2 feet of snow - and its nothing like pushing a lawn mower or walking behind a motorized stroller...

    put that away - get out a shovel- and then you have a real calorie burn.
  • abrockway21
    abrockway21 Posts: 1 Member
    dbmata wrote: »
    The MFP database has no calories burned for snow blowing???!!!. I guess all MFP users live down south and what with global warming it's not needed. Fortnately other websites do.

    You're walking behind a motorized stroller.

    There's no calorie burn for it, come on.

    -As I sip coffee from my kitchen watching a plow truck clear 3 inches of snow away.
    I'd love to invite these idiots up north after a 2 ft storm of wet heavy snow. Battling the 4 ft snowbanks next to the road and clearing the rest of the driveway for 2 1/2 hours works up a hell of a sweat. There's still a ton of pushing and pulling that 200 lb snowblower. If you've never done it, don't comment.
  • BrianSharpe
    BrianSharpe Posts: 9,248 Member
    dbmata wrote: »
    The MFP database has no calories burned for snow blowing???!!!. I guess all MFP users live down south and what with global warming it's not needed. Fortnately other websites do.

    You're walking behind a motorized stroller.

    There's no calorie burn for it, come on.

    -As I sip coffee from my kitchen watching a plow truck clear 3 inches of snow away.
    I'd love to invite these idiots up north after a 2 ft storm of wet heavy snow. Battling the 4 ft snowbanks next to the road and clearing the rest of the driveway for 2 1/2 hours works up a hell of a sweat. There's still a ton of pushing and pulling that 200 lb snowblower. If you've never done it, don't comment.

    2 1/2 hours? You must have one heck of a driveway..... strong first post though, calling other members idiots.

    Bad news though, working up a sweat does not correlate with calorie expenditure. Even if you equated to activity to 2.5 hours of strength training you'd be looking at 500 or 600 calories.
  • TR0berts
    TR0berts Posts: 7,739 Member
    dbmata wrote: »
    The MFP database has no calories burned for snow blowing???!!!. I guess all MFP users live down south and what with global warming it's not needed. Fortnately other websites do.

    You're walking behind a motorized stroller.

    There's no calorie burn for it, come on.

    -As I sip coffee from my kitchen watching a plow truck clear 3 inches of snow away.
    I'd love to invite these idiots up north after a 2 ft storm of wet heavy snow. Battling the 4 ft snowbanks next to the road and clearing the rest of the driveway for 2 1/2 hours works up a hell of a sweat. There's still a ton of pushing and pulling that 200 lb snowblower. If you've never done it, don't comment.

    Nice 2-yo resurrection.

    BTW - I live in CT and got hammered with snow. I snowblew my driveway and patio. Can I comment? If so, then I'll just say that I didn't burn much until I had to use my shovel.
  • Chieflrg
    Chieflrg Posts: 9,097 Member
    I don't know about blowing snow but the ratio is one beer every 15' in said snow for maintenance.

  • Ninkyou
    Ninkyou Posts: 6,666 Member
    Consider anything you did actually burn as a bonus and warm up with a hot chocolate. Next time do some shovelling and build a luge for the kids to sled down. You'll be a hero.
  • LunaticBunny
    LunaticBunny Posts: 2 Member


    -As I sip coffee from my kitchen watching a plow truck clear 3 inches of snow away.
    I'd love to invite these idiots up north after a 2 ft storm of wet heavy snow. Battling the 4 ft snowbanks next to the road and clearing the rest of the driveway for 2 1/2 hours works up a hell of a sweat. There's still a ton of pushing and pulling that 200 lb snowblower. If you've never done it, don't comment.[/quote]

    Agree. When we actually had the snow blower working, it didn't turn corners with ease you had to fight with it. It didn't have reverse to you tried to avoid it. It can be hard work using a snow blower.
    Its harder now since our snow blower has died, its the shovel or if I'm lucky the Hubby will actually use a tractor. ( hardly never, only once this winter)
  • jjpptt2
    jjpptt2 Posts: 5,650 Member
    As someone said previously, there are a lot of variables. Due to the fact that you don't do it every day, that's its not done as a workout/for exercise, and the wild inexactness of estimating calories burned, I wouldn't bother logging it. If nothing else, it would give me a little buffer for the times I underestimate calories consumed.

    If you insist on logging it, log something pretty low. Even if you're fighting with a big snowblower on rough ground, it's not going to be a large calorie burn. I'd probably log it like I did weight lifting... something like 3-5cals per minute.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    dbmata wrote: »
    The MFP database has no calories burned for snow blowing???!!!. I guess all MFP users live down south and what with global warming it's not needed. Fortnately other websites do.

    You're walking behind a motorized stroller.

    There's no calorie burn for it, come on.

    -As I sip coffee from my kitchen watching a plow truck clear 3 inches of snow away.
    I'd love to invite these idiots up north after a 2 ft storm of wet heavy snow. Battling the 4 ft snowbanks next to the road and clearing the rest of the driveway for 2 1/2 hours works up a hell of a sweat. There's still a ton of pushing and pulling that 200 lb snowblower. If you've never done it, don't comment.

    Strong 1st post on a necro thread...

    Necro2.jpg
  • bagge72
    bagge72 Posts: 1,377 Member
    dbmata wrote: »
    The MFP database has no calories burned for snow blowing???!!!. I guess all MFP users live down south and what with global warming it's not needed. Fortnately other websites do.

    You're walking behind a motorized stroller.

    There's no calorie burn for it, come on.

    -As I sip coffee from my kitchen watching a plow truck clear 3 inches of snow away.
    I'd love to invite these idiots up north after a 2 ft storm of wet heavy snow. Battling the 4 ft snowbanks next to the road and clearing the rest of the driveway for 2 1/2 hours works up a hell of a sweat. There's still a ton of pushing and pulling that 200 lb snowblower. If you've never done it, don't comment.

    I live up north, and though it does take a long time to use the snow blower if I'm doing my parents house, and I do sweat, I do realize that it is because I'm wearing a lot of clothes, and moving around, not because I'm putting an extreme amount of exertion into doing the task. I sweat a lot more from shoveling my 1 car driveway and front walk in a 6" storm than I do snow-blowing my parents 8 car driveway on one side, and their 2 car on the other side in a 20" snow storm.

  • bagge72
    bagge72 Posts: 1,377 Member
    Ugh, you guys made me post on an old thread!
  • DopeItUp
    DopeItUp Posts: 18,771 Member
    This thread has everything I could want. Random insults from clueless people, multi-year necro, completely unrelated posts and plenty of sarcasm and snark. Thank you.
  • Tacklewasher
    Tacklewasher Posts: 7,122 Member
    DopeItUp wrote: »
    This thread has everything I could want. Random insults from clueless people, multi-year necro, completely unrelated posts and plenty of sarcasm and snark. Thank you.

    Topped off with most of the replies from people who don't understand that snow blowing can be a daily, or at least 2-3 times a week, thing for 4 months of the year.

    Dammit. Now I'm doing the necro thing too.
This discussion has been closed.