Count ALL vegetable calories?
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ds6099
Posts: 98 Member
I try not to eat my exercise calories back. But mfp gives me 1240 calories and if I run 6 miles, am I to include all veggies too such as zucchini Nd cucumbers???
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Calories are calories. Not sure what running 6 miles has to do with whether or not to count a cucumber.0
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It depends on how accurate you want to be.
I personally skip on logging things like a leaf of lettuce which has almost negligible calories.
However, if you eat a ton of veggies and don't weigh anything, those calories, although small individually, can start adding up.0 -
Everything counts.0
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I do count it all because it adds up, especially on a smaller calorie allowance. I'm more relaxed about things like lettuce because it's basically negligible.0
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I include all my veggie calories.0
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If you run 6 miles with any kind of regularity and only have 10 pounds to lose, your calorie goal should be way higher than 1240, unless you're about 4' tall.
If you're not going to eat your exercise calories, be sure to adjust your activity level.0 -
I'm still new to mfp and yes, I feel that 1240 is too little. I need to play with the settings and adjust I guess..0
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All vegetables have calories. I log them all.
You should probably rethink eating back exercise calories. You aren't eating much and you need energy to fuel those runs. With such a big deficit you will be losing more lean muscle mass than you would with a smaller deficit. This will not help you achieve your fitness goals.0 -
Everyone does it differently and you have to do what works for you.
For me, I don't see the point in counting some of the calories. If I'm going to count them because I want a good estimate of what I'm taking in, I'm counting all of them. Carrots count just like hamburgers.
Different people have different goals, though.0 -
I adjusted my settings to 'active' so now it's 1460 calories. That's more manageable0
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I try not to eat my exercise calories back. But mfp gives me 1240 calories and if I run 6 miles, am I to include all veggies too such as zucchini Nd cucumbers???
MFP gives me 1250 cal. But that's a net number.
In other words ...
If I don't do any exercise one day, I eat 1250 cal.
If I walk 1 hour and burn 200 cal, I can eat up to 1450 cal.
If I cycle 1 hour and burn 400 cal, I can eat up to 1650 cal.
I might not eat that much, I might only eat half my exercise calories back. But half the point of doing exercise is so that I can eat more.
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christinev297 wrote: »
This is an interesting article about determining activity level based on steps per day. I aim for at least 10,000 steps per day. I'm not a mailman or a high energy athlete, but according to my vivofit my daily average is 10,989. That being said, I've only put my my activity level as slightly active, not at the active level this indicates I would be at. Others may feel like they are more active though with the same number of steps.0 -
Fruit and vege can be pretty cheap, personally if I have an apple or something a day, then I won't bother. TDEE is an approximation, MFP exercise cals are an approximation, dietary info in the MFP database can vary from entry to entry and is likely an approximation. All things considered you will never know the exact input and output, too many variables to measure accurately. Even if you religiously log everything, safe to say your net diary is probably +/- 100 cals (I'm guessing) or more to what you actually processed.0
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Where are you gonna draw the line for counting vs. not counting?
Count 'em all.0 -
Gotta count 'em all
CAL-O-RIES
veggies might be lower in calories than say bacon but they aren't zero. Better off logging them instead of wondering what you didn't lose weight.0 -
Sounds good but I will use veggies towards exercise calories so I should have enough to eat.
Am I considered active or lightly active if I run 4.5-6 miles 6 days a week?0 -
Fruit and vege can be pretty cheap, personally if I have an apple or something a day, then I won't bother. TDEE is an approximation, MFP exercise cals are an approximation, dietary info in the MFP database can vary from entry to entry and is likely an approximation. All things considered you will never know the exact input and output, too many variables to measure accurately. Even if you religiously log everything, safe to say your net diary is probably +/- 100 cals (I'm guessing) or more to what you actually processed.
I don't get this-so why not log an item that can be over 100 calories and have an even bigger variable? I can eat an Oreo for less calories than an apple-do I log that? If you're going to spend time logging-may as well be as accurate as possible.0
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