how in the hell are these people getting 900 calorie burns
Replies
-
I wear the bodybugg and it auto adjusts my calories based on the device.0
-
According to my HRM, my 10.2 mile slog through the slush, snow and ice yesterday earned me nearly 1200 calories in 1:37:00. Get your HR up to an average of 161 for an hour and a half and you'll burn the calories, too.0
-
its dependant i walk to commute so thats 80 minutes walking plus a dog wlk and a 40-60 min work out a day easily does me a 600-800 burn!0
-
An hour of Zumba would get me 800+ if I pushed myself...and I'm not carrying a whole lot of extra weight, so it can be done.0
-
There may be ways to burn more calories, but Yoga is strenght training and helps to build muscle. It also stretches and tones your muscles. Monday is Yoga day, Tuesday is cardio day...0
-
How are people getting 900 calries burned in a workout. I do insanity etc and still burn no where close to that.
Incorrect use of HRM.
Outright delusion.
Etc.
A 200-pounder has to run over 7miles to net a 900 calorie burn - but people are going to believe what they want to believe. And then they'll stall on weight loss and call the advice-givers rude meanies...
And so it goes, this thing of ours....
EDIT: There is the 5% or so of MFP who is fit enough and active enough to do it, but the vast majority here are completely out to lunch on their burns.
Mean Ol negative Nancy... MOST of the people here use HRMs or the monitors on the gym equiptment, its easy to get up into the high hundreds burning cals if you keeo your heart rate higher for longer periods of time.
I use a Polar Monitor, and during my longer Les Mills Combat cardio workouts i can get up into the low 600's if i really push myself, and thats in about 55 minutes.
its completely possible.0 -
According to my hrm, yoga and strength training are worthless for a calorie burn. Burning only 104 calories in a yoga class...can I have my hour back
Does anyone really think yoga burns calories?Burning calories isn't the purpose of yoga.
Clearly all types of yoga aren't created equal. Yoga gives me a pretty good workout.0 -
with running its physics...it takes x amount of energy to move x amount of weight over x amount of distance...i typically burn 1500+ calories during a half marathon but as my wieght goes down so will that burn!
There it is ^ That's your answer.
Now stop worrying about other peoples burns, cals, eat backs or not. Concentrate on your goals and outcomes. You are not them. Let them worry about themselves. Geez....0 -
According to my hrm, yoga and strength training are worthless for a calorie burn. Burning only 104 calories in a yoga class...can I have my hour back
Does anyone really think yoga burns calories?Burning calories isn't the purpose of yoga.
Clearly all types of yoga aren't created equal. Yoga gives me a pretty good workout.
Different forms of yoga, different results, different purposes.
the purpose of running is to catch food, escape predators, or cover ground quickly. But it also works as cardio.0 -
Depends on the intensity of your workout, really.
I work out until I feel like I'm about to fall apart.0 -
Hour and a half usually nets me around 1200, cycling and walking. I wear a BodyMedia so its a pretty accurate estimate.An hour of Zumba would get me 800+ if I pushed myself...and I'm not carrying a whole lot of extra weight, so it can be done.0
-
according to mfp, i burned 1222 calories today, doing 138 mins of walking, i don't own a heart rate monitor so no idea how far off it really is, it was done over 3 sessions (3 school runs) i walked uphill pushing a heavy pushchair (daughter weighs approx 35lbs) with my son dragging it back half of the way, i walked at about 3-3.5 mph for half of that, and 3.5-4 mph for the other half, i also used endomondo to track this, thats how i know how fast i was walking on average
endomondo gives me about 2/3 of these calories
i personally think both are way off, any thoughts?0 -
I hope for three fifty in an hour....0
-
It takes me an hour of CrossFit (including warm up and strength) and an hour of heavy bag kickboxing to get close to 900...but I like these exercises, so I do them. It's about so much more than the burn for me...
Running is probably the easiest way to get there, but it takes a lot of stamina (and, thus, a lot of hard work) to get to a point where you can run for 60 minutes. The people who can do that are in really good shape!
Focus on finding an exercise you love, rather then the calories. If you love it, you'll keep going and it's sustainable practice that gets results.0 -
Hour and a half usually nets me around 1200, cycling and walking. I wear a BodyMedia so its a pretty accurate estimate.An hour of Zumba would get me 800+ if I pushed myself...and I'm not carrying a whole lot of extra weight, so it can be done.
Id say its high 90's, just as a matter of knowing I'll export all the data from the past year and do the math out.0 -
according to mfp, i burned 1222 calories today, doing 138 mins of walking, i don't own a heart rate monitor so no idea how far off it really is, it was done over 3 sessions (3 school runs) i walked uphill pushing a heavy pushchair (daughter weighs approx 35lbs) with my son dragging it back half of the way, i walked at about 3-3.5 mph for half of that, and 3.5-4 mph for the other half, i also used endomondo to track this, thats how i know how fast i was walking on average
endomondo gives me about 2/3 of these calories
i personally think both are way off, any thoughts?
http://www.exrx.net/Calculators/WalkRunMETs.html0 -
idk, HRMs are funny.
I can get more calories burned jumping rope then the same amount of time in an insanity work out. I'm defeintly breathing faster and far more tired during the insanity workout, but i can get my about the same amount of calorie burn out of both.
Insanity definetly seems like i'm burning more calories based on effort, but who the hell knows.
I just wear the HRM to record the highest my HR gets and how long i can stay in a particular range. thats like my point of measure to bring some objectivity to evaluating how good my workout was0 -
It takes me an hour of CrossFit (including warm up and strength) and an hour of heavy bag kickboxing to get close to 900...but I like these exercises, so I do them. It's about so much more than the burn for me...
Running is probably the easiest way to get there, but it takes a lot of stamina (and, thus, a lot of hard work) to get to a point where you can run for 60 minutes. The people who can do that are in really good shape!
Focus on finding an exercise you love, rather then the calories. If you love it, you'll keep going and it's sustainable practice that gets results.
id say running will give you a more accurate reading on HRM, not sure if it produces the biggest burn in reality. I would think that swiming, rowing, or even circuit training at a similair intensity might burn more.0 -
When I used to mountain bike, back when I weighed 185 lbs, wearing an HRM, and rode a single speed bike, I would burn 1600+ calories in 2+ hours of cycling.
Keep in mind, I never took it easy, and riding a SS bike, you need to SPRINT up hill (which is almost all the time). If you have the time and the fitness, mountain biking is one of the most intense full-body workouts you can get.0 -
If you weigh more, you burn more calories faster. Try wearing a 100lb sac on your shoulders and see how much more you burn0
-
according to mfp, i burned 1222 calories today, doing 138 mins of walking, i don't own a heart rate monitor so no idea how far off it really is, it was done over 3 sessions (3 school runs) i walked uphill pushing a heavy pushchair (daughter weighs approx 35lbs) with my son dragging it back half of the way, i walked at about 3-3.5 mph for half of that, and 3.5-4 mph for the other half, i also used endomondo to track this, thats how i know how fast i was walking on average
endomondo gives me about 2/3 of these calories
i personally think both are way off, any thoughts?
http://www.exrx.net/Calculators/WalkRunMETs.html
thanks it's interesting, gave me 868 cals, and that was without factoring in my faster pace for some of it, or pushing the pushchair, definitely a lot more than what i was expecting0 -
Some people may also be miscalculating. Myfitnesspal massively over exaggerates calories burnt.0
-
Everyone is going to burn calories at different rates... it just makes since that a 300lb person is going to burn more than a 120lb person. It's weight vs intensity = calories burned...
Plus what are you doing... walking for an hour isn't going to burn the same as someone playing basketball...
The debate can rage on... but I have decided that after having a workout routine in place for over a year and using a hrm for a little over a week now.
I take my BMR 1360 a day....
and I divide it by 24hours in a day... 57 cals... per hour(ish)...
Take my HRM reading for one hour and subtract 57 from it... that's my cals that I track.
Out of those calories leftover I have decided to eat back all of them except 30% ...
There's just way to many ways around trying to figure out each persons strengths and weaknesses. The number one goal that I think 80% on this website miss is this: ITS A LIFESTYLE CHANGE! It's a life style... it's your life! You're going to have good days, great days, horrible days, and it's ok... because honest if you're making the right changes... it will all balance out.
Sure we all want to be skinny or fit or muscled up overnight... that's the way that society is these days; but the fact remains... it takes time...
So have some patience and figure out what works for you; because what works for others isn't always the best fit for your life.
Best of Luck!! :flowerforyou:0 -
I usually burn about 4-6calories a minute depending on the workout. Im 5"5 and 152lbs. If I do treadmill running intervals I can burn 210 cals in 30mins. Obviously if you are heavy then doing certain things will be a higher burn then if a smaller person did them0
-
Depends on your weight, the intensity of the workout, and the time involved.
A workout that mixes cardio with strength may have periods where you really aren't burning much because you're focussing on strength right then rather than cardio.
A workout that is solid cardio from start to finish will burn more, but then you really should add in strength later anyway.
As for the weight issue. Think about it this way. If woman is 35 years old, 5 foot 6 inches tall, and weighs 140 pounds, and another woman is 35 years old, 5 foot 6 inches tall, and weighs 240 pounds, and they both do the same workout, at the same speed, for the same duration, the 240 pound woman is going to burn a lot more because, compared to the 140 pound woman, its as if she is doing the entire workout wearing a 100 backpack! That automatically increases the calorie burn and effort required to complete the workout.0 -
It takes me an hour of CrossFit (including warm up and strength) and an hour of heavy bag kickboxing to get close to 900...but I like these exercises, so I do them. It's about so much more than the burn for me...
Running is probably the easiest way to get there, but it takes a lot of stamina (and, thus, a lot of hard work) to get to a point where you can run for 60 minutes. The people who can do that are in really good shape!
Focus on finding an exercise you love, rather then the calories. If you love it, you'll keep going and it's sustainable practice that gets results.
id say running will give you a more accurate reading on HRM, not sure if it produces the biggest burn in reality. I would think that swiming, rowing, or even circuit training at a similair intensity might burn more.
Quite possibly right, especially with swimming and rowing. Rowing is great. I've clocked it at about 100 calories/10 minutes, give or take.
I take my burns with a grain of salt, which is why I usually leave 100-300 calories from exercise on the table.0 -
*Most* of the time, it's completely bogus.0
-
How are people getting 900 calries burned in a workout. I do insanity etc and still burn no where close to that.
Incorrect use of HRM.
Outright delusion.
Etc.
A 200-pounder has to run over 7miles to net a 900 calorie burn - but people are going to believe what they want to believe. And then they'll stall on weight loss and call the advice-givers rude meanies...
And so it goes, this thing of ours....
EDIT: There is the 5% or so of MFP who is fit enough and active enough to do it, but the vast majority here are completely out to lunch on their burns.
Quoting for emphasis.
Also, you have to realize that an HRM is Heart Rate Monitor. It is to measure heart rate. The calories burned is just a mathematical estimate not much different than anything else that "estimates" calories burned. Heart rate does not directly correlate to calories burned.0 -
I mechanic as a hobby. When doing so I walk around my shop (2500 sq. ft.) and turn wrenches pretty much non stop for 12+ hours at a time. While I'm not winded I can tell by the end of the day that I've done work. Since there's no exercise entry for turning wrenches I just use walking, 2mph, for the number of hours I spend at the shop since its the least physically exerting option. It always results in massive calories burnt, 1000-1700 depending on how long I work. I always wonder if it could possibly be accurate. It might be overestimating since I'm not winded when I do it, but I could possibly be burning more since I feel like the work I do is definitely more exerting than walking.
I work in a restaurant for a living. Often I spend 8+ hours at a time standing, jogging from station to station, making food rapidly, etc. I use walking for this also. In all honesty, this works me harder than the shop does but I wonder if I am using the best exercise entry for this, too. I will work up a sweat when I do it but again, according to the app, walking slowly for 8+ hours at a time is worth 1000+ calories.
In both these cases I get home late at night, sometimes eat dinner, and go to bed. I don't consume nearly the calories the app says I've burned. Sometimes it results in zero calorie intake for that day since I've burned more than I ate. My brother doubts I am burning as many as the app says I am. He may be right, but I do know I'm burning way more than the average person does throughout a day. Who knows?0 -
I get mine by running the vacuum for 15 minutes. That's 900 minimum! i broke my metabolisms in the other direction!0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 426 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions