I'm new here, so patience please. :)
Naturebeckles
Posts: 44
Hello,
I read all the articles today for newbies and I did not see my concern addressed. So, I apologize if this has been asked before, but here goes...
I'm doing a mix of strength training and cardio 4 days a week at the gym here at work before I go home each day. I do work out for about 40-45 minutes a day, but not all of that is cardio. About 10-15 minutes of that time is strength training. I do different muscle groups on opposite days so the muscles I worked the previous day get their rest. My question is, why isn't strength training counted towards my time exercised a day? And why aren't the calories counted either? I feel like my calorie/time goals for exercise for the week is skewed because it only counts my cardio time and calories per day.
Thanks for taking the time to answer me.
Naturebeckles
I read all the articles today for newbies and I did not see my concern addressed. So, I apologize if this has been asked before, but here goes...
I'm doing a mix of strength training and cardio 4 days a week at the gym here at work before I go home each day. I do work out for about 40-45 minutes a day, but not all of that is cardio. About 10-15 minutes of that time is strength training. I do different muscle groups on opposite days so the muscles I worked the previous day get their rest. My question is, why isn't strength training counted towards my time exercised a day? And why aren't the calories counted either? I feel like my calorie/time goals for exercise for the week is skewed because it only counts my cardio time and calories per day.
Thanks for taking the time to answer me.
Naturebeckles
0
Replies
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I noticed this as well. I am also wondering as to why it does not add to the calorie count0
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Yeah it's strange isn't it? I log my strength training as cardio. I have to calculate my calories burned but then it shows up on my feed as exercise.0
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You can add it as a cardivascular exercise, just search strength training.0
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I'm not an admin at the site but it honestly it strength training is very subjective, the best way to imput those calories and time would be to go and by an Heart Rate Monitor. This could also be said for cardio but that gives you at least a general idea.
Some people rest 10 seconds between sets, others do cardio in the middle of their rest, other tackle two groups so while their resting one area they're working another to keep their heart rate up, some people at the gym wait almost 2 mins between sets and hog the equipment (grr... crazy spandex guy).
What at least one of my friends on mfp does is she tracks her strength training in the "Strength" section sets, weights and what not, but she also added her own excersie in the cardio which I think she calls Lifting which she put the calories per min the same as a slow walk.
I hope this helps and welcome to the site0 -
Calories burned strength training are often not significant and are covered by the activity factor when estimating TDEE. You can always add some calories and track it to see if you are still losing fat.0
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If you are only doing 10-15 minutes, you really aren't burning enough to log it. Think about strength training and cardio/calorie deficit this way: strength training is for your body shape, cardio and/or a calorie deficit is for fat loss.0
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Its under cardio0
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I was wondering the same thing. I do about 60 minutes of cardio. I do weights for about 40 minutes. How don't don the normal resting time between sets. I work hard on these and thought it should come off the calories too. How would you convert that to calories? Thank you for any help. I new at this too.0
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If you are only doing 10-15 minutes, you really aren't burning enough to log it. Think about strength training and cardio/calorie deficit this way: strength training is for your body shape, cardio and/or a calorie deficit is for fat loss.
I figure every little bit counts first of all, and secondly I know strength training is for body shape. It's also to build lean muscle to make my muscles more efficient and burn more calories. My real problem is I just need to get my butt in gear in the morning to get to work earlier so I can get off work earlier and work out longer before I go home. But at least my workout is 40-45 minutes all together for now.0 -
The strength training section is just to keep track of your progress on your reps and sets.
To actually have it log calories burned, you have to enter it under cardio.0 -
Hello,
I read all the articles today for newbies and I did not see my concern addressed. So, I apologize if this has been asked before, but here goes...
I'm doing a mix of strength training and cardio 4 days a week at the gym here at work before I go home each day. I do work out for about 40-45 minutes a day, but not all of that is cardio. About 10-15 minutes of that time is strength training. I do different muscle groups on opposite days so the muscles I worked the previous day get their rest. My question is, why isn't strength training counted towards my time exercised a day? And why aren't the calories counted either? I feel like my calorie/time goals for exercise for the week is skewed because it only counts my cardio time and calories per day.
Thanks for taking the time to answer me.
Naturebeckles
I log it under Circuit Training in my cardio.0 -
I'm not an admin at the site but it honestly it strength training is very subjective, the best way to imput those calories and time would be to go and by an Heart Rate Monitor. This could also be said for cardio but that gives you at least a general idea.
Some people rest 10 seconds between sets, others do cardio in the middle of their rest, other tackle two groups so while their resting one area they're working another to keep their heart rate up, some people at the gym wait almost 2 mins between sets and hog the equipment (grr... crazy spandex guy).
What at least one of my friends on mfp does is she tracks her strength training in the "Strength" section sets, weights and what not, but she also added her own excersie in the cardio which I think she calls Lifting which she put the calories per min the same as a slow walk.
I hope this helps and welcome to the site
^ perfect answer IMO0 -
Thanks, everyone. I'll log my reps and weight and then manually calculate what I'm doing and add it to the cardio. I knew I'd find the answer if I asked.0
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I'm not an admin at the site but it honestly it strength training is very subjective, the best way to imput those calories and time would be to go and by an Heart Rate Monitor. This could also be said for cardio but that gives you at least a general idea.
Some people rest 10 seconds between sets, others do cardio in the middle of their rest, other tackle two groups so while their resting one area they're working another to keep their heart rate up, some people at the gym wait almost 2 mins between sets and hog the equipment (grr... crazy spandex guy).
What at least one of my friends on mfp does is she tracks her strength training in the "Strength" section sets, weights and what not, but she also added her own excersie in the cardio which I think she calls Lifting which she put the calories per min the same as a slow walk.
I hope this helps and welcome to the site
Unfortunately everything that I've read states that HRMs are not very accurate at recording calories burned during strength training. They are best for steady-state cardio, which was very disappointing for me to read since I'd been using it to track a variety of workouts for years.
Anyway, when I started NROL4W, I decided to buy a BodyMedia because I did want a more accurate picture of calories burned during strength training.
If you are going to use a HRM, I would recommend deducting a percentage of the total burned, just to be on the safe side.0 -
If you are only doing 10-15 minutes, you really aren't burning enough to log it. Think about strength training and cardio/calorie deficit this way: strength training is for your body shape, cardio and/or a calorie deficit is for fat loss.
I figure every little bit counts first of all, and secondly I know strength training is for body shape. It's also to build lean muscle to make my muscles more efficient and burn more calories. My real problem is I just need to get my butt in gear in the morning to get to work earlier so I can get off work earlier and work out longer before I go home. But at least my workout is 40-45 minutes all together for now.
The guidelines for fitness say 5 days a week for 30 minutes a day. You should be able to get a quality training program in that time if you ramp up intensity as you increase in fitness.0 -
The strength training section is just to keep track of your progress on your reps and sets.
To actually have it log calories burned, you have to enter it under cardio.
This. I used to not log my strength training unless I broke a sweat but, since I've started NRoL4W, I don't have to worry about not sweating anymore.0
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