Exercising In Cars/On Planes
eeyore9990
Posts: 8 Member
This may seem silly, and I apologize for that, but I am often in a position where I'm spending 10+ hours in a vehicle or on an airplane.
IS there a form of cardio I can do while confined in such close quarters?
Thanks in advance!
IS there a form of cardio I can do while confined in such close quarters?
Thanks in advance!
0
Replies
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TeacupsAndToning wrote: »I hope you're not doing cardio while driving.
LOL, no. Just a passenger!0 -
Maybe one of those desk cycles would work in a car.0
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On a 14 hour trip from Los Angeles to Sydney, I walked along the aisles a few times. Also saw other passengers doing stretching exercises at the back of the plane.
In a car this is not going to work!!0 -
On long car trips, I just try to take full advantage of stops. Walk or run some laps around the rest area, do some stretches. In airports I walk laps whenever I have a layover and avoid just sitting at the gate.2
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I choose to drive, train and subway twice to get my six miles in daily, rather than just sitting on the bus. Consequently I have fabulous biceps and deltoids, and avoid the bronchial infections the disesel fumes give me.0
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Purposeful fidgeting is all I can think of for car rides, this increases your NEAT (non exercise activity) and still burns calories. Plan walks at rest stops, etc.
The walking up and down isles in a plane works unless you are confined to your seat belt.
Usually the only exercise I can do is for my brain through reading and playing mobile games.1 -
Sorry, this isn't going to help you, but your question reminded me of this. My husband was on a recent trip to France and said the airport he flew into had mobile charging bikes. If you wanted to charge your mobile device, you got on a bike and pedaled to charge it. Sounds like a great idea to me. I wish the airports in the US had something similar.6
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Hyperventilate maybe? Does that count as cardio?
I'd go nuts if my passengers tried to do cardio while I drove.0 -
I'd say you don't have to be exercising all of the time. I have a 30 hour travel coming up and I won't be exercising other than to get up and stretch my legs on the plane a bit and stretch. I'll be able to workout later when I get to my destination.2
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Not cardio, but you could work on your core doing isometric exercises like lifting both feet off the floor, contracting your abs, or flexing your glutes. maybe get one of those rubbery resistance balls and squeeze it. You could probably figure out something with exercise bands too. They're cheap, light, and easy to take along.
That's the route I'd take.2 -
I recently discovered on a 13 hr flight that you can easily do 10-15 minutes of Barre workout on a plane.0
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