Should you log walking each day if you walk several miles a day
Privatesandbank
Posts: 41 Member
I have my settings set to sedentary. I walk a minimum of 10,000 steps a day (~5 miles) in my daily commute. I’m big and so this equates to a huge burn for me. Most calculators say approximately 400-500 calories for this, a conservative estimate is around 250-300 burned. My average walking pace is 4mph (I’m 6’) and I walk carrying heavy bags and wearing tons of sweaters. It seems to me this is definitely exercise but I’m still hesitant to log it since I’m not “actively” trying to workout. It’s just part of my routine. I’ve given myself bare bone calories and do not eat exercise calories back as I do not do any intentional exercise besides weights right now. Would you log anything for this? Should I just pretend I didn’t do any activity?
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Replies
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If it's a daily occurrence, I would just adjust my Activity Level in MFP from Sedentary to Active.
As this relates to all home/work/school life activity that is not intentional exercise i.e. workouts.
Why would you pretend you didn't do any activity? If you're using a tool to do something, use it as it's intended.11 -
If you have an activity tracker synced, that should take care of it (eat back at least some of the calories it gives you). If you don't have an activity tracker synced, you have a few choices: log your walk every day and eat back the calories, increase your activity level and don't log your walk, and increase your goal calories by the average you walk daily and don't log your walk.5
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If your activity level is set to sedentary I'd say log it but be careful to log the "net" calories (ie additional calories expended). The formula for net calories burned walking is .30 x weight (in lbs) x distance (in miles) so, for example a 200lb person walking 5 miles a day would burn (approximately) an additional 300 cal.2
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A sedentary person does not walk 10k steps per day. Adjust your settings to active and go from there.9
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Privatesandbank wrote: »Should I just pretend I didn’t do any activity?
No!
Answer the goal set up questions honestly and accurately if you want the calculator to spit out the right number.
If it's routine (sounds like it is) then that's what your activity setting is for.2 -
You either need to up your lifestyle settings from sedentary to active or you need to get an activity tracker (fitbit, garmin or apple watch are the most popular) to do the calculations for you.1
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You will discover what you need and want to do to adjust you lifestyle. I still have elements of sedentary to mine (after all I AM a retiree 😉). However, in my post hip replacements life, I have taken to finding parkings places distant from where I go or taking longer routes around park lot at home to my car and logging those walks. It can't hurt! Best of luck!0
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I walk 60 minutes a day to & from work & always log mine in my diary3
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I walk daily (11k steps in average) but I'm set as sedentary because I, indeed, have a sedentary desk job. That's why I log my walks and treat them as exercise. I don't have an activity tracker linked to MFP, but I know the distance I walked and the time I did it in, so I can log it in a somewhat accurate way.
I've been logging both my food and my exercise as accurately as I can for the last 15 months, and the rate of loss has been consistent with the plan.
I guess, in the end, it doesn't matter if you adjust your activity setting and not log the walks, or you do it the other way around. For me, it's easier the way I do it. Others may prefer it a different way. As long as it works as intended, that's all that matters.1 -
Privatesandbank wrote: »
I don't walk every day but I log it too, I have a desk job so this is my exercise and mfp adjusts my calories accordingly. Also because I use mapmywalk it gives me my times and pace and I can see an improvement over the last 18mths.2 -
BrianSharpe wrote: »If your activity level is set to sedentary I'd say log it but be careful to log the "net" calories (ie additional calories expended). The formula for net calories burned walking is .30 x weight (in lbs) x distance (in miles) so, for example a 200lb person walking 5 miles a day would burn (approximately) an additional 300 cal.
^This^.0 -
Privatesandbank wrote: »I have my settings set to sedentary. I walk a minimum of 10,000 steps a day (~5 miles) in my daily commute. I’m big and so this equates to a huge burn for me. Most calculators say approximately 400-500 calories for this, a conservative estimate is around 250-300 burned. My average walking pace is 4mph (I’m 6’) and I walk carrying heavy bags and wearing tons of sweaters. It seems to me this is definitely exercise but I’m still hesitant to log it since I’m not “actively” trying to workout. It’s just part of my routine. I’ve given myself bare bone calories and do not eat exercise calories back as I do not do any intentional exercise besides weights right now. Would you log anything for this? Should I just pretend I didn’t do any activity?
Since this is a part of your day to day, I would adjust the activity level to reflect your actual activity level going about your day to day.0 -
I use Strava for cycling and Map my Walk for walking. I have them linked and synced to MFP. Once the workout shows in MFP, I then access the workout and change the calories by using .3 x weight x distance. For Cycling I cut the calories in half. I do this since the tracking apps are not accurate.0
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