chibimaddy
New member
I grow trees. Third career.
I'm overweight. (190, M 66yr)
A fair amount of my day is walking, moving potted trees, stoop, bend, lift. (A typical day my step counter says anywhere from 11 to 16 thousand steps. )
I should lose weight, and thanks to the advice I've gotten over on /r/losit I am. 4 pounds down in 3 weeks, bit fast, but within the 'noise' levels. From my use of sun3's TDEE calcuator (still early with only 3 weeks data) I probably should increase my cals by about 150-200. But holidays are coming.
I felt my best when I was between 150 and 160, so my target is 150 -- 45 pounds (started at 195) in a year.
Anyway, why post here instead of at /r/loseit? I need to stay strong while losing weight. My year is very cyclic, with activites in bursts. I just finished two weeks of inventory shuffling -- where larger trees are regrouped into appropriate water zones. Lift up 40-60 lb container, walk 2-10 steps, put it on the trailer. Repeat 27 more times. Move the tractor. Lift up container place where it goes. Adjust permission. Repeat 27 more times. That is my 'set' Takes maybe 25 minutes. Repeat for 3 hours.
But this isn't all year. That's done for this year. Two days ago it was burying 300 trees in compost using a grain scoop.
Now I'm taking inventory. Stand. Count. Measure. Freeze. Museum pace 10 feet to the next block. Next week is the start of firewood season. I cut with a chainsaw, but haul with a sled (woods too tight for the tractor) and I split with a maul. Firewood season is about half time 3-4 hours a day for a month. 9 cords. Much of the rest is working on my web page, orders for spring, other desk work.
January and Feb are house reno months. Outside it's colder than an iron seated outhouse on the north side of a glacier. March I'm out for a few days on snowshowes taking cuttings for trees that start from sticks.
August is a serious backpack trip with my 19 yr old nephew. We typically spend a week in Willmore Wilderness doing about 120-140 km and a half dozen passes. This year he cleaned my clock on the uphill grades. But there was 50 extra pounds of me compared to him.
Anyway, as I get older I find that I'm hurting more. It's a lot easier to throw my back into spasm. A bad session will leave me in serious pain after an hour of sitting for weeks. (standing or moving isn't too bad). Whenever I change tasks -- move from tree moving to wood cutting, I'm sore for more days as I adjust.
Yeah, yeah, I'm becoming an old fart. Most of this is just old age. "Make it move, old timer, what do you want?"
A: Advice on how to cope with a yearly cycle of wildly variant activities. I suspect that this will be a routine of both stretches and exercises. Nearest gym is an hour's drive away, so something that can be done on the farm or in the home. Probably I need 'meta advice' links to articles or books about this sort of thing.
B: Losing weight without losing strength or endurance. During an active season, actions are repeated hundreds to thousands of times a day. (Pots are filled with a scoop. I go through 90 cubic meters of compost a year. 65 tons. Two walking trailer loads or 6 dump truck loads. With a 3 quart scoop.) Reading here and on loseit I've found out:
I've seen mention of "Neurological adaptation" to increase the strength of a muscle without increasing its mass. How do you train for this? I see skin and bones high school kids that can do chin-ups until they run out of numbers, but appear to be your typical 140 pound 5'10 grade 10, with muscles that look like they were sprayed onto bones. I have a high school kid working for me that weighs 110 pounds dripping wet, is 5'6" He can't handle a 60 lb tree as well as I can yet, but watching him, he's still learning technique. (The kids do admit they are sore the next day -- and they are only doing it for 2 hours after school)
I'm overweight. (190, M 66yr)
A fair amount of my day is walking, moving potted trees, stoop, bend, lift. (A typical day my step counter says anywhere from 11 to 16 thousand steps. )
I should lose weight, and thanks to the advice I've gotten over on /r/losit I am. 4 pounds down in 3 weeks, bit fast, but within the 'noise' levels. From my use of sun3's TDEE calcuator (still early with only 3 weeks data) I probably should increase my cals by about 150-200. But holidays are coming.
I felt my best when I was between 150 and 160, so my target is 150 -- 45 pounds (started at 195) in a year.
Anyway, why post here instead of at /r/loseit? I need to stay strong while losing weight. My year is very cyclic, with activites in bursts. I just finished two weeks of inventory shuffling -- where larger trees are regrouped into appropriate water zones. Lift up 40-60 lb container, walk 2-10 steps, put it on the trailer. Repeat 27 more times. Move the tractor. Lift up container place where it goes. Adjust permission. Repeat 27 more times. That is my 'set' Takes maybe 25 minutes. Repeat for 3 hours.
But this isn't all year. That's done for this year. Two days ago it was burying 300 trees in compost using a grain scoop.
Now I'm taking inventory. Stand. Count. Measure. Freeze. Museum pace 10 feet to the next block. Next week is the start of firewood season. I cut with a chainsaw, but haul with a sled (woods too tight for the tractor) and I split with a maul. Firewood season is about half time 3-4 hours a day for a month. 9 cords. Much of the rest is working on my web page, orders for spring, other desk work.
January and Feb are house reno months. Outside it's colder than an iron seated outhouse on the north side of a glacier. March I'm out for a few days on snowshowes taking cuttings for trees that start from sticks.
August is a serious backpack trip with my 19 yr old nephew. We typically spend a week in Willmore Wilderness doing about 120-140 km and a half dozen passes. This year he cleaned my clock on the uphill grades. But there was 50 extra pounds of me compared to him.
Anyway, as I get older I find that I'm hurting more. It's a lot easier to throw my back into spasm. A bad session will leave me in serious pain after an hour of sitting for weeks. (standing or moving isn't too bad). Whenever I change tasks -- move from tree moving to wood cutting, I'm sore for more days as I adjust.
Yeah, yeah, I'm becoming an old fart. Most of this is just old age. "Make it move, old timer, what do you want?"
A: Advice on how to cope with a yearly cycle of wildly variant activities. I suspect that this will be a routine of both stretches and exercises. Nearest gym is an hour's drive away, so something that can be done on the farm or in the home. Probably I need 'meta advice' links to articles or books about this sort of thing.
B: Losing weight without losing strength or endurance. During an active season, actions are repeated hundreds to thousands of times a day. (Pots are filled with a scoop. I go through 90 cubic meters of compost a year. 65 tons. Two walking trailer loads or 6 dump truck loads. With a 3 quart scoop.) Reading here and on loseit I've found out:
- Log everything.
- Don't try to lose more than a pound a week.
- Keep protein on the order of 1 g / lb target weight or .7 g/lb current weight
I've seen mention of "Neurological adaptation" to increase the strength of a muscle without increasing its mass. How do you train for this? I see skin and bones high school kids that can do chin-ups until they run out of numbers, but appear to be your typical 140 pound 5'10 grade 10, with muscles that look like they were sprayed onto bones. I have a high school kid working for me that weighs 110 pounds dripping wet, is 5'6" He can't handle a 60 lb tree as well as I can yet, but watching him, he's still learning technique. (The kids do admit they are sore the next day -- and they are only doing it for 2 hours after school)