Finding a type of exercise you actually enjoy makes SUCH a difference! Also: I tend to be terrified of any and all wild cattle so I´m not mad you didn´t get closer to that bison to take its portrait. I´ll be saying hi to the wild boar for the first time in months today though, and am really looking forward to it (from a very safe distance).I probably rode 3 or 4 miles and gained about 300 ft elevation on a rough trail. Enough to tire me out. It was fun, a motivation to keep riding regularly so I can go further next time.
By myself, don't think many others would want to ride with someone as slow as I. Maybe when I get better at it, the nearby bike shop does organize groups, but they seem to be folks of your age, not mine.Did you go with a group or by yourself?
You should be, these bison are wild animals, never domesticated, and quite large, up to 1,000 lbs. They can appear quite docile and it is often easy to walk up to one, but if they feel cornered or threatened they will charge and that can be deadly. If you watch the hair on their neck closely you can tell when you are too close (I think anyway, worked for me so far). Bison kill more tourists in Yellowstone than the bears, it just doesn't make news stories as exciting. https://www.yellowstonepark.com/news/teen-gored-bisonI tend to be terrified of any and all wild cattle so I´m not mad you didn´t get closer to that bison to take its portrait.
May 15 must be a lucky day. Thanks for your response Petal, it sounds like you did have some triggering things that turned the switch. Maybe I did, but I don't remember them.coincidentally I think for me it was around may 15 too
Makes sense Amy, I'll be looking for your first Iron Hen short!I think a female Iron Rooster should be an Iron Hen.Now there's a superhero they haven't thought about yet - the Astonishing Adventures of Iron Hen! (bok-bok-bok-bok!)
I didn't know that, but it makes sense, cows can get pretty big. I had an uncle with a ranch in south Florida, he ran Brahman cattle, and they were quite aggressive.Domesticated cows kill tourists almost every year here
Yep, no shortage of people trying out for the Darwin awards. The buffalo in the picture is about as close as I ever get to them.In Sri Lanka people do the same- pose for selfies with wild elephants. In Greece, they stand on the edge of cliffs at Meteora & fall off
No damage, except to my ego. I just got back on and kept riding, though after the fall I was a lot more careful. Riding on that snow and ice was a lot of work, harder than on a dry road.No damage to either you or the bike? You didn't have to walk home?
Yeah, and we are supposed to get more tonight. I've had enough of that pretty.The snow looks so pretty though!
Most cattle here isn´t aggressive but there are plenty of hiking trails that run through pastures and people get too close, either for pictures or to try and pet the animals (especially when calves are around...) or they make the cows nervous by bringing along dogs where they shouldn´t. And sometimes the beasties ARE in a bad mood, you do everything "right" and you´re still glad to come away with your life.I didn't know that, but it makes sense, cows can get pretty big. I had an uncle with a ranch in south Florida, he ran Brahman cattle, and they were quite aggressive.
Yes, that seems to be the case, I would never have thought it possible.I think you’ve squashed your appetite into non-existence
Yes, if you click on my thumbnails you can see it. But to be honest I don't know much about, I try to keep the fats low and protein high but that's about all.Do you log your food into an app that tells you what nutrient/protein levels you're getting?
I really want to stick with it until I get below the obesity line, for me that's still 30+ pounds away. Not bad for a guy who started ~130 lbs above it, but not there yet. I am quite skilled at hiding my fat in pictures, many years of practice. Difference is now it kind of works, hard to hide 100+ pounds.Looking at your last picture I don't think your extreme approach is still warranted
Oh, I think I crossed that one a while back, the obsession part anyway, I do try and keep it healthy. I know I am obsessed with counting my calories and posting, just the way I have gotten to be. Its one of the reasons I worry about the transition to maintenance, the obsession will end one day, I hope to be able to figure out how to do that and keep the weight off.It is such a fine line between healthy dieting & obsession.
Actually it has been going on for a week or so, some days I had to force some end of day eating to bring my calories up, and in all honesty some days I inflated my calorie count to make it look like I was eating more. That last one is not a good thing, I am going to end it, an honest calorie count is important. I agree that for my health I don't think the low calories are too dangerous, but it may make transition to maintenance harder, when that day comes.If I were you, I would pay an attention on how I feel and eat in next days more carefully.
No Amy, it was you who started the thread, but I did encourage it. I appreciate it, like I said I have been worried about maintainance for a while, seeing others do it helps. I do think I will follow your example, but as I recall you only started your break after getting out of the obese range, that is my plan as well. As much as I have any real plan, I do better thinking of this as one day at a time than looking too far into the future.Maybe take a three-month break, as I'm doing? A maintenance break! Join the Adventures in Maintenance gang for a while? - after all, it was you who instigated the thread!