Hi,
I am just wondering how much cardio is too much? I've been doing an hour a day burning between 400 and 550 calories. I don't want to over do it but I need to shed maybe 15 lbs before I get married in 6 mo. I'm also training to do some running races.... Thanks,
Andrea
Thank you!
Hi,
I am just wondering how much cardio is too much? I've been doing an hour a day burning between 400 and 550 calories. I don't want to over do it but I need to shed maybe 15 lbs before I get married in 6 mo. I'm also training to do some running races.... Thanks,
Andrea
id definently advise you to stop all that immediately its really unneccesary and imo will become very taxing on the joints if you keep it u pfor periods of time.
instead do HIIT twice a week.
and remeber diet is key!!
If her goal was to lose weight only, I might agree with this. But, she wants to run races down the road and you can't develop endurance without long runs that increase mitochondrial and capillarial increases. I think continuing the current running program combined with HIIT when she is ready for it would accomplish her goals of weight loss and becoming a better runner.
If her goal was to lose weight only, I might agree with this. But, she wants to run races down the road and you can't develop endurance without long runs that increase mitochondrial and capillarial increases. I think continuing the current running program combined with HIIT when she is ready for it would accomplish her goals of weight loss and becoming a better runner.
Well said.
Franky, she really doesn't really even need to embrace separate HIIT sessions at all if she doesn't want to IMO.
If she has a comfort level with doing 1 hour runs 5 or 6 times a week and likes 1 hour runs, then that's fine IMO. She simply needs to toss in some moderate intensity interval phases within those 1 hour workouts to bump her rate of fitness improvement so she can boost her caloire burn per hour over time. It may very well be that a 20 or 30 minute HIIT session ends up burning the same amount ( or less ) of gross calories ( including EPOC calories ) than her 1 hour runs do now.
Ditto for weight training. Unless each weight training session results in an overall calorie expenditure significantly greater than the potential 550 calories she says she now gets from her 1 hour run, I see no compelling reason to dump those 3X 1 hour runs in favor of 3X 1 hour weight sessions.
I have usually found that the best exercise for losing fat is the exercise you like doing the most and the one you'll stick with - which in this case - just might very well be going on 1 hour runs.
Doing 1 hour cardio 4 +/- times a week for the next 6 months shouldn't be an issue at all IMO.