2. Get a wearable tracker or watch that counts heart rate, steps, calories, and allows for custom reads for different activities. Get used to figuring out what your best calories/hour activities are and how much you can do.
3. Be well hydrated and have a small breakfast.
4. Walk on a treadmill at an incline for an hour. I am 6-feet tall and 200 pounds, and when I walk at 4 mph and a 6 percent incline, I burn about 1,000 calories an hour. So one way to reach your goal is to do this for 5 hours (adjusting for your calorie burn based on your own research). Note that this activity is the go-to exercise for contestants on The Biggest Loser. It’s not shown for more than 1 percent of the television show, but contestants have admitted that it’s what they spend most of their time doing.
5. If you don’t want to walk for all that time, lift weights at 50 percent or less of max and do many reps, in sets of 10, with long breaks, throughout the day. If you go slow and not heavy, you can get 1,000 or so reps in. Squats are probably your go-to exercise. 60 percent of the average human’s muscle mass is below the waist, so exercises that target the legs give the biggest bang for the buck.
It’s fairly easy (relative to other things) to work your way up to completing 1,000 squats a day. Squats can burn 1 to 5 calories each (about 15 calories per minute), depending on whether they are weighted or not. 1,000 squats, if you are adapted to them, can be done in 20 to 25 minutes.
6. Biking is fun, and can burn 750 or so calories an hour. I have a 38 mile bike ride I do that’s mostly on a path by the beach, between Santa Monica and Palos Verdes peninsula, which takes me about 150 minutes, and supposedly (according to my Surge watch) burns 1,600 to 1,800 calories.
source : Medical Daily (http://www.medicaldaily.com/)
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