Comparing 1km walking to 1km running
I started checking all of this shortly after reading an article that claimed that there isn't much difference in how many calories you burn if you are running/jogging/walking. I found this very hard to believe despite their science-y sounding stats so I decided to run (pun intended) my own tests using my sport watch and phone to see what it says based on my own body.
In my mind, I always felt like if your heart rate was getting higher that you would burn more and this is obviously true, but for some reason it does appear thus far, that since you spend more time walking a distance than you would running it, that it all kind of balances out in the end. Running burns more calories per minute but takes fewer minutes. Walking burns fewer calories per minute but takes more minutes. Makes sense kinda right?

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when I started jogging regularly and started getting better and faster at it, I would see people walking on the run trails and even though it isn't nice I would be thinking "stop being lazy, at least try to exercise!" but as it turns out I was thinking about it all wrong.
I have conducted a few mixed runs where I would jog one km the walk the next but those figures might have been tainted by my heart rate being too low after the walk, or too high after the run portion. So I did them both separately.

This is one km of walking but keep in mind it wasn't a leisurely stroll, I was still walking kind of fast but not doing that ridiculous speed walking that people just look really silly when they are doing it. It's kind of like a NYC pedestrian speed walk.

This is the run. The word "run" means different things to different people. For me, anything under 7 minutes and 30 seconds is pretty fast but would be considered kind of slow for more experienced runners. The point kind of remains the same though and what I was trying to showcase here is that 1km done in an easy way is going to burn the same amount of calories as the harder way. We really only need to look at active calories because "total calories" include your metabolism and that is the amount of calories that your body burns just by you being alive.
You can see that the figures are very similar but my heart rate is much higher when I am jogging. The 26 meter elevation loss that is shown in the run is BS, I activated my watch at the top of the stairs in my building but didn't tell it to start recording until I was already ready to start running.
I was unaware that my watch would do this for you without asking. I don't like that because it has kind of screwed up my data. It screwed up my pace as well because you can see on the second data-set that the total time in the top left is 6:52 yet my "average pace" is 6:43 per km...even though it was only recording for 1km. So that is something I am going to have to take into account if I want to get truly accurate results. I am going to need to go and sit somewhere for a while and wait for the watch to realize I am not moving anymore and do some sort of reset.
But the point is still valid even though my data was thrown off a bit by the smart-watch trying to factor in the little bit I did before I started walking and that is that walking or running burns about the same amount of calories.
Walking is easy, and I would say it is a little bit too easy. When I was walking the 1km between the 1km runs, I started wanting to run earlier so perhaps I need to alter my regimen to be running 1km and walking 500 meters.
At the end of the day the only reason why I am doing this is because I live my exercise life by the theory that whatever it is that you are doing for exercise needs to be something that you don't dread. Walking is pretty darn easy, isn't it? Also you can do a lot of things while you are walking given the technology that we have now such as listen to a podcast or maybe even learn something by some sort of language lessons or a trivia show. There are many ways that you could multi-task here while walking. When running on the other hand, for me at least, I can only really focus on the running and how it kind of starts to hurt after a while.
So if you are out there just walking I want you to know that you are burning calories... you are burning just as much as the guys that blaze past you running provided you walk as far as they run. Hell, I would say that it is a lot easier to walk 5km than it is to run it, so especially if you are older and trying to avoid any sort of injury or sore muscles and joints, maybe the walking is the better option. Just make sure to keep your heart rate elevated.
Thats pretty cool. i guess we feel burn more because we burn more when we running because we cover more distance in less time. For me exercise is about the time I have. If I run fir 30 mins as opposed to walking fir 30 mins im gonna burn way more. So I opt for running if I can. Working smarter with my time.
Thanks for sharing your experiment.
well yeah, obviously. If you work harder in the same amount of time you will burn more, for sure. The main reason why I even bothered with this is because a lot of people that I know want to lose weight and have better cardio but they erroneously believe that they have to be out there running like crazy in order to do that. If they have enough time, and can just go for a walk and burn the same amount, that is something that can motivate them to get out there and do something. The jogging can come later once their bodies are more used to it.
Fo sho hence I said it was a cool experiment.
Well that seems to prove the theory, if the app is accurate. I expect scientists have done tests of this with more accurate equipment. I wonder if it would be different if you could go much quicker. It depends on what you expect to get from a workout. Getting the heart rate higher and working the lungs should develop fitness more than walking. That is more my goal than burning calories.
I do walk a bit more than I used to when I always drove to work. Now I have more walking to get the train and I do a lot of stairs in the office so I get a reasonable workout even if not running.
It's all interesting anyway.
!BEER
yes, pushing the limits will definitely increase the body's resilience and that is why you are so fast for so long whereas a guy like me that has been involved almost exclusively with weights for decades is not fast and has low endurance. Since one of my objectives is to lose another 5kg so that running is actually more efficient, knowing that I don't have to really push myself which results in me dreading the exercise, this is a nice little trick to know though.
Your stairs tactic is a good one, and one that other people should also use.
Losing weight just seems to be hard generally, hence the massive industry serving that market. I really feel I'm lucky to not struggle on that front, but I was putting on weight before I started running and that was one incentive to get out there. I do like my food, so have to get the balance right.
I don't think losing weight is hard, it just takes a long time and that is why most people give up. They expect immediate results and things just don't work that way.
The only really quick way is to chop bits off 😁
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Do you realy need to duplicate post to steemit?
https://steemit.com/running/@normie.fitness/comparing-1km-walking-to-1km-running
need to? no, of course not. I didn't realize it was a problem though.
Any exercise is good exercise and always remember the story that a good sex session is the equivalent to running a marathon. I have run a marathon and a good sex session does not come close lol.
lol. well I know which of those I would rather do 😃
I've never run a marathon though.