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Saturday 6 January 2024

Housework Can Help Keep You A Little Fitter !


"You might not relish the idea of doing household chores, but research claims that dusting, vacuuming and mopping with gusto are as good for you as any session at the gym.

So, if you don't have time to pump weights at the gym or attend Pilates classes, then substitute them with everyday household tasks or jobs in the garden.

They will help stretch and tone your muscles, and you will burn up to 315 calories an hour - that's more than twice as many as you would sitting in front of the television.

Sounds unbelievable? It was put to the test. The results are a scientific estimate of what a ten-stone person would burn while doing the following activities at a comfortable pace, based on the calories burned in an hour per pound of body weight. If you push yourself very hard at, say, walking, add more calories.

But remember, although housework can go a little way to keep you that bit fitter it is not a good form of cardiovascular exercise, you will still need to work your heart and lungs with walking, swimming or cycling.

315 CALORIES
30 minutes of digging, or 45 minutes of cycling on flat ground
Digging uses the thigh and calf muscles; it is also a good form of cardiovascular exercise if you can keep it up continuously for ten minutes or more.

285 CALORIES
30 minutes of climbing stairs, or 19.5 minutes of skipping
Climbing stairs is a great cardiopovascular activity. Do it several times a day and you are looking at a work-out equivalent to one you would get on the stepper at the gym.

225 CALORIES
30 minutes of raking leaves, or 37 minutes of ice-skating
Because you are pulling against a resistance (i.e. wet leaves), raking is a form of weight-training. It works all the major muscles in the legs and upper body.

200 CALORIES
30 minutes of scrubbing the bath, or 45 minutes of ballroom dancing
Getting rid of tide marks on the bath is not the most pleasant of household tasks, but it really works your bicep and tricep muscles in the arms. Particularly stubborn stains will guarantee you work up a sweat.

190 CALORIES
30 minutes of carrying shopping bags home, or 40 minutes of golf
Try to make sure you have evenly-weighted bags in each hand - or swop on the way home. Every now and then, rest the bags on the floor and then bend your knees before lifting them again. This simulates free weights at the gym.

160 CALORIES
30 minutes of painting and decorating, or 25 minutes of walking
Climbing up and down the step-ladder to reach nooks and crannies adds to the calories burned when you decorate. Wallpapering is an energetic activity too - applying paste and reaching up to put the paper on the walls works the upper body.

143 CALORIES
30 minutes of washing the car, or 32 minutes of yoga
It might take longer than whizzing your motor through the car wash at the local garage, but the advantages are that you will work you arms and abdominal muscles as you reach to clean the roof and other awkward places.

130 CALORIES
30 minutes of making beds, or 12 minutes of jogging on the treadmill
Although sheets and blankets tend to make for harder work, even shaking out a few continental quilts and puffing up pillows will add to your energy expenditure.

125 CALORIES
30 minutes of cleaning windows, or 21 minutes of power yoga
Obviously, the size and position of your windows has a big part to play in determining quite how effective this workout will be. If you are using a bucket, don't put it on the floor next to you, but leave it a slight distance away so that you have to reach to get it every time you need water.

115 CALORIES
30 minutes of weeding, or 13 minutes of weight training
All the bending down to pick out weeds from the garden means that you are working your thighs and buttock muscles. Try to make sure you don't bend from the waist down, as it can strain your lower back.

110 CALORIES
30 minutes of shelving groceries, or 18 minutes of badminton
Tins of food can be replacement weights for a home workout, so understandably this chore will be taxing if you have shopped for heavy items.

105 CALORIES
30 minutes of loading the dishwasher, or 30 minutes of light stretching
OK, so putting your dirty dishes in a machine rather than washing them by hand is the easy way out, but believe it or not, the bending and reaching action will help you fight off the flab.

90 CALORIES
30 minutes of vacuuming, or 15 minutes of kick-boxing
Vacuuming works your arms because of the pushing and pulling it entails. Do the entire house in one go rather than one room at a time - it will mean that you work up a real sweat.

80 CALORIES
30 minutes of preparing the dinner, or nine minutes of tennis
Chopping, grating and lifting dishes in and out of the oven in a steamy kitchen will burn calories. Follow with washing up and you have a work-out without leaving the kitchen.

71 CALORIES
30 minutes of ironing, or 11 minutes of step aerobics
Think of ironing as weight-training for the upper body. Make sure that you stand up straight and work your arm muscles hard as you press down. And remember to change hands regularly, so that you don't end up with one arm more muscular than the other.

50 CALORIES
30 minutes of dusting, or 10 minutes of salsa dancing
It may be less taxing than a lot of chores, but if you have a lot of high shelves or trinkets to be moved, then the calories burned will mount up. Much of the benefit is in the stretching actions as you reach out with your duster. "
Above words from article here

Well after all that 'work out' it must be time to put my feather duster away


and sit down and enjoy a refreshing cup of tea ... or would you prefer coffee?

All the best Jan

37 comments:

Dee said...

Tea for me, please.

My house is very small. I'm guessing I don't burn quite as many calories, but pushing that heavy Dyson vacuum on the living room rug IS a good arm workout.

Tom said...

...I take care of the vacuuming!

Angie said...

Jan - first, thanks for visiting my blog, and Happy New Year to you and yours!

I love this post. There is no question that, after I retired and housework became a regular part of my routine (my stay-at-home husband did it before that), the weight loss I experienced was because of the exercise!!!! I often find myself in a sweat, especially after mopping the floors!

J.P. Alexander said...

Siempre es bueno limpiar y si ayuda a quemar calorĂ­as. Te mando un beso.

Catarina said...

“… research claims that dusting, vacuuming and mopping with gusto are as good for you as any session at the gym.” – Absolutely not!! : )

I don’t dig. Prefer stationary bike.

I don’t skip – I climb stairs every single day, many times a day.

I don’t rake leaves – the gardener will do that – and I don’t ice-skate or any other kind of skating… I have resistance bands. Will that do? : )

I will dance any time instead of scrubbing the bath.

I do carry heavy grocery bags from the trunk into the house

Definitely walking instead of painting

Love to wash the car in the driveway and love yoga.

Making the bed… no other alternative.

Someone does windows for me and my yoga is not power yoga… Should think of something else ... 13, 20, 25 minute of weight training!!

Putting groceries away… yes… I like it! Badminton would be nice too!

Light stretching if I have a choice!!

I like vacuuming. My cordless Dyson is very light.

One hour preparing dinner.

Step aerobics is fun. Ironing not so much.

Dusting and salsa dancing after.

How about eating? How many calories do we burn?! : )) – This is what I just read:

“Digesting, absorbing, moving and storing food burn calories. About 10% of calories eaten are used for digesting food and taking in nutrients.”

Lots of info. Thanks, Jan!!

Magaly Guerrero said...

It sounds perfectly reasonable to me. When I was growing up, in the Dominican Republic, we did all our laundry by hand--my arms have never looked that great.

Happy New Year, Jan!

Elephant's Child said...

It is surprising just how many calories housework can burn.

peppylady (Dora) said...

I drink both, with no sugar.

Christine said...

I like tea in the afternoon

Elizabeth Seckman said...

I'd much rather clean than exercise! Thank you for sharing.

Kay said...

Oh gosh... Maybe I should take over vacuuming from my husband. Hmmmm... Making the beds only takes me 10 minutes though at best.

Rustic Pumpkin said...

You dp nor need to convince me. Ever since I developed Parkinson's and cannot safely do housework or gardening, the weight has piled on! Tea for me please, no milk or sugar.

Margaret D said...

Interesting.
So far I can still clean the house, though slow I get there.

jabblog said...

This is something my husband has been saying for years. Does thinking about it count??

Donna said...

I feel fit, already...lol
Interesting facts!
hugs
Donna

David M. Gascoigne, said...

Our house is on four levels so we get lots of exercise going up and down stairs. Lifting my coffee cup is a wonderful arm workout too!

My name is Erika. said...

I was just reading an article about exercise for people over 60, and they mentioned that things like gardening, housework and other act ivies are great exercise. It makes sense since for most of the time humans have been on earth there has been no gym and people did manage to stay fit. Plus no processed food either. Happy weekend.

CJ Kennedy said...

Now maybe I'll be more motivated to clean the house. đŸ˜º

eileeninmd said...

Hello,
I do many of these things, except for stairs. Our house is one floor.
Take care, have a wonderful weekend.

gluten Free A_Z Blog said...

Very interesting research on the burning of calories. Never thought that housework could keep you fit!!

Valerie-Jael said...

Sounds good, but I have a home help for hours each Wednesday, and he is really good! It's a big help for me as I can't move so easily these days. Happy weekend!

Snowbird said...

It never occurred to me that housework could be good for you.xxx

Salty Pumpkin Studio said...

I run back and forth putting things away, I'm sure I burn a calorie or several.

bread&salt said...

Really very interesting research. Our house a little big and house works keep me fit. Thanks for the post. Greetings.

Giorgio said...

That's a great post!
Have a nice weekend ☀️

Alicia said...

Who would have thought that you could burn so many calories just by cleaning! As I look around my home office I see quite a bit of dust, maybe it's time to burn my calories...or I could go shopping, walking burns calories too! Coffee for me please. Someone gave me a Maple Bourbon coffee for Christmas and it's amazing!

happyone said...

Nice to know we can use up all those calories doing housework.

Jeanie said...

THis was fun. I think I'd better now go burn 90 calories and vacuum!

Ananka said...

I try to do housework when I am motivated!

Louca por porcelana said...

So glad reading your post! Lots of house work! Happy New Year!

Linda said...

I am just not capable of doing most of this. Of course, it burns calories to struggle. I will have a glass of iced tea, plain, nothing in it except lots of ice.

Conniecrafter said...

I feel I get the most workout from sweeping/vacuuming and cleaning bathrooms

Phil Slade said...

I decided to do all of those things to help with my weight until I remembered we don't have stairs, a dishwasher (only me), or a bath to scrub. Just a shower room because we both struggled to get in and out of a modern bath so made the room into a wet room. Happy New Year Jan and Eddie. Keep the tips coming in 2024.

carol l mckenna said...

Great list to contemplate calorie use ~ thanks,

Wishing you good health, laugther and love in your days,
A ShutterBug Explores,
aka (A Creative Harbor)

Teresa said...

Realmente interesante. Besos.

baili said...

This one is awesome. Made me smile a lot and chuckle. The comparison between both is understandable.
Thanks for wonderful useful knowledge it is very important for us
God bless you

This N That said...

I'm always disappointed when I see how few calories one burns in a half hour of exercise..Have a Happy New Year..