I've got some video footage from the Saturday morning workout and will try to work that into a future post.
Switching gears here a little bit I want to let you of a device I'm testing out. It's called a BodyBugg and it measures you caloric expenditure. You wear it around your left arm and it records how many calories you expend during day.
Now some people will be thinking 'I have a heart rate monitor that tracks my calories so how is this any different?'
True, a heart rate monitor provides an estimation on calories burned but it isn't very accurate. Basically the caloric measurement from a heart rate monitor correlates to how many calories would typically be burned at a particular heart rate.
So first of all we realize this is an estimation and therefore is not a totally accurate method of tracking your calories. But secondly your heart rate monitor has no way of detecting whether an increased heart rate is due to physical exertion or a hightened emotional state. For example if you wore your heart rate monitor to a scary movie you might get a number of spikes during the frightening scenes of the movie. And your heart rate monitor would calculate these spikes as physical work being done and calories burned. But sitting on your butt for 2 hours watching a movie doesn't burn a lot of calories. Actually when you consider the barrel of popcorn and huge pop most people drink at the movies there probably is a caloric surplus after the movie rather than any type of deficit as represented by the heart rate monitor.
So how does the BodyBugg do this? Well it has four different sensors to measure caloric expenditure. And if one sensor detects caloric expenditure but the other three do not it doesn't count that initial reading. According to the manufacturers this results in the device having 95% accuracy of a clinical measurement.
But why is this important? Well for a number of reasons including:
* If our goal is weight loss we'll know whether we have achieved a deficit or not.
* We'll be able to quantify various type of workouts for effectiveness. How does one hour of a particular type of exercise compare to other types?
* It makes us more accountable. Just as writing down our goals leads to a great chance of success so too does having true numbers to record and measure keep us more on track and focussed.
I'll provide more details and some video of the BodyBugg in days to come. There is also an online food diary component that I'll review as well.
Have a great week.
Chris okanaganpeakperformance.com 'always moving forward'