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Today I Invested $1 For My Health
#1

Today I Invested

For My Health

tl;dr - 10 minutes of jumping rope is equal to 30 minutes of jogging. Jump rope was a $1. Hopefully, even the busiest person can find 10 minutes to work out.

I bought a jump rope at the 99 cent store.

I just did about 30 minutes of jumping rope (which is probably more like 15 to 20 minutes) considering how many times I smacked myself and little pauses between sets (which is jumping rope until I hit myself).

Lately, I work lift in the morning and at night I have been going for 45 minute walk - down to the park, a few laps, and walk back.

However, I was never covered in the sweat after my walks as I was after jumping rope. And all I had to do was go downstairs by the garage. Minimal effort, no driving to the gym, etc.

I had heard before that 10 minutes of jumping rope is the same as 30 minutes of jogging. I decided to research that and found this article, which confirms what I had heard before.

Even if you guys are really time constrained, if you can squeeze in 10 minutes of jumping rope, you will still get a good workout in.

Now if I can only find some foam rollers to massage my muscles with at the 99 cent store [Image: biggrin.gif]

Quote:Quote:

Is 10 Minutes of Jumping Rope Equivalent to Running 30 Minutes?

There was a report that was circulating this week about how 10 minutes of jumping rope is equivalent to running 30 minutes.

After doing a little research I found a few research studies that have been published on the benefits of jumping rope; one study was in The Research Quarterly, a journal of the American Association for Health, Physical Education and Research.

It was a comparative study of rope skipping and jogging, and tried to determine the effects of each on cardiovascular fitness.

Led by John A. Baker at Arizona State University, the study divided 92 male students into two groups, half skipped rope for 10 minutes a day, the other half jogged for 30 minutes a day. After six weeks, the men were administered the Harvard Step Test to measure their cardiovascular gain. Each group showed an equal level of improvement.

Baker concluded that a 10-minute daily program of rope jumping is as efficient as a 30-minute daily program of jogging for improvement cardiovascular efficiency. He went on to recommend that jumping rope, which is less time-consuming than jogging, would be a valuable component of any physical education program geared toward building endurance. He also viewed jumping rope as an option for adults who were unable to jog because of time or space restriction.

One researcher at Temple University saw measurable gains in cardiovascular fitness in a group of adult men who engaged in progressive rope skipping. In another small study, women who jumped rope for five minutes a day over a four-week period were rewarded with lower pulse rates, increased oxygen uptake and a 25% improvement in physical work capacity.

Skipping rope has also been found in other studies to reduce tension and raise energy levels. Subjects in experiments at Illinois University’s Physical Fitness Research Center were studied while skipping rope during a 60 minute, five day a week, ten week period. The results were greater leg and knee strength, increased calf size, better jumping ability, and faster running speed. They were also found to be more agile, more flexible, and their hearts were found to have become stronger.

Jumping rope will burn off 720 calories an hour (at 120-140 turns per minute and depending on body weight) which is the same as running at close to a six mile pace. If the intensity is increased (i.e # of foot taps) one can increase caloric expenditure to 1000 calories or more per hour, again depending on body weight. A boxer can hit 300 RPM in a minute of jumping rope.

These studies suggested that average people, non-athletes, could experience significant benefits from a form of exercise that required only a small time commitment and a minimal investment in equipment. On the opposite end of the spectrum you have the highly trained athlete, like the boxer that was mentioned, who can increase his endurance, improve balance, coordination, agility and quickness through his training. Those attributes are needed for all other athletes and you can take advantage of this training effect as well.

Try adding some jump roping into your training routine especially if you’re doing any type of interval or circuit training work. Start slow and increase your toe taps over time. I average about 125 toe taps or RPM for every minute I jump rope. For more information on adding it into your routine see Ross Enamait’s site.

The following statistics on jump roping were found on the Jump Rope Institute website founded in 1996 by former Olympian Buddy Lee. According to his site, “research has shown jumping rope for a minimum of five minutes a day can improve physical fitness and when you build to ten minutes of nonstop jumping at 120 RPMs it can provide the same benefits as the following”:

30 minutes of jogging
2 sets of tennis singles
30 minutes of racquet and handball playing
720 yards of swimming
18 holes of golf

http://michaelwoodblog.com/2013/09/21/850/

Fate whispers to the warrior, "You cannot withstand the storm." And the warrior whispers back, "I am the storm."

Women and children can be careless, but not men - Don Corleone

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