Article from 1999, referenced study likely from earlier.
The average American walks less than 75 miles a year - about 1.4 miles a week, barely 350 yards a day.
Thank you to @urlyman@mastodon.social for pointing this out.
Article from 1999, referenced study likely from earlier.
The average American walks less than 75 miles a year - about 1.4 miles a week, barely 350 yards a day.
Thank you to @urlyman@mastodon.social for pointing this out.
I have failed to find the mentioned study.
I can believe an elderly person barely moving, and perhaps there are a number of them?
Yeah, aside from riding my bike, I would hardly call myself active but I sure as hell walk waaaay more than that. Even if I was above average (doubtful), these numbers seem off, especially for back then. With all sorts of delivery and micromobility devices these days, I figure we’re walking even less than we did in the 90s but still more than 1.4 miles per week (you could easily walk that without even leaving a building)
One third of Americans are obese and one third overweight. Riding a bike occasionally is easily above average.
I can see why you might connect the two, but I weigh 240 lbs and bike commute every day as long as it isn’t freezing. Overweight and obese people ride bikes all the time.
Being sedentary is only part of the reason we’re so fat: Can’t out exercise a bad diet and we are barraged with highly processed foods to the point that you can accidentally eat a lot of processed stuff even when you’re trying to eat healthy.
Oh, also, beer but I quit drinking so that should help lol
Fair on the weight!
Still, I have to say that bike commuting regularly is definitely above average. Maybe you’re not living in the most representative area?
I have family that certainly only walk a few hundred meters a day.
I’d be surprised if I wasn’t: Most things are within about a 25 minute walk for me, much less on a bike. Still though, I feel like that study’s numbers were off.