An Expert's Secrets to Losing More Fat
Interested in losing more fat in less time and with less effort? Craig Ballantyne -- one of the world's top experts on healthy fat-burning -- provides 3 very useful tips for losing body fat in a faster, easier way. I always enjoy reading his stuff and I think you will too. Enjoy...
3 Ways to Lose More Fat from an Expert Fitness Trainer
By Turbulence Training author Craig Ballantyne
Once you get in the zone, burning fat can be very easy. I know, easier said than done, right? But maybe you just don't have the right tips and tricks in your arsenal to help you get started on the right foot.
So here are three of the most important things you need to be doing to get your fat burning workout program started properly.
1) Use Fitday to figure out your food intake.
You can't just "wing it". You can't "eyeball" your food intake, as research shows that even nutritionists underestimate how much food they are eating.
If you don't know whats going down your throat each day, you are going to eat way too much food and never burn the fat. If you aren't losing fat, it's a simple numbers game. You are eating too much. And if you know your numbers, its easy to make the necessary changes.
As one client said on the message boards...
"Ok, I input all my meals on Fitday yesterday, including 2 cheats that I didn't think were a big deal. One was a handful of trail mix and the other was a handful of goldfish crackers. (yes, I have kids :-) ) I can't believe how just those two seemingly harmless snacks added up!! No wonder I have a muffin top! Yikes! So thanks for the tip about Fitday because that's going to keep me accountable."
The little things add up so quickly! You'll be amazed when you finally start counting your calories that you will often be far above your recommended intake.
A little bit here and a little bit there is all that is needed to sabotage your efforts.
Use it and lose it!
2) Use the right recovery pace in your interval training.
The biggest mistake people make in interval training is working too hard during the recovery period.
If you continue to work at a hard pace when you should be almost resting, you wont get the true benefits of interval training.
So lose the cardio mentality and be sure to alternate between periods of harder than normal exercise, and very easy exercise.
If you don't know about interval training, here is how it goes.
Start with your normal warmup. Let's say walking at 3.0mph on the treadmill. Do this for five minutes, and then increase the speed to 3.8mph (a fast walk). Do this for 30-60 seconds (as long as you are comfortable doing it - don't do it if you feel that is too fast for you).
Drop the intensity way back to three miles per hour.0mph for 60-90 seconds. That is one interval. Go back and forth between working hard and going easy for 3-6 rounds. Then finish with a 5-minute cool-down.
Use the recovery period to recover!
3) Plan your food intake on the weekend.
Set aside time to plan, shop, and prepare several days worth of meals. Use a Saturday or Sunday afternoon to cook some chicken breasts, prepare some raw vegetables, wash your fruit, and pack up your nuts.
A little bit of knowledge can go a long way.
Its that easy.
Use interval training in your fat burning workout and bodyweight exercises to sculpt your body.
Labels: Fast Weight Loss, Fat Loss, Interval Training, Trainer

14 Comments:
Some really useful content here. Thanks for the great blog.
Definitely important to plan your eating for the weekend. A lot of times people head off for the weekend, get feeling good, and they end up stuffing their faces. Mondays are always rougher after a weekend of binge eating.
The advice to plan weekend meals is really sound. So often people dive bomb with their diet at the weekend, simply because the structure of the week is lost, and relaxation comes first, leaving junk food and snacks the main food source.
Plan ahead, cook a nice meal, make sure there is fruit in the house before the weekend!
I just read your thing on walking not burning fat -- it's misinformation. It's not a matter of "intensity" but rather the distance one totes the load. Certainly if you run for 15 minutes you will burn more calories than if you walk for 15 minutes, but that is because you can run farther in 15 minutes than you can walk. Walking is actually a GOOD way to burn fat, particularly for people who are starting a fitness program, have joint problems, or are somewhat overweight. Walking is the most natural of human exercises and most people can become good at it.
I know. I'm a 56 year old former trail runner, climber, hiker who routinely (4 to 6 times/week) walked (hiked? ran?) 8 to 12 miles in the mountains. The only people who would hike with me were serious athletes -- one a champion body builder who considered a hike in the mountains with me a serious aerobic and weight controlling workout. Three years ago I blew out my hip (or learned I had blown out my hip) and ended up having hip resurfacing surgery to repair the all but destroyed joint.
I love to run, but I know that some of the pain and debilitation I've experienced might not have happened if I hadn't thought running up and down hills was the most fun thing I could do. The "intensity" you mention needs to be translated to distance in order to mean anything to anyone. Running is NOT "better" than walking, it just covers more distance in less time.
I think that the best piece of diet advice I ever heard was to limit your beverage calories. I think you really have to learn to be hungry again too. That said the idea that your rest interval can have a significant impact on your fat burning assumes that you have all of the other factors of your diet dialed in. Good post though. Diet is the largest factor of fitness (some say 75%) but definitely is also the most illusive. Certainly something that I haven't mastered 100% yet.
www.villapamphilifitness.com
I like the comment about resting during the recovery portion of the interval training. Often I will go too hard during intervals and burn out before the session is complete. This results is a shorter session that I think is reducing the amount of fat I am burning.
www.kettlebellplanet.blogspot.com
Wonderful news. Do you need rope pulling or rope climging fitness equipment? It's very important to stay in shape, especially your upper body. Please keep this in mind.
Rowing has long been recognized as the most complete aerobic exercise, working 84 percent of muscle mass and promoting full range of motion. WaterRower (www.waterrower.com) brings this dynamic indoors, providing a unique hybrid of cardio aerobic and low-impact resistance training. Users are able to maximize benefits, burn more calories, and minimize the time spent working out.
Kind to the body, WaterRower is non-loading bearing – no impact to the joints. The exercise is suitable for young or old, male or female, regardless of weight and fitness level. The patented WaterFlyWheel™ provides an added restorative dimension with the soothing sound of water as the user rows.
How Can WaterRower Burn So Many Calories?
Of the natural aerobic exercises, rowing is a “whole body” exercise. Whole body exercise works a wide range of muscle groups, enhancing the overall training benefit. By spreading the aerobic load over a large number of muscles, energy consumption and intensity can be optimized.
Exercises which work specific muscle groups, such as running, cycling and stair steppers, isolate the aerobic load in but a few muscles. This maintains the required intensity but reduces total energy consumption. The overall training benefit is therefore lower than that of whole body exercise.
Fuel stores used to produce energy are not local to the muscle group being exercised, as many may think. Fuel stores (fat and carbohydrate) exist in many parts of the body. Localized exercise will use all these stores, and not just those local to the area being exercised. Exercising the legs therefore may firm up the thighs and buttocks, but will not specifically burn fat in that region.
Because whole body exercises such as rowing, optimize the calorie consumption, they will more effectively reduce the body’s total fat content (provided of course they are performed at an exercise intensity which optimizes fat consumption).
Many exercise equipment manufacturers make miraculous claims as to the rate of calorie consumption attainable by their product. However the rate of calorie consumption is wholly dependant on our physiology, our level of fitness and the way in which we exercise. Trying to increase the calorie consumption by excessive exercise intensity may counter your specific exercise objective: you will not burn as much fat, and you will not be able to exercise as long, reducing the aerobic improvement.
Fitness is not a workout, it is a series of workouts spread conveniently throughout the weeks, months and years. Fitting a regular exercise regime into a busy lifestyle is difficult. The WaterRower fits into your living area, fits into your life, fits into your lifestyle like no other fitness product. Warm and welcoming to the senses, the WaterRower encourages the dedication of use essential to realizing ones exercise objectives.
Great post!
Here is another interesting fitness site:
http://www.modelsobserver.com/fitness.html
Got food & recipes for weight loss at Weight Watchers.
You might be interested in this guy's story. He lost 12 pounds doing the same things.
http://corebuildingwithoutcruches.blogspot.com/
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