05-05-2016 08:52
05-05-2016 08:52
05-05-2016 09:49 - edited 05-05-2016 12:41
05-05-2016 09:49 - edited 05-05-2016 12:41
Ignore your heart rate zones; Fitbit bases your zones on the widely discredited 220-Age formula for calculating Max heart rate (zones are some percentage of Max). Instead concentrate on your breathing as follows:
05-05-2016 12:30
05-05-2016 12:30
Large periods of time, many hours, can in theory lead to heart failure. Especially in someone that is in poor shape.
An hour, that's nothing to worry about. In fact I suspect that as you get into better shape, your heart rate will drop and you will burn fewer and fewer calories doing the same exercise.
When I first started walking, my heart was in the 140 BPM range. Now it's rarely over 106 BPM.
So keep at it!
11-05-2017 07:38 - edited 11-05-2017 07:38
11-05-2017 07:38 - edited 11-05-2017 07:38
I was 96% in my peak zone the in 32 min of my run. Is that ok?
This is my first 3 miles for a while. I usually never get in my oeak zone but I feel great after.
11-05-2017 08:05
11-05-2017 08:05
@Lovelylbb99, short answer, your zones are wrong.
Long answer:
The 220-Age formula is based upon gross averages and is wrong as often as it is correct for any given individual. The easiest thing you can do is to bump your Maximum Heart Rate in your profile to something closer to reality for your body.
12-05-2017 08:51
12-05-2017 08:51