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9
WAYS TO BONE UP!
By
RMW
9
WAYS TO MAKE YOUR BONES THICKER & STRONGER
1
USE SUPPLEMENTS to get at least 1200mg of calcium per day. It's probably most
effective if taken in 2-4 doses throughout the day. Increase calcium intake by
200mg for every training hour beyond one per day. Help your body absorb it by
taking 400-800 IU of vitamin D per day, according to Oregon Health & Science
University
2
ADD YOGURT, MILK (any type) and other high-calcium products to your regular
diet and post-ride refueling. Each serving contains 200-230 mg of calcium
3
CUT BACK ON SMOKING, ALCOHOL AND SODA, all known bone thinners.
4
LIFT WEIGHTS AT LEAST TWICE A WEEK, year-round.Some experts believe using
heavy weights in three sets of 6-10 reps to failure (the point where you lose
form) puts maxi-mum stress on muscles and bones, which cues the bone-strenghtening
mechanism. But just about any weight-lifting program will improve bone density.
5
DO BACK EXERCISES TWICE A WEEK to strengthen the lower vertebrae, which might
become particularly weak in cycling due to lack of movement. Do back extensions
or, at home,do yoga's cobra pose: Lie on your stomach with your hands behind your
neck, or with your palms flat on the floor in front of
you, shoulder-width
apart, then raise your head and chest off the floor. Hold for 5-30 seconds, and
repeat 3-10 times. You may also perform our stretching exercises.
http://www.betaller.com/grow-taller.htm
6
RUN, HIKE, SKIP ROPE OR JUMP AROUND with your kids for 20-30 minutes, two
to three times a week, to promote bone growth with weight-bearing vibration. "The
impact must be significant," says Christine Snow, director of OSU's Bone
Research Lab. A Johns Hopkins study found that light-intensity activities such
as walking did not strengthen bones. Other studies hint that as few as two minutes
of significant impact or vibration per day bestow some benefit.
7
STAND UP MORE OFTEN ON THE BIKE. It loads weight on your legs.
8
MOUNTAIN BIKE MORE. Sally Warner's study found significantly higher bone densities
in mountain bikers, particularly in the upper body, probably from the occasional
hiking, jarring ride and high-torque climbing.
9
GET A BONE SCAN. Know where you stand. Insurance companies typically won't
pay for the $1000+ DXA bone density scan until men are 65 and women are 50. Doctors
we contacted suggest that you might be covered under most insurance policies if
you appear to hunch when you see your doctor, com-
plain of aches and mention
that your spouse or friends say you look shorter, which could indicate premature
kyphosis, a grand-motherly forward slump.--R.M.W
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