Tag Archives: Walking

I did something bad.

What did I do?

I realized that I can get to a total walking mileage of 2,500 for 2015 if I walk 9.8 miles per day for the rest of the year.

That’s not impossible, not at all.

I…I might need to make it happen. But we’ll see.

A wild pedestrian appears!

OH. MY. GOD.

I need this. I need it now. I’m a faster walker than about 94% of the population, and 99% of the population doesn’t know how to courteously walk down a sidewalk, so this would be a very convenient and unobtrusive way to let a slower walker know I want to pass them. Currently I usually just scrape my shoe loudly against the ground as I’m approaching someone from behind so that they know I’m back there. It’s not always effective; half the time they look back at me and don’t even freaking move out of the way. WHY DO YOU THINK I’M MAKING NOISE?? This bell would make me sound like a bike, though, which would probably get them to actually move.

Maybe.

Shel Silverstein’s “Where the Sidewalk Ends” is actually referring to every other block in Calgary

Nate and I did another 20-mile walk today! This time we walked to Sunridge Mall and back. A nice big loop.

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(The map route is approximate.)

I’m also REALLY CLOSE to hitting 2,000 miles for the year. I’ve got about 8 more to go.

YAY!

Walker: Texas Pedestrian

Alright, I have a new long-term goal.

I am going to try to walk the distance equivalent to the circumference of the earth. I say “long-term” because if I walk 2,000 miles in a year (which I’m going to say is probably my max, given school and related things), it will still take me 12.5 total years to walk the circumference (which is approximately 25,000 miles at the equator).

BUT IT WILL HAPPEN, DAMMIT! I’m starting with this year, meaning I’ll be done sometime in 2027, assuming I’m able to keep my yearly mileage around 2,000.

I still won’t be done blogging by 2027.
OH MY GOD.

Canadian Mall – Installment 22: Core Centre

Holy crap, it’s a Canadian Mall post! I haven’t done one of those in like 40 years. Today I’ll blog about Core Center (or I guess Core Centre, since it’s Canadian), though this isn’t the first time I’ve been here. Technically Nate and I went here on our second date. So yeah, sometime last December was the first time I was here, haha.

ANYWAY.

Mileage from home to mall:

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Pros:

  • It’s got a little inside garden (okay, a big inside garden) that’s very peaceful and cool to look at, especially with the water features. There’s usually someone in there playing piano, too, so it’s nice.
  • Bookstore!
  • It’s downtown and thus is a nice intermediate point for our longer walks that take us through downtown but to a destination a ways away.
  • Part of the mall is structured so that if you’re on one of the higher floors and are looking across the way to the other side of the mall, it looks like you’re looking at the outside of another building. It’s a weird little illusion, but it’s pretty cool.

Cons:

  • It’s tucked away rather unassumingly in a building downtown, which makes it impossible to find for people like me. It’s a good thing Nate knows where it is. I also never would have found this on my own, just because it doesn’t look like a mall from the outside.
  • They close the bathrooms in the food court on the weekends. What.

Of course someone’s always pushing the envelope. Otherwise it’s just stationery.

HELLO, PEOPLE!

So I had this fantastic idea the other night to figure out, in total, how many miles/steps/whatevers I’ve put on my iPod since I bought it way back in February 2012.|
This idea was promptly destroyed, however, when I discovered that my 2012 walking data is nowhere to be found. I have 2010’s (for the three months I walked during that year, haha), I have 2011’s, and I have 2013-2015. But no 2012.*

How about I figure out, in total, how many miles/steps/whatevers I’ve put on my iPod since January 1, 2013?

HERE WE GO WITH SOME SUMMARY STATS

Total distance: 3,769.68 miles (average per walk: 4.358 miles)
Total steps: 7,932,075 (average per walk: 9,170)
Total calories burned: 211,136 (average per walk: 290.33)

I also wanted to try to see if my average number of miles walked is significantly different year by year. So I did an ANOVA! The ANOVA turned out to be highly significant (F(2,862) = 126.26, p < 0.001), which suggests that at least two years have significantly different mileage averages. Some Tukey Pairwise comparisons showed that all three years had significantly different average mileage from one another. Here are the means:

2013: 2.803 miles per walk
2014: 5.647 miles per walk
2015: 6.664 miles per walk.

Have some graphs!

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*That missing year of data is really stressing me out, you have no idea.

Mileage Update

Hello, fools!

Counting today’s mileage, I’ve officially walked 1,000 miles since May 1st. It’s taken me nearly 11 solid days of walking to do it, but there ya go. That means I’ve walked 1,750 miles for the year, which surpasses my goal mileage, 1,500. YAY!

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It also means that I’ll have to try for 2,000 miles total by the end of the year.

I’ll do it.
Impending Canadian winter cannot stop me.

“I THINK IT’S DE SUNS?”

(Random Metalocalypse quote just because.)

A while ago I promised you pictures of my sun-faded walking clothes, so here they are.

Pants:

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Shirt:

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I’ve had these as my walking clothes for at least 2.5 years now, so they’ve been out over 3,500 miles. The back of my shirt is getting really worn through, too, ‘cause I always have some sort of backpack on when I walk and it rubs against the shirt the whole time.

A Year in Calgary: Walking Edition

A year ago today, I moved to Calgary. So what better way to celebrate than to give you all my walking stats for the past year?

Total mileage: 2,162.6 (that’s approximately equal to the distance from Seattle to Atlanta)
Average miles per day: 7.33
Total steps: 4,548,608
Average steps per day: 15,419.01
Average speed: 3.83 MPH

Here’s a graph of my mileage per month.

Mileage per Month

December, January, and February are low because of CANADIAN WINTER (which actually wasn’t too bad, but still); May and June were low because of our road trip and moving to the condo. April is highest because I was switching to my new shoes on May 1st and I was trying to pack as many miles onto the old shoes as I could.

Here’s a graph of my mileage per week day over the course of the year.

Mileage per Day

I was surprised Monday was highest; I would have guessed Thursday or Saturday. Though I guess my weekly walking pattern changed once I met Nate. It’ll be interesting to see what next year’s graphs look like! Hopefully I can beat the 2,162.6 miles.

Moscow Dust (Warning: Gross Feet)

I wear little ankle-high socks when I walk. That’s the only time I don’t mind short socks.

Anyway, I walked about 8 miles today and I had these nice little dust leggings by the time I got back home. I would have had to walk more than 20 miles to get the same dust build-up in Calgary.

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Must be the dryness.

(Apologies for my gross legs; I didn’t have anything else to blog about today.)
(Also, I have the cankles of a god.)

I went for a walk today. It was weird.

Reasons why it was weird:

  • There was a guy dragging a big screen TV by a rope as he walked down the sidewalk. It was a big TV—like a 62” one or something—and it was like he was out taking it for a walk. I asked him if he needed help, thinking he was dragging it to the curb to throw it away or something, but he was like, “nope, I’m good!” and kept walking it.
  • I saw four—yes, four—different couples walking around where the woman was holding a bag of groceries and the man was holding a watermelon. This wouldn’t have been as weird if the four sightings had been in a relatively concentrated area, but they were all over the place.
  • This kid (he was like 12 or something? I have no idea) rode his bike up to me while I was going up 14th street and started talking about the Illuminati.

Strange walk. Strange walk.

Calgary Adventures

So guess who walked 20.5 miles today?

WE DID!

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We went down to the southern end of the C-Train because we wanted to see just how far south we could walk in one stretch. Turns out it’s pretty far. This is (approximately) our route. That Dairy Queen was our destination.

sadf

YAY! I’ll be doing my “one year in Calgary” walking stats in about a month, so stay tuned!

Also, this. You can buy individual colors/flavors of candy. Do you know how dangerous that is?
ALL APPLE JOLLY RANCHERS ALL THE TIME

I AM ROOMBA HERE ME ROAR

I’m to the point with my walking where any walk shorter than 8 or 9 miles feels like absolutely nothing and, if that’s all the distance I go in a day, it feels like I’m slacking off and not walking enough.

Which is a pretty stupid thing to think, since before we moved to the new place I was walking about 7 miles a day (four times a week at least) going to/from campus. Now I’m going 10+ about four days a week, plus at least 5 or so the remaining 3 days of the week. So I’m obviously not walking less, but it really feels like I am. It’s like this:

  • 15+ miles: Good walk!
  • 12 – 15 miles: Decent walk!
  • 9 – 12: Yeah, sure, okay.
  • 8 – 9: At least you moved a little. Sort of.
  • < 7: GO DIE IN A CORNER YOU LAZY CRAP

I’m sure my mind will return to realistically looking at mileage once next semester starts up and I’m actually busy (especially with thesis stuff), but right now, this is how it is.

At least I’m putting good mileage on these shoes!

Why I Walk

As you all know, walking is kind of my thing. Which is funny if you think about it, because I used to think of walking as a boring waste of time. Why not just take a car? What kind of weirdo would go walking for fun in their spare time? Why do people waste their lives doing something so dull??

Obviously my opinion has changed. And since I’ve been doing this “walking for fun” thing since late 2010, I figured it’s about time I actually explained why I do it and why it’s enjoyable for me.

The whole reason I started walking in the first place was for stress relief. In August 2010 I was just starting my second year of grad school at UBC and I was already obscenely stressed out about it. It got to the point where, one weekend, I was so anxious that I felt like I just needed to get out of my apartment. So I put my shoes on, grabbed my keys, and just went for a very brief walk. I didn’t have any sort of pedometer with me on that walk, so I can only guess that the walk was likely no longer than a mile tops, but it almost instantly calmed me down and made me forget all my school-related nonsense for the half hour or so I was out there.

Knowing that I’d likely want to go do this again, I dug out a basic pedometer I’d gotten from somewhere and just put it next to my shoes. On my next walk, which was within the same week as the first, I started tracking my steps.

Well, because I’m me, the “walking for relaxation” very quickly became the “walking so I can beat my previous step count,” which was surprisingly just as relaxing as simply walking for walking’s sake. So I kept at it. By that point I’d bought an iPod Nano ‘cause my old one finally died, and it had a built-in pedometer feature that I started using instead of the clip-onto-your-waistband pedometer. Once I bought my iPod Touch, I downloaded the pedometer app I still use today and was able to keep even better track of my walking stats.

Over the next horrible, horrible 8 months of grad school, walking was really the only thing that kept me from jumping off a bridge. Unlike nowadays, when I’ll gladly walk 7+ miles on any given day, I pretty much resigned my walking to Saturdays while I was in Vancouver (though that was mainly due to the fact that it rained about 5 out of the 7 weekdays in that freaking city). But my Saturday walks took me all around Vancouver and were the only things that would get my mind off of my impending thesis and all the other hellish nonsense that second grad school year brought me.

And I’ve been walking ever since. While I’ve never been nearly as stressed as I was in that last year of grad school, walking has consistently been the thing that’s calmed me down and given me time to just think. I always feel like my mind clears up and just works better when I’m out walking and for hours after. It allows me to explore cities (and Moscow) and to get a better grasp on directions/knowing where I am—which is super helpful, because I have the fantastic ability to get lost even with a map in my hands.

And the stats. I freely admit that I would not walk as often as I do now if I didn’t have a way to keep track of my steps/mileage/calories burned/walking time. I really, really like keeping track of things like that. It’s a nice feeling to me to be out on a 4 hour walk, for example, knowing that every step and every second is being counted and recorded and can be referenced and explored later. I just love that. Plus I can do analyses on all the old walks, which is the BEST FREAKING PART OF IT ALL.

So yeah. What began as a desperate attempt at regulating the stress of grad school has evolved into something that is very much a part of me now. I walk because it’s just what I do, and I can’t see myself wanting to cut down on it or stop any time soon.

So yay!

Oof.

Hahahaha, look what I did to these shoes, man.

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If I ever let my shoes get as chewed up as these and refuse to get a new pair until a certain number of miles have been reached and/or a new month starts, one of you needs to forcibly drag me to a store that sells Kinvaras and then make me buy a new pair, ‘cause these new shoes are making me feel like I’m walking on air.

I have learned my lesson, feet. Many apologies to you.

In This Blog: Claudia Ruins Another Pair of Shoes

In news that is likely quite shocking: 1,450 miles of walking will murder a pair of shoes.

I’ve had my Kinvara 5’s since September 8, 2014. Since then, I’ve walked 1,450 miles in them while up here in Calgary. Have some walking stats!

Total distance: 1,450.28 miles (2,334 kilometers)
Total steps: 3,062,328 steps
Total time: 370 hours (15.41 days)
Most mileage in a single day: 22.9 miles (April 29)
Least (non-zero) mileage in a single day: 0.37 miles (April 11) (We just walked from Nate’s place to the new condo and back)

Boxplots!

month week

1,450 miles is approximately the distance from Vancouver, BC to Winnipeg, MB. Or, if you want to go north-south, it’s approximately the distance from Milwaukee, WI to Miami, FL.

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Pretty snazzy.

So unless I die or something, I’m pretty sure I’ll hit 1,500 miles by the end of the year (which was my goal). If I can get to 2,000, I’d be super happy.

WOO! My Kinvara 5’s can now retire. It’s time for the new ones to earn their stay.

 

BLUCH

Do you ever feel like a box of turds for no discernible reason?

That’s how I’m feeling today.

It might be because I didn’t walk to campus today. I wanted to give my feet a bit of a break because I’ve walked 71 miles over the past week, but maybe my body’s so used to the walking that it goes into “I’mma feel like garbage” mode if I don’t walk more than 5 miles in a day.

Sorry, body. I’ll do better tomorrow.

(P.S. Microsoft Word 2007 does not recognize the word “turds”)

INFINITE WALKING

DUDES.

I have a portable recharger/extra battery thingy for my iPod already, but ohmygod.

I could just wear this thing along with my iPod on my walks.

And I would
NEVER
NEED
TO
STOP.

(Well, okay, food and water and sleep and all that nonsense, but I don’t need much of any of that anyway.)

The Proclaimers, where are you?

500 walking miles since January! That’s approximately the distance between Moscow and Calgary.

If I keep this pace, I’ll hit 2,000 miles by the end of the year.

Have some chill music to celebrate.

Steppin’

I’ve walked a million steps this year! That’s probably not at all impressive, but whatevs.

Have some Powerthirst, because Powerthirst.

One of my good friends has the nickname “Fizzbitch” from these.

i’m in ur country, walkin ur cities

HEEEEEEEEEEEEEY, guess who hit 1,000 miles on her pair of shoes?

*points at self*

Nate and I went on a very nice 11-mile walk this afternoon (which included getting poutine and candy), which put me above 1,000 miles on my shoes. Check them out!

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So that’s 1,000 miles since I moved to Calgary, which was September 1st of last year (though I guess I didn’t wear those shoes until the 8th, but whatevs). I’m going to try to get to 1,500 miles on them before I break down and get a new pair (mainly because I want to wait until the Kinvara 6’s come out), but no promises. The heels, as you can see, are really starting to wear through.

Here are some stats:

Miles: 1,029.41
Time: 265 hours, 44 minutes, 43 seconds (that’s like 11 days)
Steps: 2,173,614

Woo!

ALSO: we watched Guardians of the Galaxy last night, so now I’m all caught up for Age of Ultron in May. I’d have to say my three favorite movies were, in order, The Avengers, Thor, and Iron Man 3. Thor: The Dark World had the best soundtrack, though.

ALSO ALSO: rainbow sprinkle pretzels. Is there a better candy to represent me? I think not.

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Walkin’ on the Sun

Holy buttgoblins, I’ve been missing Vancouver today. I was actually going to blog about how much I missed the city (and walking around in it), but as I started doing so, I remembered something else that was related but more interesting than my usual Van blathering.

“What is it?” You ask, grateful that you don’t have to scroll past another “Claudia blah-blahs about Vancouver” post.

It’s Walk Score!

From their “About” page: “Walk Score’s mission is to promote walkable neighborhoods. Walkable neighborhoods are one of the simplest and best solutions for the environment, our health, and our economy.”

Basically, a city (or a specific house in a city, either way) is assigned a score depending on how “walkable” that particular city/house is. If a house is closer to major things like downtowns, restaurants, grocery stores, parks, etc., it will have a higher score. If it’s far away from such things. Or, in the case of a city, if there aren’t a lot of sidewalks or pedestrian-friendly routes, the city’s overall score decreases.

So let’s check it out!

Vaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan

Yeah, that looks about right. The blue dot is where I lived, by the way.

And this:

CAaaaaaaaaaalg

That looks about right, too. Calgary is fantastic at the inconsistent sidewalk thing. And the taxi drivers that want to mow down pedestrians. DON’T GET ME STARTED ON THE TAXI DRIVERS.

What about Moscow?

SCOOOOOOOOOOOW

That’s…surprising, actually. I don’t know if it’s because there just aren’t that many grocery stores in the city or (because stores/restaurants/etc. seem to be pretty clustered in specific spots)? Moscow seems waaaaay more walkable than Calgary. But that might just be because I’ve walked it so many freaking times that a 3-mile walk to Walmart doesn’t seem bad at all.

Marana

Hahahaha, yeah. Yeah.

Canadian Mall – Installment 21: Westbrook Mall

Hey look, it’s one of those Canadian Mall posts. I haven’t done one of those in quite some time, have I? Anyway. Today Nate and I walked down to Westbrook Mall, a mall down kind of in the southwest part of the city.

Mileage from home to mall (one way; from Nate’s house, not mine):

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Pros:

  • A nice little quiet mall. It wasn’t very crowded at all.
  • There’s a Walmart, apparently. I either didn’t see it or just wasn’t paying attention.

Cons:

  • Like most malls, the parking lot is a death trap for pedestrians.
  • There were no super special standout stores. It’s a small mall.
  • The walk was good, though!

END!

Winter Walk!

So I just found this last night.

“Winter Walk Day 2015: Join schools, community groups, workplaces and individuals to walk for at least 15 minutes on February 4th. Register and then record your minutes after your walk.”

Of course today was the one day I didn’t feel like walking to/from school, but I did it anyway!

Mileage: 6.47
Steps: 13,670
Speed: 4.05 MPH

WOO!

Walk the Walk: Canadian Style

Heeeeeeeey, so I don’t know why I waited like a week for this, but what the hell, have some walking statistics for my time in Calgary so far!

Total distance: 680.00 miles [Not sure how I managed to hit that exactly. It wasn’t planned.]
Total number of walks: 93
Average distance per walk: 7.31 miles

Did I meet my average of 50 miles per week? No. I blame finals. But that’s okay, considering that last year it took me eight months to go 1,000 miles and this year it took me only about 3.5 months to walk nearly 700 miles. I bumped up the pace quite a bit, I’d say.

Want some line graphs? You know you do.

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khkhkk

October was a good month.

Stay tuned for a later blog post in which I set my yearly mileage goal for 2015!