Want to walk your way to health? Just Add Poles

Nordic walking is a boon for mobility and overall health

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Nordic walking is a boon for mobility and overall health

I’m a walker, logging an average of 9,000 steps a day several times a week around my Toronto neighbourhood. One of walking’s great charms for me is that you don’t need equipment. But on recent trips to Copenhagen and Stockholm, I noticed tall, fit Scandinavians striding along on city streets with poles, as if they were cross-country skiing without any snow.

It was a revelation to learn that the addition of the poles makes it a more vigorous, full-body exercise than simply walking—and, as a 76-year-old looking to stay healthy while enjoying the outdoors, I decided to give it a try.

There’s plenty of help online for the novice Nordic walker: stand tall, swing your arms out as if to shake hands, and plant your poles with vigour. Then there’s the little matter of the strap on the pole. This allows the walker to grip the pole when thrusting forward and then relax that hand as the other hand pushes forward—a feat of coordination that builds stronger muscles.

For a warm-up, I started slow: Nordic walking down the hall that extends from my front door to the deck. In case you’re tempted to sneer, that measures 19 good strides and it wasn’t easy. As I struggled to propel the right arm out while the left leg stepped—all while gripping and releasing properly—I was reminded of The Centipede’s Dilemma, a 19th-century poem about a poor arthropod who, when asked how she walked, had no idea what to answer.

Coordinating the movements wasn’t my only problem. As someone who can walk eight kilometres briskly without apparently raising my heart rate, the novel use of my arms and upper body was surprisingly strenuous.

After half an hour, my heart was pounding and I was sweating, but I still wasn’t much good. I pressed on, because there’s no arguing with the exercise’s benefits. Nordic walkers’ upper-body exercise increases their heart rate s...

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