Does Cycling ACTUALLY Help You Lose Weight? | GCN Show Ep. 569

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  • Опубликовано: 23 янв 2025

Комментарии • 789

  • @gcn
    @gcn  Год назад +11

    Tell us about your cycling nutrition 🥦

    • @kolstefan5
      @kolstefan5 Год назад +5

      16/8 fasting, low carbohydrates, high fat and protein. This lowers insulin and produces ketones and burns fat.

    • @TiberiusMoon
      @TiberiusMoon Год назад +1

      My BMR is very low which kinda sucks when your reducing your body fat percentage, After many measurements with a consistent diet and exercise my BMR is around 1200 cal (and advice from a dietican) @@traderz13

    • @ltu42
      @ltu42 Год назад +4

      Phil Gaimon's statement that you can eat whatever you like on the bike (in the context of huge chocolate chip cookies) because you'll burn it all by the time you'll get home really stuck with me. Coffee stops with guilt-free cake are so good.
      Other than that, my fave lifehack is 50 grams of maltodextrin in the first water bottle. No artificial flavours, no sickening sweetness, two gels worth of energy while sipping on the drink.

    • @hutchy_4297
      @hutchy_4297 Год назад

      @@kolstefan5 so you must be super thin?

    • @markjthomson
      @markjthomson Год назад +4

      Bodies are made in the kitchen, and if you have to exercise to lose weight your nutrition is wrong! Exercise is great for many reasons, but weight management is not one of them. Eat right, real food, avoid ultra processed foods, exercise well, rest properly and sleep! In regard to ex pro's who "balloon", you can't comment on any reasons based on change in exercise alone, as it is a whole raft of changes including typically no longer being closely monitored in the areas of health, nutrition and exercise. Too many changes to simply isolate it to "less exercise makes them gain weight".

  • @philipcooper8297
    @philipcooper8297 Год назад +244

    Not sure about my body weight, but my wallet certainly does seem much lighter than it was before I got into road cycling.

    • @James_R_
      @James_R_ Год назад +4

      FACTs! Quit for 5 years because of this exact reason... Not only that, it was a loaner bike I was just trying to maintain. Then gained 100lbs. /facepalm

    • @n22pdf
      @n22pdf Год назад +1

      lol so true 😂😂Pete

    • @forsdykemontague1017
      @forsdykemontague1017 Год назад

      Now you spend it all on overpriced Lycra 😂

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Год назад +7

      Hahaha we hear you there! Are you happier though? 👀

    • @TikeMyson69
      @TikeMyson69 Год назад +1

      Sounds like you can still afford food though.

  • @brittwoodruff9369
    @brittwoodruff9369 Год назад +131

    While diet does play a part in weight loss I can honestly say that my weight loss from 440 lbs to 198 lbs over a 2 year period cycling definitely played a massive part in it. At my largest I had done so much strain to my joints that I choose cycling due to its lack of physical impact on joints to change my body. 100% cycling has made a difference.

    • @jimcappa6815
      @jimcappa6815 Год назад +12

      That's awesome! Keep up the good work. I did a similar thing. Went from 385 to 180. Feel great, and at 60, I hope to be around for a while.

    • @mommamooney
      @mommamooney Год назад +4

      Nice work!

    • @brittwoodruff9369
      @brittwoodruff9369 Год назад +5

      @@jimcappa6815 absolutely feels incredible. Was able to get myself to a position that I attempted and completed the Whistler Forte Fondo in September.

    • @johnrodgers6049
      @johnrodgers6049 Год назад +7

      Exercise most definitely helps control weight, but it is much easier to control weight by diet.
      BUT! There are a litany of other health benefits gained from exercise and the primary one may be psychological health.
      Exercise also helps with:
      Stroke.
      Metabolic syndrome.
      High blood pressure.
      Type 2 diabetes.
      Depression.
      Anxiety.
      Many types of cancer.
      Arthritis.
      Falls.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Год назад +2

      You made the right choice! Cycling is amazing 🙌 Keep up the great work, What's the next goal?

  • @dakotatroudt3736
    @dakotatroudt3736 Год назад +6

    Hey everyone, I'm fella with the Globe Haul e-Bike! Thanks for picking my bike, while I don't ride everywhere with bikes on the back Si did cover the reason. I run a bike shop in my town and often bring my bikes that I'm switching out parts, need something, etc... and I've tried to go mostly carless over the last few months when commuting to work and we have a fantastic paved trail network here in Fort Collins. You'd be surprised how many folks here in town haul bikes with cargo bikes. I mostly did it out of sheer silliness to have fun with everything and give myself a practical way to get my bike to work when I don't want to drive them if they need something. Thanks for featuring me, made my day!

    • @kevinfeeney5309
      @kevinfeeney5309 Год назад

      I've done similar with an old dog hauling trailer. I stripped all the fabric (it was worn anyway) and since the frame was round tubing I used Yakima bike trays. I sort of did it as an exercise.. don't use it much.
      I do use a '76 KHS Gran Sport mixte with the Xtracycle Free Radical though. I have picked up several bicycles that were free in my neighborhood. I spot them on rides, so rather than having to ride back home to grab my minivan, I just use my "DIY" longtail.

  • @jonheggen
    @jonheggen Год назад +99

    My wife, a retired PE teacher, always tells me, "you cannot out run(pedal) the fork". However, two years ago we road our bikes across the US. I ate what I wanted, drank an amount of beer that only Dan would appreciate and lost 15+ pounds (6.8 kilos, 1.07 stone). six months later, 10 of the lost pounds were found. Beer and Pizza consumption had to be reduced.

    • @drkneesandtoes6312
      @drkneesandtoes6312 Год назад +12

      I'm at the other end of the scale after a lifetime of endurance exercise. For example, I rode across Australia, solo, unsupported, in 18 days of cycling (2 days off in Port Lincoln) doing 200 -300 km a day, on perhaps 3000 kcals a day - mostly stuff like dried fruit, tins of tuna, freeze dried veg etc. Back in the 80s the roadhouses were few and far between. But I lost no weight. Similarly on mountaineering expeditions, other people would lose 10kg or more, but I never lost any weight. And the reverse it true, as now I'm slowing down I am putting weight on but I can literally not eat for a week (like a recent hospital stay where I was on a saline only drip and NBM for 7 days) and lose less than 1 kg.
      More recently I've actually had my BMR measured - it's 1200 kcals/day. So it looks like 40+ years of cycling, mountain running, 24 hour orienteering, and mountaineering around the world, and generally undereating as food's heavy stuff, I've pushed my body to levels of efficiency where I can get by on minimal calories. But I'm suffering the health effects (REDS) like loss of bone mass and osteoporosis.
      So there's genetics, and there's training and adaptation, but everyone is different.

    • @jigglypuff4227
      @jigglypuff4227 Год назад

      Hello; I noticed the same phenomenon when it comes to me, I wont lose any further weight at some point, no matter how many kilometers I did per day. I rode 5 times a week and sometimes around 70 - 90 kilometers per ride and only ate around 1.550 kcal - 1750 kcal the whole day, being 168cm tall and at 63.5kg
      It really feels that my body is completely stuck and it felt like I could even gain weight while eating 1650 kcal even though I should have burned every day over 1200 kcal or more per Zwift session. I have no idea what that is, I can not really get shredded :( I saw some videos where they claim it is the problem that I am not eating enough and therefore being skinny fat, but I am not sure. @@drkneesandtoes6312

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Год назад +3

      That's some great riding though and you need to fuel for a journey like that! What an epic tour - have you got any more tips lined up?

    • @michaeltsui3435
      @michaeltsui3435 Год назад +1

      ​@@gcnthe only sure way to lose weight is to consume more than you eat, and if you burn 2.5k to exercise your body must commit to extra food or reserves.

  • @aihsanasl
    @aihsanasl Год назад +49

    Cycling caused me to gain extra 15 kgs, Im 7/24 watching GCN videos and eating sandwiches, pizza and hamburger.

    • @feedbackzaloop
      @feedbackzaloop Год назад

      Looks like a diet to gain pounds, not kilos

    • @johnhickie1107
      @johnhickie1107 Год назад

      GCN as a cause of weight gain. Never realized that! 😂 I'll get up and jump on the trainer this minute.

    • @judithdavison6698
      @judithdavison6698 Год назад

      You could be burning fat and gaining muscle.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Год назад +3

      We're sorry about that, we'll have too make out videos less engaging 😉

    • @aihsanasl
      @aihsanasl Год назад

      @@gcn don't worry girls find me hotter that way.

  • @kevinhoffmann3713
    @kevinhoffmann3713 Год назад +32

    My weight fluctuation from riding is in direct correlation to the amount of cafe stops taken.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Год назад +5

      Hahahaha! You've got to get a cake when you're at the cafe 🍰

    • @deanjohnson6642
      @deanjohnson6642 Год назад +1

      Just 1?

    • @helipeek2736
      @helipeek2736 3 месяца назад

      Eschew pastry

  • @jeffadams3489
    @jeffadams3489 Год назад +24

    Cycling definitely helps with weight loss: I promised myself that I would not treat myself to that new bike until I lost 15 pounds, which really helped me stick to my diet! Love the new bike (6 years old) and have kept the weight off. Truly, I think that cycling is more about motivation to watch what I eat than what I lose through excersise.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Год назад +1

      That's awesome! What a way to treat yourself, what bike did you get? 👀

    • @jeffadams3489
      @jeffadams3489 Год назад

      Thanks. It is a Carbon GT Grade Ultegra. I eventually changed out the cranks and cassette to get to 1:1, which I am only going to need more in the next decade. I switch from a 28 summer tire to a 35 knobby tire in winter, and then ride more gravel and off road.@@gcn

  • @zao.224
    @zao.224 Год назад +6

    I also listened to a lecture from Dr. van Tulleken recently and found that calorie claim perplexing. Would be awesome for you all to have him on the show and dig into that a bit deeper!

  • @stephengirimont
    @stephengirimont Год назад +36

    I've lost 50 pounds since March of 2021 when I started cycling. The ONLY change has been that I started cycling. I did not change my diet at all. Of course, I'm riding 1.5 to 2 hours a day 5 or 6 days a week, so the "endurance sport" calorie burn does come into play in my situation.

    • @yumyumhungry
      @yumyumhungry Год назад +2

      I think the studies are only taking into account the vast majority of people who do a half hour to an hour run and call it a day. Not us freaks that will do 8+ hour rides.

    • @Taz86
      @Taz86 Год назад +1

      @@yumyumhungry probably accurate tbh. My longest ride this year was around 9 hours in the saddle, and I burned north of 5,000 calories

    • @healthandfitnesstips-o6t
      @healthandfitnesstips-o6t Год назад

      Are you Weight loss Transformation Solved?
      Please, commented YES or No

  • @andrifsig
    @andrifsig Год назад +20

    yes! Cycling helps with weight loss! Started cycling moving away from a static lifestyle. Weighed in at 165kgs and about 191cm tall. Today I am 108kgs, so still a relatively heavy cyclist but able to complete long endurance rides over 200kms. And still targeting longer rides. Started at the beginning cycle touring and it is the absolute fastest way to shed off the weight but still eating like a hog. 11 day trip in the Westfjords of Iceland and shed off 10kgs on the trip. Ate whatever was infront of me and did so about 8 times a day. Even had a meal at the ready during the middle of the night because I was waking up still hungry. Just could not eat enough. Low zone2 riding for the win! Now the proud owner of 4 bikes and all put to great use throughout the week!

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Год назад +3

      Sounds like you are smashing your riding! Anything over 200k is pushing it 🥵 Iceland is an amazing place to ride - we've done some great gravel over there 👉 ruclips.net/video/4wHmo5-OvwQ/видео.html

    • @Nasr.bussiness
      @Nasr.bussiness Год назад +1

      Great story man❤
      Just keep up
      Me I'm 100kgs i have to lose over 15kgs to get best weight 😢 I'm searching about buying a bike 🚵

  • @troughtonbl
    @troughtonbl Год назад +26

    Interesting debate on weight loss, I think we need a presenter calorie test with Manon, Conor and Si - seeing how long it takes to burn a variety of calories 500, 750 and a 1000. Think we’d be surprised how different the timing might be

    • @DB-sj8km
      @DB-sj8km Год назад +1

      The amount of time it takes Manon to burn 500 calories will be what it takes Si to burn 750, and Conor 1000. Not exactly, but around that.

  • @jamesthomas2196
    @jamesthomas2196 Год назад +5

    As a relatively competitive marathon runner, i work by the 80:20 split for weight control and it works. 80% diet and 20% exercise. Also as a doctor, i see many patients claim they cant lose weight because they cannot get to the gym…they leave with the same advice i apply to myself

  • @kaidean
    @kaidean Год назад +5

    I took up road cycling last year specifically to lose weight. Since then, I have lost about 13 kg and am now training for riding across the UK in a day. I try to eat right (I logged every calorie I ate for about 12 months) and I ride about 100 - 120 km per week. I have just recently entered the world of Zwift which I find harder to put the hours in to burn the calories, looking forward to better weather so I can get back outside!
    In the last 18 months of cycling, I have found a huge shift in attitude to food consumption, I am not overly interested in eating, I eat at meal times and no real snacking. This means, I have zero desire to stop on rides for café stops!

  • @colinricketts1415
    @colinricketts1415 Год назад +2

    the hack or bodge thing on the shimano mtb mech/campy gear lever - that's similar to the avid rollamajig. Just removed one from an old mountain bike because it had stopped rolling due to wear

    • @kevinfeeney5309
      @kevinfeeney5309 Год назад +1

      That's what I was thinking about when Si was describing his little device...

  • @r.massattack4052
    @r.massattack4052 Год назад +3

    Cycling was tremendous in me losing weight. I was a free weight lifter but hurt my shoulder. I turned to cycling to not balloon up in weight. I started at 233 Lbs & in the 1st week I dropped 18Lbs. Im currently at 193Lbs. I never changed the way I ate but I do fast 2 days a week. I have a wheel on trainer & workout 1-2 hours, 3-4 days a week. My goal per session is 10 miles plus per hour. I found the GCN Sessions on YT & have been hooked ever since. I train on Zwift while training to GCN. 2 Birds, 1 Stone.

  • @nwimpney
    @nwimpney Год назад +2

    Canadian in Vancouver here: Probably similar weather to UK. Last week was around freezing in the mornings and foggy, last few days it's been warm-ish at around 10C, but loads of rain.

  • @WrathMania32
    @WrathMania32 Год назад +8

    I definitely think there's truth to this. I first started cycling seriously two years ago and was able to be pretty loose with my diet while still either maintaining or losing weight. I was doing 60 miles a week then. Now I do 100-120 and I find I have to budget calories pretty strictly. There's probably other factors involved (stress, for instance), but I do think my body adapted to the workload.

  • @alinapopescu872
    @alinapopescu872 Год назад +5

    For me, a solid episode of deep depression is the best way to lose weight. The one I'm still treating made me lose 5 kilos, taking me from a barely healthy 50 kilos to 45. I've put back 3, so I'm out of the underweight zone. It works like a charm every single time.

    • @colecoleman1499
      @colecoleman1499 11 месяцев назад

      U lost water weight and muscle likely not fat

  • @darrylhuculak4996
    @darrylhuculak4996 Год назад +3

    As per Si's request - Current weather in Victoria, BC: 11ºC, overcast with light winds. We're a little pampered here on the West Coast.

  • @newttella1043
    @newttella1043 Год назад +1

    The bike on a bike is actually a bike on an E-bike. So getting to a mountain bike trail quickly, efficiently, and environmentally are good reasons.

  • @diezrosales
    @diezrosales Год назад +2

    It certainly does. I took the GCN January 2023 challenge and I cycled for 30 minutes everyday. I enjoyed it so much, that I continued doing it for the rest of the year, as well as cycling 3 or 4 hours over the weekend. By June, I had lost 10 kg, even though I hadn't set out to lose any weight as I only wanted to improve my fitness, but it just happened. I have a balanced diet and never changed it, other than treating myself to a cake every now and then as a reward, which I wasn't doing before. In my experience, cycling regularly definitely made me lose weight.

  • @Quivivravelo
    @Quivivravelo Год назад +4

    #captioncompetition: Oh my Lloyd, These Karate kids trying to get their first DAN.

  • @rasmuskoop3516
    @rasmuskoop3516 Год назад +1

    Chris Van Tulleken misrepresented the study he is citing. it finds a positive correlation between physical activity and energy expenditure, that gets smaller as activity increases.
    Copied from the abstract :"total energy expenditure was positively correlated with physical activity, but the relationship was markedly stronger over the lower range of physical activity. For subjects in the upper range of physical activity, total energy expenditure plateaued."
    From the study "Constrained Total Energy Expenditure and Metabolic Adaptation to Physical Activity in Adult Humans " by herman pontzer et al

  • @contactking
    @contactking Год назад +1

    Truth be told, it has been TOO WARM in Calgary. Yesterday, was +12C. Today, +4. We've only had a few days of snow so far. On the positive side, I've only fallen off my bike on ice three times.

  • @deborahkontschak2098
    @deborahkontschak2098 Год назад +3

    During summer and 7h weekend rides I definitely lose weight… BUT! since losing weight is one way to become a faster rider, cycling has helped me a lot in being more disciplined about eating.

  • @rothotborski
    @rothotborski 8 месяцев назад +1

    As long as I'm cycling it prevents me from going to the fridge...so simply the time spend on a bike helps to lose weight completely independent from calorie consumption...

  • @MrPharmageek
    @MrPharmageek Год назад +11

    Me: nice, I just burned 800 calories on a zone 2 ride.
    Also me: proceeds to shove 1000+ calories worth of chips into my face.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Год назад +1

      You're not the only one, nothing wrong with a chippy tea 🙌

    • @jack002tuber
      @jack002tuber Год назад +2

      We all find that the rate of intake is much nigher than outgo. One candybar in takes like two days of hard work to burn off

  • @thenobleist9262
    @thenobleist9262 Год назад +3

    To be fair, if I could ride an e-bike to the trailhead or to a local race start, I absolutely would do that. Quite the hack figuring out a way to transport one bike with another.

  • @hughbriz
    @hughbriz Год назад +1

    That shifter adjuster is for sale - j-tek shift mate allows various Shimergo combinations and works well. There are several different ones.

  • @draconianTL
    @draconianTL Год назад +2

    I'm in the middle of losing weight, going from a starting point of 84.5kg, currently at 79kg and aiming for

  • @johnnorris1457
    @johnnorris1457 Год назад +1

    On the induction loop traffic sensor - when stopped, we used to lean our steel frame/rimmed bikes near parallel with the loops inorder to get the sensors to trigger. It may have been more of a superstitious act than fact based, but seemed to have worked enough times to keep us trying.

  • @jonathanbouchard39
    @jonathanbouchard39 Год назад +1

    The Bike on a Bike is great when you want to lend your bike to a friend - Hack!

  • @gregknipe8772
    @gregknipe8772 Год назад

    You two have the best chemistry.

  • @CameronFraserACHF
    @CameronFraserACHF Год назад +6

    I ran for a decade, eventually getting up to half marathons, and then came back to cycling, which I've been focused on for the last decade. I said on more than one occasion that despite all the exercise I hadn't actually lost any weight... I'd just rearranged it into a slightly more attractive package. A couple of years ago, I started using an app to track food intake and manage portion size. Lost 25 pounds in just over a year.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Год назад +5

      Often the diet and exercise will work hand in hand, great to hear that you've come to the light side and away from... running! 😂

    • @CameronFraserACHF
      @CameronFraserACHF Год назад

      @gcn At 65, it turns out to be, far and away, the easiest way... maybe the only way... to improve my power to weight ratio

    • @jack002tuber
      @jack002tuber Год назад

      I have heard someone say "you can't outrun (or outride) the fork". I believe it. Most power in controlling diet. Both diet and exercise has to be better, but don't expect to lose weight while not dieting.

  • @TimothyFish
    @TimothyFish Год назад +18

    I agree that you don't have to exercise to control your weight, but my experience has been that I tend to eat the same amount of food whether I'm exercising or not. For that reason, it is a lot easier to lose weight when I am exercising than when I'm trying to keep my calorie count down.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Год назад +3

      A healthy balance of them both is always the best option 🙌

    • @davidmackintosh429
      @davidmackintosh429 Год назад +1

      I feel that when you start to exercise regularly your diet usually falls into place too. I find myself craving more nutritious foods, especially fruits when exercising and loads of meat and vegetables for after workouts.

  • @ianstewart8301
    @ianstewart8301 Год назад +1

    When I was running and doing triathlons I was super fit. Now that I’m biking, doing minimal weights & yoga, it’s not the same. The main thing is that exercise also helps the heart and mind.

  • @DBmusICify
    @DBmusICify Год назад +1

    Regarding the Globe Haul LT with the Epic EVO on the back, not all people have cars! I commute on the Haul ST everyday and have a similar setup but the wheel is on the ground.

  • @James_R_
    @James_R_ Год назад +2

    I recently found that looking at a fasting chart and listening to zone 2 gurus helped understand how little hard exercise contributes to fat weight loss and plateauing.
    Long story why I was overweight in the first place so I'll skip that.
    I was 305Lbs in may, I have been losing 10lbs per month since. 237lbs currently. I started by cutting carbs and sugar for the first 40lbs or so. I got back on the bike around 260lbs and started eating a little more and maintained the same weight loss rate.
    Ok, so back to the "what I believe to be true" and what I think I learned.
    In the fasting chart it showed that your energy used first is the energy stored in the blood stream, then in the muscle. After that it goes for the fat creating ketones for energy rather than readily available carbs in the bloodstream after you eat. This will be true when on the bike even in a hard ride. You will likely also be tired as your cells scramble to make and expend energy working overtime. Less tired if your body is accustom to generating ketones which most people are not. This is why some coaches push for fasted training sessions.
    My suspicions about long hard exercise would push beyond the body's ability to restore muscle cell energy fast enough with ketones from fat possibly causing local damage which prevents gains in strength. This is why over training plateaus exist.
    Thoughts?

  • @TheImprobableIronman
    @TheImprobableIronman Год назад +2

    Having managed to stack on a ton of weight over the last few years, I finally decided (in April this year) that 2023 would be the year I finally got back in shape. I quit alcohol completely, started eating healthily, tracking it with MyFitnesspal and got my training focus back. Most days involve a 1 hour walk and an hour on Zwift. I mix in some weights and also a couple of 3 hour road rides each week. Starting weight (end of April) 141.6 KG - weight today 88.9 KG (tracked with a Garmin Index scale). I feel great and have seen my Garmin Vo2 Max go from 33 (think that was bottom 15% for my age and gender) to 50 (which Garmin tells me is the top 5% for my age and gender).
    I think there is truth in that saying that you can't out-train a bad diet.....the best weight loss exercise is 5 sets of eating less crap....etc. But I think I'm proof that regular exercise, combined with a healthy diet and a bit (or lot) of commitment really does get results. You also need to track what you're doing (we all easily forget the things we don't want to remember - such as that bag of crisps etc.). Studies, such as the one you refer to, are always interesting and their findings should be considered. But equally, you do speak as you find and the results I've seen speak for themselves - or they do to me, anyway.

  • @recstoppauseplay
    @recstoppauseplay Год назад +6

    When first getting back into cycling about 12 years ago, I did it for the fun and social reasons. There are some fantastic trails in my area. The urban infrastructure isn't too good but the parks and converted rail beds are excellent. I thought I'd lose some weight (now 76 kilos) but that didn't happen. I did lose some build up around the middle and now my old clothes fit much better - such a bonus. The benefits of cycling could fill a book, and maybe it has, but I don't think every cyclist will lose weight. Every cyclist benefits from the exercise though.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Год назад

      Riding bikes is the best! For so many reasons - social, fitness, weight loss even mental health. Great to hear that you are loving cycling. We've filled some books about with cycling 👉gcn.eu/books 😉

  • @becker517
    @becker517 Год назад

    100% agree, during pandemic early years I was spending 3 times the time and miles on my bike losing significant weight, while eating more. Now, less time to ride, weight is back on while trying to eat healthier.

  • @kevinblankenburg4816
    @kevinblankenburg4816 Год назад +6

    It helped me loosing 30kg in one year. Also I completely changed my diet. One meal a day, low carb. Key is to change your metabolism to fat burning and do a lot of exercise in aerobic levels.

    • @jesmondo5785
      @jesmondo5785 Год назад +1

      Or it's because you were in a massive energy deficit.

    • @speedsociety9177
      @speedsociety9177 Год назад +1

      to each their own. I lost 10kg and keep a low bf% for years now through cycling, eat clean food, 3-4 meals a day and still consume a normal to high amount of carbs. Just saying that there are many ways to achieve weight loss but be careful you are not underfueling with that approach. I did that in the beginning and messed up my hormones and felt terribly fatigued all the time.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Год назад

      Are you doing lots of zone 2? 👉ruclips.net/video/dBbK-0vh-d8/видео.html

    • @kevinblankenburg4816
      @kevinblankenburg4816 Год назад

      @@gcn mostly, short high intensity, but 90% zone 2.

    • @jack002tuber
      @jack002tuber Год назад

      Walking worked for me. Way better than cycling. I don't know why or how.

  • @carlosdeno
    @carlosdeno Год назад +4

    Not only does it help you lose weight, bang the miles in and eat what you want! 🌮🌮🥩🍨🍿🚴🏼🚴🏼🚴🏼Sixty years old, 5’11” and 72kg. Seriously though calorie deficit and exercise, equals weight loss. More importantly what it does for your wellbeing is absolutely superb. There’s no better feeling than being out riding your bike!

    • @speedsociety9177
      @speedsociety9177 Год назад +1

      exactly, I am "only" 40 but cycling allowed me to get down to 75kg at 186cm and keep it there. When I ride a lot, I eat a lot, largely clean food with the occasional cheat meal has worked well for me for years now.

  • @alienaudaxer9827
    @alienaudaxer9827 Год назад +2

    For the caption competition result you should send a black bottle with a white lid so it looks like a Guinness. Great hair this week btw Dan.

  • @andreaonyoutube9560
    @andreaonyoutube9560 Год назад

    14:49 "cue-dos" 🤣🤣🤣. That's right up with the trainer company "w-hooo" 🤪

  • @kelinryan8222
    @kelinryan8222 Год назад +1

    I have to agree with Si on the 3d printed bodge. Forcing a Shimano mountain bike derailleur to work with Campagnolo road group levers is kind of like forcing a Ford truck transmission/gearbox to work with a Ferrari . I don't care if it worked you don't do it.

  • @torbenfrlund5964
    @torbenfrlund5964 Год назад +1

    Interesting topic and discussion. I think that by training a lot you also start paying more attention to what you eat, it's difficult to train 10 or 20 hours per week on a very bad diet. The studies you are referring to also suggests that it's easier to maintain a weight loss if you are training, so that is also an important point.

  • @marcusantonyledulx
    @marcusantonyledulx Год назад +1

    If you eat a meat pie of 430 calories, to "burn off" that food requires 94minutes of riding at 23kmh (zone-2). People riding 36km for this ride, undo the burn off gain by eating a pie in 5 minutes.
    For weight control it's easier to not eat the pie.

  • @richardharris8538
    @richardharris8538 Год назад +3

    #CaptionCompetition: Arashiro's teammates didn't believe he had a karate dog, until they saw the little shih tzu.

  • @bigguib
    @bigguib Год назад

    In Montreal, this morning, it is -15 degrees Celsius and in Buffalo Wyoming it is 8 degrees Celsius. It is colder here, in Canada.

  • @serisingh
    @serisingh Год назад +2

    2:47 you only loose weight if you consume fewer calories than you burn. If you do an immense amount of exercise, appetite usually increases to compensate (or come close) for many people because the body is designed to maintain homeostasis (in this case, body weight), which was an adaptation for survival before the days of easily accessible over-processed foods. For me personally, if I do small amounts of moderate intensity exercise, my appetite is more easily controllable, and I can loose weight. But if I do a lot of high intensity exercise, I always gain weight because my appetite goes through the roof!

  • @MrCyclist
    @MrCyclist Год назад

    Toronto here. Canada is a super large county with 6 times zones and winter temperatures from plus 5C to minus 50C. Talk cities not one country. Here in Toronto we hover at zero mark and mostly sunny during winter.

  • @timothyhorlacher
    @timothyhorlacher Год назад

    Tim, 35yrs, Philadelphia PA. I have been cycling for fun since 2011 but my goal of weight loss started in 2019 when my body reached 275lbs. I focused on my eating habits first and it was trial and error on what kinds of food and how much food made me feel strong and energized. I would cycling intermittently to add some activity to my routine. By 2021 and 2022, I figured out the correct food intake my body wanted and I averaged 7 hours per week of cycling from march to October. The summer months I road longer due to the weather and extra sunshine. During this time I was very consistent with my food tracking, averaging 2000-2700 calories daily depending on the time of the season. I went from 250lbs to 185lbs during this time. Compared to 2023, I averaged 5 hours a week and did not track my food as rigorously, I currently sit at 200lbs. Not a big deal, I feel and look great!
    In 2024 (and beyond) I will continue to cycle and I will continue to be conscious about my diet. From my experience, if you are feeding your body with crappy processed food, over over eating sweet treats, or abusing alcohol…. You could never out ride the diet.
    Consistent weekly activity that challenges you, eating real food in moderation and getting plenty of sleep is all you need to lose some weight! Thanks GCN!

  • @maxfera.
    @maxfera. Год назад +1

    #captioncompetition
    I'm sorry Sensei, I'd love to participate but according to *UCI rule 1.2.079 "Conduct of participants in cycling races"* _All licence holders… …shall refrain from any acts of violence, threats or insults or any other improper behaviour or from putting other persons in danger._

  • @davidheathfield5040
    @davidheathfield5040 Год назад +1

    Jan Ullrich coming back from the off season, classic example of not being able to out-pedal a bad diet

  • @judithpreston4756
    @judithpreston4756 Год назад +1

    As a casual cyclist (3 to 5 hrs per week weather permitting) I did not lose any weight but I did improve my endurance and muscle tone. Not to mention my mental health!

  • @jackatmensacosacoaching
    @jackatmensacosacoaching Год назад +1

    Having been a coach for many years, I can tell from experience that exercising for more than 5 hours a week is already quite a stretch for many and that a lot of exercise is actually compensated throughout the day with extra rest, which kind of off-sets the energy burned. If you are an athlete who works out for an hour at a moderate level and after that workout drinks a protein shake (because marketing tells you that's what you should do), you probably on balance haven't lost that much energy. Also we should take into account that doing a lot of exercise creates a lean muscular body, which is super efficient at storing and burning glycogen (hence the much lower heart and breathing rate when not exercising! - and therefore less energy demand when in rest). The problem is that the average athlete, which I think 99.9% of us are, are not working out at the same intensity and duration as elite athletes but, due to marketing, adopt a nutritional lifestyle similar to elites (protein shakes, sport drinks, energy bars, gels etc etc) which we actually don't need. I think Chris Van Tulleken has a point with his ultra processed food impacting our microbiome in a quite unhealthy way and you only have to read the ingredient label of any sports nutrition product to see that most of these products are ultra processed!

  • @logicworkshop1
    @logicworkshop1 Год назад +1

    When I restarted cycling in response to being diagnosed with Type 2 Diabetes in my late 50s, I also significantly changed my diet. I lost about 20kg over 12 months and that was largely driven by the diet change. The cycling acted as a motivator to keep to the diet as I could monitor my weight loss through the gears I needed to use to go up hills. I think that the research is largely correct although maybe it would be more helpful to describe the results as exercise alone is not enough to lose weight but it is a great contribution to the process if supported by a sensible diet

  • @eloann
    @eloann Год назад +1

    I picked cycling up again (as in more than just commuting when it's sunny) this year and dropped from 80kg to 71kg in 6 months, eating more than ever. I do cook regularly and only consume meat once a week, but that has been the case for years.

  • @TravisBrodie
    @TravisBrodie Год назад +2

    as someone that has lost 80 lbs over the past 3 years, i can tell you for a fact you can out work diet, to a point. Burn more calories than you eat and you will lose weight, worked for me. Problem is most people also increase calories because working out makes you more hungry or they dont understand that a small amount of "bad" food has a lot more calories than they think.

  • @anthonyparkes8162
    @anthonyparkes8162 Год назад

    I think it is common for many riders to treat themselves to a treat after a ride , which pretty much negates any calories burned by the ride.
    We naturally balance our calories in vs burned unless the calories in are carefully monitored.

  • @melibaut
    @melibaut 10 месяцев назад

    Love the banter and content and glad you added the Isaac retort 😂

  • @jerry680
    @jerry680 Год назад

    Interesting research regarding diet. I have said to people in the past that I find it easier to lose weight when not exercising as when I am doing a lot of exercise, I am constantly hungry and thus eat a lot more. Probably like most things in life, it's all a sensible balance.

  • @throughthewindow4894
    @throughthewindow4894 Год назад +4

    Cycling has kept my weight stable. I get the research, because if you eat properly and you are riding, you're going to lose weight faster. But I also get a bad feeling that a small percentage of people are going to latch on to this to prove their point that exercise is pointless.

    • @rob-c.
      @rob-c. Год назад

      The research doesn’t say you’ll lose weight faster. It says your calorie expenditure averages out across a month/year whether you exercise or not. You use more calories when exercising, but then less when resting - relative to what you would have used if you just rested the whole time.

  • @joshebrown2575
    @joshebrown2575 Год назад +1

    "So you want us to break that brick? With our hand?"
    Dan is brilliant!
    #captioncompetition

  • @MrStatsfreak
    @MrStatsfreak Год назад +2

    My personal experience with losing 50 pounds a few years back was that while I was following a calorie monitoring system to control eating, without bicycling, and seeing the improvements in both enjoyment and performance of my rides because of weight loss which motivated me to continue with the program, I don't think it would have been achievable. Dieting alone wouldn't have worked for me.

  • @stevem1985
    @stevem1985 Год назад +1

    I think what studies in question actually say is that exercise is not the best strategy for weight loss, however weight maintenance is an entirely different thing

  • @darrin2382
    @darrin2382 Год назад +2

    I've lost over a stone this year from cycling 1500 miles in my first year in the saddle.

  • @davidadamus177
    @davidadamus177 Год назад +2

    Fueling on the bike has definitely increased my weight 😢

  • @evasivefox7287
    @evasivefox7287 Год назад +2

    I've lost 30lb this year alone and I attribute that both to my increase in cycling and my diet.

  • @Accounting4Cycling
    @Accounting4Cycling Год назад

    It's pretty warm in Milwaukee, WI, USA right now, a balmy 1c and sunny (wind-chill of -4)!

  • @Thierrydaoust1607
    @Thierrydaoust1607 Год назад

    37:55
    -14°C right now. Still bike commuters coming to work. Got to -8°C during the day apparently

  • @Stephen-nq5kd
    @Stephen-nq5kd Год назад +3

    #captioncompetition Daniel San is one of my top 6 GCN presenters.
    “Daniel San look eye” *send Stephen a bottle*

  • @pauljaffray6437
    @pauljaffray6437 Год назад +1

    Iv just started cycling, with an eye on doing an ironman plus other endurance events in the cycling and running world. Iv been running since lockdown. Same diet probably eaten more and have lost 2 stone and I wasn't large beforehand. With amount of calorie deficiency I have been in some months.

  • @martinmalloy5997
    @martinmalloy5997 Год назад

    Speaking as a person who due to an operation had to take almost three months off the bike and NOT put any weight on then once starting cycling again has put weight on I agree with the GP.
    In 2020 I cycled through it and put weight on due to comfort eating.

  • @andreaonyoutube9560
    @andreaonyoutube9560 Год назад

    Lol so much funny banner and parts today. I don't usually L-O-L during the GCN Show!

  • @davidadamus177
    @davidadamus177 Год назад +1

    Thanks for this video, it perked up my morning a bit! 🎉. Came into work laughing, I guess that's a good start.

  • @markricketts6957
    @markricketts6957 Год назад +1

    I began serious endurance exercise, burning around 1500 calories extra each day. My calorie intake went up by around 50% and my weight dropped by 40 lbs.

  • @hollywoodxl
    @hollywoodxl Год назад +1

    I dropped from 16 st to 14 once and the weight loss absolutely hit the wall there. I had a weekly time limit on riding and at that point, it was either eat less, ride more or hold the weight steady. It will accelerate weight loss or arrest weight gain, but at some point, calories in will equal calories out.

  • @emmanueljammes6481
    @emmanueljammes6481 Год назад +1

    I lost 20kg by cycling 15,000km in 18 months. But at one point, I had to adapt my nutrition because my body could no longer withstand as much effort without a suitable diet.

  • @robbie6638
    @robbie6638 Год назад +1

    I have found over the years when my mileage is reduced it coincides with an increase of calories on the plate and too many treats. As I burn out from training and racing I want to smooth myself with junk. When I get back to training for an event I get my diet inline and the extra weight falls off.

  • @hugobrown2516
    @hugobrown2516 Год назад +2

    can you do a bit on which burns more calories, spinning or grinding?

  • @9090Glenn
    @9090Glenn Год назад +2

    I did a PERSONAL study in 2021 - I reduced my diet for 3 months and saw a gradual decline in weight - I then retained that SAME diet and exercised daily with 30 minute jogs or 2 hour rides over the next 3 months - I continued to lose weight but at an ACCELERATED decline - as I plotted all of this data over the next 3 months you can still see the DRAMATIC effect adding exercise had - there is a decline for 3 months and then a visually sharper decline the next 3 months - this year alone I have retained a standard diet and have lost 20 [lbs] cycling to date - FACTS - exercising BURNS calories - BMR + calories IN > calories OUT you WILL gain weight - BMR + calories IN < calories OUT - you WILL lose weight - its called the Calorie Bank Account and I monitored it over a year losing 53[lbs] in the process - FACT - if I maintain the SAME diet but then cease exercising my weight INCREASES week on week - I need to burn about 800 calories daily ( 4KM jog ) or 6500 calories weekly ( 150KM and 1500M cycling per week ) to maintain my body weight on a 2000 calorie daily diet - so your Doctors Study is pure BUNK which rhymes with JUNK BTW - I much prefer my OWN study and exercise routine and NOT relying on a DRUG like Ozempic to remove weight "for free" - that ONLY leads to a poor junk diet NOT being punished while exercising inherently makes your body CRAVE good nutritious food for energy and growth - a healthy body is NOT only about calories but also NUTRITION which is ESSENTIAL for health - so eating junk and losing weight with Ozempic results in an unhealthy body - get it ?

  • @2wheelsrbest327
    @2wheelsrbest327 Год назад +1

    As much as I enjoy cycling running swimming if I want to lose weight its walking for me. Its also the easiest to do during the dark Winter nights. Great video.

  • @BlindingSun_
    @BlindingSun_ 9 месяцев назад

    I cycled every day from 91 to 2015 and never went over 9.5 stone. Eating as much as I wanted all day every day. Dislocated my shoulder, stopped riding now I’m 13 stone. Bought a new bike yesterday and weight loss starts tomorrow.

  • @Erteywie
    @Erteywie Год назад

    I just got a bike commuting after 15+ years of not riding one. I decided to get it after getting a nice cushy office position. I quickly gained ~30 lbs from stagnation all day. Even after that weight gain, I'm still far from my heaviest, but I am also now at my thinnest in ~15 years

  • @theantichrome9842
    @theantichrome9842 Год назад

    34:40 where I live, if a traffic light doesn't change after a few minutes, it's perfectly legal to treat it as a Stop sign and continue on when it is safe (not affecting anyone else's right of way) This law was enacted for motorcycles. Additionally, we have the 'Idaho Roll' law for bicycles. Stop signs are treated as Yield signs and Stop lights are treated as Stop signs. This law, when enacted, immediately reduced car vs bike accidents. It makes cycling in the streets much nicer. It reduces the amount of time we're exposed in intersections and It doesn't affect anyones right of way.

  • @dmitrypalaev3323
    @dmitrypalaev3323 Год назад +1

    We should look on wider angle. Losing weight is happening not just because of calorie burning during the exercise right at the given moment. Cycling is improving the whole body system including metabolism, oxygen level and so on. So this is why our fat burning factory is working better.

  • @pierce9128
    @pierce9128 Год назад +2

    I was 24½stone at the start of 2020. I started walking, some short jogs on the walk. 3yrs later im 15½stone. Managed a ½ironman cycle in 2hrs48. I didn't really change my diet much. One potato lest with my dinner and few lest sweets. Cut out fizzy drink aswell.
    So yes exercise does lose you weight but you still have to watch your diet to get the best results.

  • @justsomedude7556
    @justsomedude7556 Год назад +1

    I lost a whole lot of weight about 15 years ago going from 375 to 175, but now float between 195 and 215 lbs. I ride on avg 100 to 120 miles per week taking every 8th week off for recovery. At one point in time, while at 175 lbs, I felt really tired and weak, and when I would take long rides, 80 miles +, it would take me a couple of days to recover. After about 6 months of that, I determined that I was not getting enough to eat and decided to add 25 to 30 lbs on my frame and feel so much better during, and post ride. I do not ride for weight loss, although it helped me achieve my goal, but I ride for the other benefits it gives me as well as allowing me to not feel guilty having ice cream more often.

  • @GenuinePluko
    @GenuinePluko Год назад +1

    I went from 210 lbs to 155 lbs, eating 2500 > 3000 kcal a day, purely from cycling too much. Long rides mid week, long rides at weekend. It got to the point I couldn't get enough food down me to find the sweet spot balance. I eased off the miles due to other commitments last year and went back to 165lbs. Until I ramped up my cycling my weight never fluctuated and I was 15 stone for many years.

  • @capio78
    @capio78 Год назад +1

    I actually agree that the body adjusts to a lot of cardio. I lost a lot of weight and now i do over 20 hours a week of hard cardio and eat pretty well and only maintain

  • @DiscoStu1970
    @DiscoStu1970 Год назад +1

    #captioncontest: when I said you need to earn your cycling chops, this wasn’t what I had in mind

    • @DiscoStu1970
      @DiscoStu1970 Год назад

      PS Dan don’t believe everyone else, you are useless!!!!!

  • @jmw2840
    @jmw2840 Год назад +2

    Of course you can increase calorie expenditure in the short term (Pontzer says as much!).
    It is really tricky to out exercise a bad diet in the long run (It takes 2 hard hours to burn an excess 1000 Calories but 10 happy minutes to eat them). Even those who’ve managed it for an entire sports career have to modify their intake at some point in retirement. That said, amongst the many benefits of exercise one is that it does assist in keeping weight off. Probably by modifying satiety signalling rather than by excess energy expenditure.

  • @matthewlewis2072
    @matthewlewis2072 Год назад +1

    22:10 Si: "Why are you not riding the bike?"
    Me: "Because it's a mountain bike and vile to ride on road"

  • @TWD2DAN
    @TWD2DAN Год назад

    Calgary temp today (Dec 5th) , plus 12 C! Summer kits here we come!

  • @matt_acton-varian
    @matt_acton-varian Год назад

    First hack/bodge, a long travel MTB is much less efficient than an e-cargo bike on tarmac so if you are travelling a decent distance you can get there much faster for less effort.

  • @braapaholicracing6969
    @braapaholicracing6969 Год назад +1

    I think diet and exercise often go hand in hand. When you are cycling and exercising more you tend to be me aware of what your are putting in your body.

  • @timwendelken2444
    @timwendelken2444 Год назад +1

    I dropped 20 kgs in 6 months, but only when I got serious on the diet side. Did the same amount of cycling as before the diet when my weight was static.