Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 10 yo gets around 20,000 on a normal summer day. He doesn’t wear it for his one hour swim team practice or in the pool.
Outlier. And younger.
NP- are 10 yo boys that much more active than 12 yos?
No. I have a 10 year old and a 12 year old. Both boys are very active. My husband and I exercise daily. The boys have always seen it and we often do physical activities together. I actively have played sports with my kids in the backyard/park since they were young.
The camp they are currently in, is more academic this month===just a short period of gym or outdoor time. But--every night they want to go the local park to play pick-up soccer and I have to literally drag them home after 2.5 hours. They play the sport competitively year-round and their training sessions have very little rest time. The older one plays the full 90 minutes in games----that is a helluva lot of running.
The 12-year old started mowing lawns for $ this summer--so there is that added activity too. Little one swims a lot with friends outside of camp.
I read that the average American child has the activity level of a 60-year old adult in 1970. Kids this day and age are so much more out of shape than those of us born in the 70s. We lived outside in the summer----and I grew up here in the hot and humid misery---but we were always running, biking, swimming, etc.
Outlier family. Go start your own thread to glow.
It’s really sad that this is considered an outlier family.
Parents just need to say no to so much fortnight and online time.
every night they want to go the local park to play pick-up soccer and I have to literally drag them home after 2.5 hours. They play the sport competitively year-round and their training sessions have very little rest time. The older one plays the full 90 minutes in games----that is a helluva lot of running.
how's this not an outlier? or at least way about average? how many 12-yo plays pick-up soccer 2.5 hours EVERY NIGHT, or plays the full 90 minutes in soccer games?
Anonymous wrote:We don’t have a tracker but mine practices with me a 5k 4-5x a week, does active camp (no indoor video game stuff), is on a swim team with practice 3 days a week. He can’t seem to gain weight. He has been 90-93 lbs for the last year. He is 5’4. Eats like a linebacker
. PS. The dad played professionally. He’s great w kids.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC swims w swim team, runs on a track team and rides his bike almost daily. He has a basketball coach one day a week. He’s not a superstar but he’s having fun (mostly). He’d rather not do basketball but I consider if a life/social skill in some settings.
wait, he's not interested in basketball buy you hired a private coach once/week? Bizarre.
Not bizarre. The coach is a family friend. He coaches his own kids on saturday and offered to have my kid join. Costs nothing. My kid isn’t complaining about going he’s just not hyped about it. So what’s the problem?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC swims w swim team, runs on a track team and rides his bike almost daily. He has a basketball coach one day a week. He’s not a superstar but he’s having fun (mostly). He’d rather not do basketball but I consider if a life/social skill in some settings.
wait, he's not interested in basketball buy you hired a private coach once/week? Bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:nobody that I know shoots hoops for 20 minuted. I have trouble dragging my kid home in less than 90 minutes. This sounds off to me.
Anonymous wrote:Ok. I've worn a tracker for nearly 4 years and 10000 steps from 20-40 minutes of basketball is a MASSIVE miscount.
10,000 steps works out to nearly 5 miles, give or take stride length. Studies of NBA players show the longest distance run in an entire game is 3.1 miles with the average player doing 2.9. This is back and forth offense and defensive play, not just shooting hoops.
Honestly, unless they are playing a game, I wouldn't even wear the tracker. I'd score it separately as 30-minutes of shooting baskets or something, as an exercise. If you really want the steps, consider wearing the tracker as a clip on his waist or something.
Anonymous wrote:My DC swims w swim team, runs on a track team and rides his bike almost daily. He has a basketball coach one day a week. He’s not a superstar but he’s having fun (mostly). He’d rather not do basketball but I consider if a life/social skill in some settings.