Forget about the gym! Chicken-sizing will keep you fit. Bonus: Fresh eggs
Last edited Sun Jun 30, 2024, 09:17 AM - Edit history (1)
https://www.npr.org/sections/goats-and-soda/2024/06/27/g-s1-6784/exercise-workout-gym-chickens
Forget about the gym! Chicken-sizing will keep you fit. Bonus: Fresh eggs
JUNE 30, 2024 6:37 AM ET
Michaeleen Doucleff
[...]
A different exercise mind-set
At the same time, I was reporting on global health for NPR, and I started to realize that exercising per se was a strange phenomenon. Around the world, people dont necessarily go out and move their bodies with the intent to burn calories and tone their thighs (mmmm
chicken thighs). Instead, they embrace a revolutionary idea: They move and move quite a bit with a clear purpose in mind beyond the movement. They move to reach a destination. They move to hunt or forage. They move to take care of animals or tend crops. Or build a structure. Or gather firewood.
Every day you're doing something from dawn to dusk, says Esther Ngumbi, who grew up in rural Kenya and is now an entomologist at the University of Illinois, Urbana. In the morning, you have to go to the river to fetch water and come back. Then you go to the farm during the day and go fetch fire wood. Then at dusk, you have to go fetch water again.
[...]
To be honest, chicken-sizing is harder than I thought it would be. Way harder. Taking care of flightless birds does tone your core and thighs. Because it requires bending, squatting and carrying heavy loads around your yard. One weekend, I tracked what chicken-sizing involved, and I counted about 20-30 squats each day, 1,500 extra steps each day (depending on how many chickens I have to chase back into the pen), and lots of lifting poultry water dispensers up, down and around the yard. Theyre not 25 pounds but theyre at least 5.
[...]
Ngumbi agrees. Yes, maybe there is a sweet spot to exercising, she says. I actually really enjoyed going to fetch water at dusk. It was so refreshing with the cool evening breeze. It just all of a sudden relaxed you. So I felt like I was meditating while walking meditating, weightlifting and accomplishing a necessary task of life.
Science journalist MIchaeleen Doucleff is the author of Hunt, Gather, Parent: What Ancient Cultures Can Teach Us About the Lost Art of Raising Happy, Helpful Little Humans.