Any suggestions for some serious walking time in a tiny town with either pastures or highway with no sidewalks? Assume I'll have all the kids with me.
Thanks!
Em

I love it. This is brilliant. The Don Quixote workoutI will no longer feel that the no-essers see me as a cracker in a neon jumpsuit walking in search of my next Krispy Kreme. Instead, they know that I am Henry David Thoreau walking to my cabin on Walden Pond.
I'm lucky to be able to fit in both urban and country, and I'd say they both have pros and cons, urban walks have nice flat paths & a distinct lack of mud, but the downside of car pollution and dull grey concrete backdrop. Country walks give one the opportunity to pretend to be a Lothlorien Elf just nipping down to Hobbiton for teareinhard wrote: "Country walks" seem like a more straightforwardly attractive prospect than city walks. Just pretend you're someone out of a Jane Austin novel going on a "long walk."
Not sure about the mileage, but I assume her step count would have been something like this:I often wonder how far little Laura Engles walked to school each day.
The results of the study indicate that a very high level of physical activity is integrated into the daily lives of the Amish. Amish men, who mostly work as farmers, reported an average of 10 hours of vigorous work per week and took an average of 18,425 steps a day. One man recorded more than 51,000 steps in a single day by walking behind a team of horses while farming. Women, most of whom report being homemakers, engaged in more moderate forms of activity such as gardening, cooking, and childcare, but still achieved an average of 14,196 daily steps. Other forms of physical activity performed were determined and quantified by the questionnaire, which asked the participants to record three physical activities they performed each day. On average, the Amish participated in roughly six times the amount of weekly physical activity performed by nearly 2,000 participants in a recent survey in 12 modernized nations.
Form a suburban ranger posse?yet I don't quite feel safe walking the streets alone. Any ideas?