a means to health and fitness. Others yet find pleasure and perspective from a bicycle saddle as they ride along a bike trail. Of the many reasons for bicycling, I find that three in particular stand out---health benefits, economic savings, and environmental advantages.
Health Benefits: The health benefits of regular cycling include:
- Increased cardiorespiratory fitness - The increases in heart
and respiratory rate produced by cycling will improve your overall
fitness level. While many people choose bicycling as their primary
means of exercise, time spent on a bicycle commuting can result in
improvement in fitness also. The U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services has determined that biking for transportation can count toward
the minimum 150 minutes/week of moderate-intensity aerobic activity
recommended for physical health.
- Reduction in heart disease risk - By now, everyone is aware
that exercise can reduce the risk of heart attack. Cycling can help
strengthen the heart muscles, reduce blood pressure and improve blood
fat levels, all of which lower the risk for heart attack. One study
found that increasing biking and walking from 4 to 24 minutes a day
would reduce cardiovascular disease by 14%.
- Decreased body fat levels - Cycling raises the metabolic rate
and burns body fat. Steady cycling burns about 300 calories per hour.
Over the course of a year, a half-hour bike ride every day will burn
over 10 pounds of fat. Studies show that school-aged children who bike
or walk to school have a lower percentage of body fat and are more
likely to remain at a healthy weight than those who are driven or take
the bus.
- Reduction of risk for developing diabetes - Research in
Finland found that people who cycled for more than 30 minutes per day
had a 40 per cent lower risk of developing diabetes.
- Improved mental health - Regular exercise, including
bicycling, has been shown to reduce stress and depression and improve
our sense of well-being. Many people find that cycling serves as an
escape to the stresses of everyday life. According to surveys performed
by the Transportation Research Board, bike commuters report lower stress
and greater feelings of freedom, relaxation, and excitement than car
commuters.


Economic Savings: With over half of the working population of the U.S. living within 5 miles of their workplace, bicycling becomes a realistic way of getting to work. In fact, it has been reported that from 2000 to 2011, the number of bicycle commuters in the U.S. grew by more than 47 percent. The League of American Bicyclists estimated that in 2012, bicycle commuters in the U.S. saved more than $4.6 billion over their car driving counterparts. Savings for the bicycle commuter comes from a variety of sources including parking fees, fuel costs, car maintenance expenses, and public transportation fares. Businesses benefit also in that cyclists take fewer days off work for illness than non-cyclists. Add to that the savings from treatment of chronic illnesses that bicycling could help prevent, and the economic benefits of bicycling are astonishing.
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