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by dylanzhangdev 905 days ago
Hello, I wonder if carrying a heavy backpack for a long time will cause obvious damage to the shoulders. Otherwise, it seems very tempting to significantly increase the calories burned in the same period of time. After all, we are always short of time.
1 comments

hiking recommendations suggest 20% of your bodyweight for the weight of your backpack. that suggests that carrying more for exercise should be possible. consider that hiking can mean several hours of walking during the whole day, while an exercise walk is usually more limited and you don't have any other challenging activities like pitching a tent, chopping wood, etc that you might have on a hike.

if you are inexperienced, i'd start smaller and increase the weight over a few weeks as long as you feel comfortable. i think it is also important to choose a good backpack that evenly distributes your weight and doesn't pull on your shoulders.

i have never tried this myself however. i have done a lot of hiking in my youth, but i doubt my backpacks ever reached those 20%. so don't take my word for it, but double check with an expert, doctor, gym trainer, etc.

thank your advise
As with anything physical, start small and slowly increase! 10 or 20 lbs is enough to feel some pain, try it for an hour. Then 1.5 hours. Then increase the weight, and so on.

Humans have evolved to carry and run long distances and the world's militaries all ruck with 50 - 80 pounds regularly. So we're definitely "built" for this activity but of course you need to train for it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qd-3z5_2M0Q