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Swimming and Weight Loss

post #1 of 33
Thread Starter 
Swam competitively in HS, many years ago, have gotten fat and out of shape since then. I started swimming a grueling 2,000 yard workout 3x a week about 3 months ago. On alternating days I do 1.5 miles or so on the treadmill and a weight circuit routine. I take Sundays off. I have dropped about 15 lbs since Feb. 9, lost 1.5 inches off my waist, cut my BMI from 30.1 to 27.8 and my body fat % from 34.6% to 24.9%. BP went from 118/90- to 115/75. Cholesterol was 259, have not checked since I started but I am hoping it dropped at least 10%, what with all the intense cardio I am doing with the swimming and running.

Problem is now I feel like I have plateaued, weight-loss wise. I can't seem to get below 190 lbs. I would ideally like to get to about 175-178, But I seem to be stuck in that 190-192 range. I was reading that swimming is not the ideal exercise for losing weight, seems to have worked so far, but could it be that I won't get much more from swimming, weight wise? I will say my cardio fitness is probably really high, so I am going to keep swimming, but as for weight, has anyone else heard that swimming is not ideal for losing weight?
post #2 of 33
I have heard/read this in many places. Like you I lost a little from swimming. Or, it's hard to say if it was just swimming because I was doing other things too.

I would do a serious weight/resistance routine if I were you and also look at diet. Swimming ain't gonna do it alone.
post #3 of 33
no... it's an exercise and a full body one at that. I think if you're mixing running/swimming and weight training you should be getting plenty of exercise. It also seems like you're exercising quite a bit, maybe take a day off in between. Or instead of doing 1.5 mile on treadmill, do some basic weight training squats/deads/bench/overhead (stronglifts routine may help) and do some sprints or interval training. If you're trying to lose weight you should be looking more in depth into your diet as it seems you're exercising plenty.
post #4 of 33
I've been swimming for about 3-4 months, once a week when I am home, but up to 4 times when I am traveling. I haven't seen any weight loss, but I have lost about an inch around my waist, maybe more, that I attribute directly to the swimming. I think that you end up with a little muscle build up.

I also jog once a week - the jogging seems to be the least pleasant, but the best weight loss tool. that and diet. frankly, you just aren't fat enough to lose without changing your diet, Stu. I have gone way into the protein side, I am at 50% of my calories from protein, but you also need a lot of fiber if you eat that much protein. but I'm down better than 110 pounds so far.
post #5 of 33
Jogging sucks.
post #6 of 33
Quote:
Originally Posted by Manton View Post
Jogging sucks.

truth. being over 300 pounds sucks more.
post #7 of 33
I typically fall into a similar routine. I'm riding about 200 miles per week and weight/strength training 2 days per week and usually take one day off. I have trouble getting under 173 unless I really focus on diet. The problem is with so much endurance training - I need the calories or I feel like crap while riding. But the short answer is - really really focus on diet. And intervals.
post #8 of 33
Thread Starter 
Yeah, diet is certainly key, But -- I have made a conscious effort to eat boatloads of fiber, stay away from too much red meat, and keep my calorie intake at 2,100, or less, which is my burn rate, as I understand it, for my age, weight, height and very active lifestyle. Guess I have to try 1,800 or so and see if that works. Then again, maybe I am losing teh way I am supposed to lose, 2-3 lbs a month.

Globe: Congrats on your weight loss, impressive.
post #9 of 33
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stu View Post
Yeah, diet is certainly key, But -- I have made a conscious effort to eat boatloads of fiber, stay away from too much red meat, and keep my calorie intake at 2,100, or less, which is my burn rate, as I understand it, for my age, weight, height and very active lifestyle. Guess I have to try 1,800 or so and see if that works. Then again, maybe I am losing teh way I am supposed to lose, 2-3 lbs a month.

Globe: Congrats on your weight loss, impressive.

thanks,

Stu, have you put on much since I saw you? 3 lbs a month should be good for you, no?

also, the shape of the calories, as much as that sounds like voodoo, seems to work. 50 % protein, 25 each carbs and fats has been very good to me.
post #10 of 33
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by globetrotter View Post
thanks,

Stu, have you put on much since I saw you? 3 lbs a month should be good for you, no?

also, the shape of the calories, as much as that sounds like voodoo, seems to work. 50 % protein, 25 each carbs and fats has been very good to me.

I was pretty trim when you saw me, for me, which is about 185 or so. Problem is I fluctuate, and if I don't watch it I get up to 205-207 pretty quickly. That is not huge for5' 10" but it brings other problems with blood pressure and cholesterol, plus I feel like shit at that weight.

I'll try the calorie shape thing and see if I get some more results. BTW: You coming to NY City anytime soon?
post #11 of 33
Quote:
Originally Posted by Manton View Post
Jogging sucks.

ooh, disagree. Love jogging.

...Stu, plateaus are normal because your body adapts to the specific stress you put upon it. If you swim 2,000 meters at a steady state, your body adapts to handle this particular load as efficiently as possible. At this point, you probably ought to work in some additional training, or different training like a different stroke, or speed intervals, or something else to change the demands you're putting on your body - and force it to adapt again.

Conversely, if you've been at it for a few months now and not had a rest...take a week off and see what happens. You may be tipping into overtraining.

Also, diet is essential, but it sounds like you're on the right track. As for rate of loss, the last numbers I heard (years ago) indicated that roughly 1 lb/week is the upper limit for 'durable' weight loss - anything more than that can trigger a sort of starvation mode, where your body perceives a sort of famine, and starts storing whatever it can - and then some more when you start feeding freely again.

Still, congratulations on your results so far, and good luck in your future efforts.
post #12 of 33
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stu View Post
BTW: You coming to NY City anytime soon?

nothing planned, but you never know. nothing calling you to the second city?
post #13 of 33
Quote:
Originally Posted by Thomas View Post
ooh, disagree. Love jogging.
If the choice were jog or don't exercise, I would never exercise.
post #14 of 33
Yeah it sounds like you might want to mix it up. Maybe try jumping rope for 10-15 minutes instead of the 1.5 miles on the treadmill. Running outside would also be an option.
post #15 of 33
I'm assuming that you don't swim the same workout every time, but if you do, you shouldn't.
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