| ▲ | phil21 9 hours ago | |
It’s the going from zero to 100 that gets folks it seems. Deep, heavy, wet snow is called heart attack snow for a reason. It sneaks up on you - a driveway you just cleared for years with normal snowfalls is all of a sudden a 10x workout from usual, and your brain doesn’t completely process this. Anything else at that level of intensity would likely trigger you to take breaks. That said - I think inactivity is far worse. But I still make a point to go shovel my elderly neighbors walks here in Chicago before they have a chance to do it when we get particularly deep snowfalls. | ||
| ▲ | unyttigfjelltol 5 hours ago | parent [-] | |
In the cold. The exercise-plus-hypothermia combo is a bad one. Pick one, not both.[1] [1] https://shine365.marshfieldclinic.org/heart-care/prevent-hyp... | ||