May 17

HDL & LDLAs stated on the Nutrition Class post I created a few of days ago, I will be sharing my responses to nutrition topics. This post includes my initial response to a question posted by the professor and comments I made to others’ responses to that same question.

The professor posted the following:
“The focus of this discussion is controlling cholesterol levels. Two common initial actions for controlling cholesterol are diet modification and activity goals. For your initial post, include two of the following:

  • one additional initial action/goal, and/or
  • one specific dietary modification, and/or
  • one specific activity modification

My Initial Response
[ME:] Cholesterol is ESSENTIAL for the body which is why we rely on a very sophisticated system that produces it. It is well known that dietary cholesterol has VERY little impact (if any) on cholesterol levels.

There are dietary changes that can be made, however to reduce cholesterol levels in the body. I am not referring to LDL or HDL, but actual cholesterol.

The main dietary change is an increase in fiber consumption. The liver creates bile salts and uses cholesterol delivered to it via HDLs as a precursor. Bile salts are then secreted to emulsify fat in our intestines (during lipid digestion). Because CHOLESTEROL IS ESSENTIAL (as stated earlier) to our health, the body has evolved a bile-salt reabsorption mechanism. This mechanism prevents loss of bile salt through excretion.

Soluble (unabsorbed) fiber binds these bile salts tightly making it extremely hard for them to be reabsorbed. The liver is then forced to create more bile salt and use free cholesterol (raises HDL levels because of need to deliver cholesterol to liver for this production).

A secondary change in diet would include an increase in phytosterols (plant hormone-like molecules) that are VERY similar in structure to cholesterol and compete against cholesterol in various places in the body.

And as a final dietary change, the elimination/reduction of trans/hydrogenized and saturated fats should be considered as well as an increase in polyunsaturated fats (most notably omega-3 from plant sources and ESPECIALLY from cold-water fish). DHA and EPA (only found in animals – ie: cold water fish) are predisposed to be used exclusively for anti-inflammatory, brain development, and heart health purposes.

Very few studies link consumption of cholesterol with an increase of LDL. But MANY RECENT studies directly link ingestion of trans/saturated fats with increase in LDL.

As for physical activity…

Really, ANY physical activity will have a positive effect on cholesterol levels. I am a HUGE fan of walking and strength training (no jogging, biking, etc). I enjoy jogging and biking, swimming, etc. but do not engage in them often. A recent study found that doing a series of 20m sprints over 30 seconds was just as beneficial as running nonstop for 20 mins – in regards to cardiovascular disease risk factors (one of which is LDL/HDL levels).[1] The beauty, of course, is that one can get the same result in far less time (in 15% of the time) & with about a quarter of the calories.

But really, ANY increase in physical activity will have a VERY positive effect on the body… especially heart related, including cholesterol levels.

References:
[1] http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/221337.php

Female RunnerDiscussion Based on my Initial Response
[STUDENT 1:]I agree that a diet in high saturated fats, will be a huge detriment on cholesterol levels. There are many types of healthy fats out there that would help us achieve overall well being and good health (such as Omega 3 and 6 fatty acids). But unfortunately in todays society, these foods are less commonly consumed, whereas diets high in fat are.
And I agree that any form of physical activity is good. However, I do believe that for someone with high cholesterol levels should start with cardio exercise before any strength training. Cardio exercise helps cardiovascular health which in turn would help lower cholesterol levels.

[ME:]STUDENT 1:

Great point about today’s average diet.

I also agree that cadio helps CV system, but so does weight training. Recent studies suggest weight lifting could do just as much as low-mid intensity cardio.[1][2]

No one doubts physical activity is good for our heart health, but literary reviews are inconclusive as to whether physical activity has any direct effect on cholesterol.[3] This is primarily because when one works out regularly, fat is burned & some weight is lost. It is unclear if this weight loss is a contributing factor to the reduced cholesterol.[4]

Here is an interesting quote from an article on WebMD: “Doctors used to believe it was only aerobic, endurance exercise that improved levels, but it turned out that we were wrong. A number of studies on resistance training have shown very powerful effects on cholesterol metabolism”[5]

My main point was that “ANY physical activity will have a positive effect on cholesterol levels”.

Frankly, I do not believe man was build for long distance running/jogging. There is no adaptaive advantage to it. I can’t think of a single animal on earth jogs long distances. They all walk to where they need to or run as fast as they can to get away from a predator or to catch prey. Sprinting is something we are supposed to do. This could be a possible explanation as the results of the reference I used in my original post where sprinting short distances for a few seconds resulted in the same cardiovascular benefit as jogging for 20 mins.

Reference:
[1] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20885204
[2] http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/213813.php
[3] http://www.unm.edu/~lkravitz/Article%20folder/cholesterol.html
[4] http://weighttraining.about.com/b/2009/02/17/does-weight-training-lower-cholesterol.htm
[5] http://www.webmd.com/cholesterol-management/features/exercises-to-control-your-cholesterol

[STUDNET 1:]You have very valid points of views. I think the main thing to remember (besides being physically active has many benefits to health) is that diet directly effects cholesterol levels (among other things). Below is a site I found for foods that are better in helping tweek cholesterol levels. Because what we eat directly effects our bodies conditions.

1.) http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/cholesterol/CL00002

Cholesterol-containing Foods[ME:] I WHOLEHEARTEDLY agree with you that our diet is DIRECTLY linked to our health.

The site you provided is inline with my belief that saturated and trans fats should be eliminated from the diet. It parallels comments I’ve made on previous posts that indicate we should all increase our fiber, DHA/EPA/omega-3, and phytosterol/phytohormone intake.

The site also tiptoes around the dietary cholesterol issue… the issue I am contesting (and have been ever since we read the chapter on fat and now the one on cholesterol). The Mayo Clinic site says “Cut back on the cholesterol and total fat — especially saturated and trans fats — that you eat. Saturated fats, like those in meat, full-fat dairy products and some oils, raise your total cholesterol. Trans fats, which are sometimes found in margarines and store-bought cookies, crackers and cakes, are particularly bad for your cholesterol levels. Trans fats raise low-density lipoprotein (LDL), the “bad” cholesterol, and lower high-density lipoprotein (HDL), the “good” cholesterol.”

Notice there it NEVER mention that cholesterol you eat increases cholesterol levels. But it does link trans and saturated fats to increased LDL levels in the blood. Harvard’s School of Public Health explains the point I’m trying to make in the following way:

“Although it is still important to limit the amount of cholesterol you eat, especially if you have diabetes, dietary cholesterol isn’t nearly the villain it’s been portrayed to be. Cholesterol in the bloodstream is what’s most important. And the biggest influence on blood cholesterol level is the mix of fats in your diet—not the amount of cholesterol you eat from food.”[1]

References:
[1] http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/what-should-you-eat/fats-and-cholesterol/

My Comments on Other Students’ Initial Responses
(First Conversation)
[STUDENT 1:]Lets say I had just received results from a cholesterol blood test, and it indicated that my LDL was high and HDL was low, I would immediately make some changes! I would first modify my diet. Specifically my egg consumption. I can eat eggs daily, and since egg yolks are high in cholesterol, that would be significantly decreased. After reading the assigned chapters, I learned that egg yolks should be limited to two per week. Secondly, I would modify my physical activity, specifically cardiovascular activities. When I was reading the interactive ebook (understanding nutrition, on line vesion) on page 615 it states “Participate in at least 30 minutes of moderate-intensity endurance activity on most days of the week”. I think I would double it to 60 minutes, as often as I could just to stay extra healthy!

For my fellow egg junkies, I thought this was kind of cool:

http://www.cholesterolcholestrol.com/egg-cholesterol-cholestrol.html

[ME:]STUDENT 1:

I LOOOOOVEEE EGGS. I knew they were an awesome source of protein but was very excited to have read that they were considered to have a 1 PDCAAS.[1] It is such an awesome/recommended source that eggs were chosen as the image for chapter 6 which talks about proteins.

I stopped eating yolks, however, not because of their cholesterol content, but contaminants. Most contaminants are fat soluble. When toxicity studies are done on chickens, it is the egg yolks that are examined.

I may get a lot of heat for this comment, but I am not scared of dietary cholesterol. I completely agree with scientists who regard the limitation of cholesterol as being based on old research that is being challenged by newer research.[2]

In fact, our book says “People with high blood cholesterol, however, may benefit from limiting daily cholesterol intake to less than 200 milligrams”.[3] It also stated that an egg can have a little over 200mgs of cholesterol.

My response: In NO WAY did the book correlate that eggs were linked. In fact, it stated that “most foods that are high in cholesterol are also high in saturated fats, but eggs are an exception.”[3] It merely puts eggs into “cholesterol-containing category” and says “limit its intake”. :( not cool for “fellow egg junkies”.

Please note… I am not arguing that people w/ high cholesterol can consume >200mg of cholesterol/day; I am arguing that there is little evidence that identify eggs as an antagonist.

The body is capable of creating the cholesterol we need (or that it “thinks” it needs). Researchers, in fact, know this and is why the most popular cholesterol-lowering drugs inhibit cholesterol production by the liver. It is thought that we evolved from apes… They have a similar cholesterol requirement that we do, yet their diet consists of no cholesterol.

Cholesterol is REQUIRED by (at least) every single cellular membrane (trillions in the body) constantly. An irregular production or LDL/HDL mobilization/utilization is at the root of cholesterol issues (in my opinion).

:) That’s the beauty of science, we can all agree to disagree and be partially right.

References:
[1] Textbook Appendix D (pg D-1)
[2] http://informalscientist.com/eating-eggs-raises-your-cholesterol-or-does-it/
[3] Textbook pg 152

[STUDENT 1:]Kevin-

“:) That’s the beauty of science, we can all agree to disagree and be partially right.” <- Well said! I was of course speaking (typing) in a hypothetical sense (if my blood cholesterol was high). But until then, I enjoy my egg yolks! Yum! But overall my egg addiction is really for the egg whites, I could separate the yolk, but I would feel like I was wasting. And I feel that the chickens are here on earth to feed us, as well as their eggs. I also just read about PDCAAS, that you wrote about. Thanks for sharing that.

Now your reason for not eating the yolk is something I have not looked into. But I think I will. I had not thought of the yolk being contaminated. Interesting! And with that being the case, I can definitely agree with you for excluding them.

Thanks for sharing :)

[STUDENT 2:]STUDENT 1,
It is nice to hear someone comment about not wanting to WASTE egg yolks. I am not a fan of eggs, but AM a FAN of NOT wasting things. When I make recipes that call for egg whites, I cook the yolks and feed them to my dogs. They love the treat. (Hopefully, it does not effect their cholesterol :))

[STUDENT 1:]Hi STUDENT 2

Good idea on giving it to the dogs! I do the same thing when I, or anyone in my house, eats a can of tuna. We pour it over their dry food. Makes for a yummy treat for them, so it seems. I had not considered giving the yolks to them. It will have to be something that I try in the future! Then I wont feel like I am wasting. Good tip :)

(Second Conversation)
[STUDENT 1:]High cholesterol, specifically high LDL cholesterol, is a serious risk factor that can lead to heart disease. The two main initial actions for controlling cholesterol are diet modification and increased physical activity. I think that in addition to the two initial actions, people should focus on increasing their intake of soluble fiber. Soluble fiber reduces LDL cholesterol and increases HDL cholesterol. Higher levels of HDL cholesterol and lower levels LDL cholesterol correlate inversely with the risk of heart disease. Foods that are high in soluble fiber include; oatmeal, bran, barley, fruits and beans. There are many ways a person could increase their intake of soluble fiber. They can have oatmeal for breakfast, or a sandwich on whole grain bread, or add things like an apple or beans to their salad.

[ME:] Awesome recommendation, STUDENT 1.

Fiber really helps in the maintenance of cholesterol. Oatmeal, as you mentioned, is an excellent source of fiber. :) Luckily, so is a sweet fruit that is easy to carry along - the apple. The skin contains pectin, one of the best natural fibers in existence. The skin of one apple can contain as much fiber as a single serving of oatmeal.

An added advantage to pectin is that it serves as a prebiotic (food for intestinal flora).[1]

References:
[1] http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2180/10/13/abstract

Please Join In
Please continue these discussions by adding your comment below.

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Jun 16

I have gotten a few e-mails asking me about my workout routine. I switch routines every few weeks. I switch from a strength building routine to a fat burning routine (I have been doing this for a very short period of time).

I am currently in the strength-building cycle, it lasts between 4 and 5 weeks. This means the traditional, gym-style workout where you do all “pushing” muscles, for example. I also add protein double my protein intake to build muscle. The idea is to gain as much muscle mass as possible so that I can burn more fat when I switch to the fat-burning cycle (which lasts from 2 to 3 weeks).

Today I did supersets of back, biceps, and legs. In this case, supersets means that I do two exercises in a row without a break in between. I take a 2.5 minute break (or less) and repeat for a total of 4 supersets [The routine takes about 45 minutes]. Here’s are videos that do an awesome job explaining each of the exercises:

Pullups Dumbell Rows

 

Continue after 4 sets of above exercises and 2.5 min break

Hammer Curls Reverse Curls

 

Continue after 4 sets of above exercises and 2.5 min break

Squats Lateral Lunges

I do these carrying weights
on shoulders as I with squats

 

Continue after 4 sets of above exercises and 2.5 min break

Glut Ham Raises Stability Ball Hamstring Press

 

My goal is to challenge my body. In this strength-building routine, I have four different workouts. Besides this one, I have one for chest, shoulders, and triceps, and a third one where I workout abs and obliques. I do one on separate days. On the fourth day (after I have done one of each of these), I walk. Yes… Walk. I walk one lap around each lane on the track, looking to shave off a few seconds for each lane from the last time I went walking.

For the exercises above, my goal is to do one more rep each time I do the exercise. I start with weight I can BARELY lift 8 times for each of the 4 sets. The next day that I have to do that same exercise, I do 9 repetitions in each of the 4 sets, and so on. When I can do 12 repetitions for all 4 sets I increase 10% of the weight and go back down to 8 repetitions. This is what works for me. You may find that increasing repetitions on the first 2 sets and keeping the same # of repetitions you did last time for the final two sets works best for you, try that. But again… the idea is to keep the body working harder than it did last time.

The body is an awesome creation and capable of conditioning itself very quickly. If you do not push it, it will simply learn what you are asking it to do and progress will stop.

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Mar 26

Yesterday morning I woke up saying to myself that I needed to add a little exercise in the mornings. I thought of a quick 15-20 minute workout routine that I could do first thing, before even leaving my room:

A set of 10 squads, immediately drop on chest and do ten push-ups, then immediately lay on back and do 20 sit-ups. Repeat three times without stopping.

And that’s what I was going to do until I saw a tweet by Pete Genot where he talked about the benefits of sprint training. After a couple of exchanges with him on his blog and via twitter, I decided switch out the routines. He said it would accelerate my metabolism. I remember the last time I saw my brother, he said that his trainer had him doing something similar.

400 meter running track

400 meter running track

So this morning I went out to a nearby track and did sprint training. I loved it. My lungs felt like I had inhaled fire, but that’s just my conditioning which will definitely improve as I continue to do the sprinting. Here’s how it went (please refer to picture on the left). I got to the track and walked one around the outermost lane (marked red). Then I cut inside and jogged curve 1 slowly. When I got to straight let 2 I sprinted as fast as I possible could and then went back down to an easy jog when I hit curve 3. I sprinted once again on straight 4, jogged curve 5, and sprint straight 6.

Oh my! I stopped halfway through straight 6 because I couldn’t go anymore but immediately motivated myself back up and I finished that last sprint. I cooled down by walking two laps around the innermost lane.

I highly recommend it for a quick workout. Because it’s my first day I can’t really say I noticed a diff with my metabolism. But it brought back a lot of memories from when I wrestled in high school and we would do similar drills. And the best thing is that it only took 20 for the whole thing (including the driving time).

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Mar 24

As mentioned on yesterday’s post:

This is not to lose weight! I don’t believe in “diets”! I know my body very well and this is what I think it needs. Yours could be VERY different to mine and as such, you should not eat exactly what I eat.The supplements, those you do need… maybe even at higher quantities.

Diet
At 10am (more or less) I drank a liter of water with a Whey Protein Blend. I also took a Multivitamin and Multimineral Supplement, a Antioxidant Supplement, a Phytosterol Supplement, and an omega 3 supplement (essential fatty acids commonly found in fish). (71 calories)

At 10:15am I ate a one egg, two egg white omelet with two tablespoons of cottage cheese and a cup of soy milk. (253 calories)

At 3pm I ate salmon patty sandwich (626 calories):

Salmon Sandwhich

Salmon Sandwhich

Two toasts with mayo and mustard
1 slice cheese
1/3 tomato (two slices)
Small bag of baby carrots (side)
Cup of Sprite (normally don’t drink anything during meals but had it left over and it’s been a while since I drank soda)

 

 

 

At 5:30pm I ate a scoop of ice cream (cookie dough). (190 calories)

At 8:15pm I drank a chocolate-strawberry shake (555 calories):

chocolate-strawberry shake

chocolate-strawberry shake

chocolate-strawberry shake finished

chocolate-strawberry shake finished

2 cups soy milk, 1 cup strawberries, 13 almonds (I don’t measure just get small handful), chocolate-flavored meal replacement shake, and a Whey Protein Blend.

 

At 8:30pm I ate two (one serving) chew-able kids’ multivitamin/multimineral. (45 calories)

chewable vitamins for kids

chewable vitamins for kids

The awesome thing about this is that I just gave myself more nutrition with these two little “candies” than with any other meal today! Each serving (two) of these chew-able supplements contains as much vitamin A as two fresh apricots, as much niacin as 5 medium sized carrots, as much vitamin D as 4 cups of milk, as much vitamin B12 as 60 ounces of chicken, as much vitamin E as 10.75 cups of kiwi, among MANY other nutrients (too many to list here).

I ate a total of 1740 calories but, as was the case yesterday, almost everything is low glycemic with the exception of the carrots and the Sprite. Stay away from carrots and sprite (I really hope you already knew about this one) if you are trying to eliminate body fat. Believe it or not, whole wheat bread is low glycemic (as is multi-grain; most other types of breads are medium to high glycemic). I also drank 2 liters of water in addition to what is mentioned above.

Exercise
About half an hour walk (one lap around each of eight lanes in a standard track).

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Feb 15

Today was the second day I worked out alone. The other two people from the workout trio we formed didn’t show up on Friday or today.

I liked the fact that I get done with my workout between 30 and 40 minutes. But I tend to hold back, especially on the bench press because there is no one there to spot me.

But I am very proud that I have not missed a single day. Well, for the weights. I have not been able to go for some of the walks.

Exercise Routine
On my “Fat Elimination Mode On” post I mentioned that we were going to do pushing muscles on Monday, pulling muscles on Wednesday, and legs on Friday. I also said that we would be changing this as soon as we got used to the workout.

Well… We got used to them by the second day! We are now doing pushing muscles from the waist up and hamstrings on one day, and pulling muscles from the waist up and pushing leg muscles the next time. And we alternate like this every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. So we get to work one group twice in a week. I like it… it’s working very well.

I go walk/hike on Tuesday, Saturday, and Sunday mornings when I can. Although walking helps with my circulation and helps with my breathing, it is not an integral part of my weight loss program. I do think it’s necessary and I do what I can to get out there for a 30 minute walk on each of these days.

Fat Loss Progress
I weigh and measure myself every Sunday morning. Yesterday morning was my third measurement and saw that I had lost 3.8 pounds since January 31st. Not a lot when compared to strict diets or rigorous workouts, right? Check this out, though:

  • Neck: -1.1cm
  • Chest: 0.8cm
  • Waist: -2.8cm
  • [Left] Bicep: -0.9cm
  • [Left] Forearm: 0
  • [Left] Wrist: -0.2cm
  • Hips: -1.8cm
  • [Right] Thigh: -2.9cm
  • [Right] Calf: -0.5cm
  • [Right] Ankle: -0.9cm

This is a clear indication that I am losing body fat. Little weight, but smaller circumference all over. Next time someone says “I lost 10 pounds with so-and-so-wonder-diet”, ask them, “how many pant sizes did you lose?” And see if their ration is 1 inch per 3.5 pounds. It is unlikely.

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Jan 25

Weight LifterI set up a workout routine last week with a friend and yesterday was our first day. It felt AWESOME! It had been over a year since I last followed a regular workout routine and I was missing it.

A little background
I wrestled in high school as a 152 pounder. Not bad… definitely the best shape I have ever been in. There were a lot of sacrifices to keeping the weight, especially during the few days leading up to wrestling matches. Without going into details, I did a lot of unsafe and extremely detrimental things (I remember losing 12 pounds from 7am to 4pm once). Needless to say, this was not good for my body.

As soon as I graduated from high school, I paid the price for what I had done. See, I went from working out 7 hours a day to absolutely zero because I started working and going to college. I went from 152 to 200, 210, 215, 220, 240, and in mid ’04 I hit my highest weight ever — 259.5 pounds.

Solution
I started on glyconutrients and dropped to 240 within a month and a half. This doesn’t happen to everyone, but it did with me. I plateaued but I noticed I had a ton of energy so I got into some sports I had previously done. I began to play tennis, golf, and jiu jitsu once again (things I hadn’t done in well over 10 years). I dropped another 10 pounds, and once again plateaued. No matter what I did or what I ate (even when in excess), I stayed at the same weight.

Then I stopped doing the exercise, I climbed back up to 240 by about a year later. And that’s where I stayed until August of 2008 when I took a new whey protein supplement which was backed by a few clinical studies (double-blind placebo and open label studies). I purposely didn’t change anything in my diet or exercise routine. I wanted to see what this product, on its own did.

But instead of caring about the weight, I focused on the measurements around certain body parts once a week (day to day weighing was prohibited). The results for the first 8 weeks were amazing. I was wearing pants that were 4 inches smaller! But then I plateaued. The body is an amazing thing! I began to work out and once again I began to drop in sizes and weight. But this only lasted a month. I stopped taking the supplement and eliminated the exercise.

For the past year, I’ve been fairly lax on my food intake with very little activity. Sure I’ve gotten up once in a while for a hike or walk or lift weight in the backyard, but nothing serious… no commitment. That is, until now.

Exercise Routine
Weight lifting is CRUCIAL for eliminating fat. This is probably the biggest thing I needed to consider since that’s my main goal. I need to reduce another 4 inches from my pant sizes. Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays after biochemistry are the days we will lift.

Mondays is upper body, pushing muscles. Chest, shoulders, and triceps (in that order). Wednesdays are upper body, pulling muscles. Back (upper and lower), biceps, and forearms. Fridays are legs. We are already thinking we may have to accelerate the workout rotation as we get more and more used to the workouts.

Tuesday, Saturday, and Sunday mornings will be for walking. I don’t run because I feel it damages the body more than it helps. Benefits of aerobic exercise are to help with mobility, circulation, and stretch the muscles. It is very, very, VERY hard to lose weight by doing aerobic exercise.

Diet
There are a lot of miracle diets. I don’t believe in any of them. The key is a lifestyle change. For the moment, I know I have to eat a lot less than I was before if I truly want to lose weight. But I do not want to eliminate food. How do I do it? I don’t concentrate on calories. Concentrating on calories in vs. calories out leads to nothing but hunger, frustration, and ultimately failure.

Instead I concentrate on healthy food choices. Low glycemic index is the name of the game. Here’s an example of what I eat yesterday and today:

Breakfast: Meal replacement drink because I was in a real hurry and couldn’t cook (tastes great and carries me through to lunch time).
Lunch: Sandwich (toast, mayo, two slices of turkey breast, spinach, and a jalapeño) with a small bag of baked pretzels.
Dinner: Sandwich as described in lunch.

Breakfast: Two egg omelette w/ cheese, small glass of soy milk
Lunch: Sandwich as described for above.
Dinner: Three fish tacos

I do not eat after 8pm. I do not drink any liquids during my meals (if I get thirsty, it’s because I’m not chewing well enough), I drink a lot of water (at least a gallon per day) with advanced glyconutrients.

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Nov 29

A Twitter conversation between @Ferrnanda, @ferhmo, and myself resulted in the current post.

These are pictures I took during a 4(ish) mile hike earlier today. The biologist inside of me loves & appreciates every detail of the Arizona desert. I hope you enjoy the pictures as much as I enjoyed the hike.

Start of Trail desert-shot-1
Beginning of trail.

 

fork high-road
Lots of trails. Which should I choose? I chose the one on the left (high-road)

 

cool-cactus cool-cactus

 

trail trail

 

jumping-cholla sahuaro-trail

 

PICT0011 tucson
Tucson, AZ

 

tall cacti weird cactus

 

desert PICT0019

 

PICT0023 PICT0025
Ingenious way our plants developed to retain their water

 

PICT0029 PICT0031
No desert is complete without golf courses.
Tucson has two things… Sahuaros and gold LOTS of golf courses.

 

PICT0034 PICT0035
Back to civilization!
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