How & Why to Get Weekly "Zone 2" Cardio Workouts | Dr. Andrew Huberman

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  • čas přidán 9. 01. 2024
  • Dr. Andrew Huberman explains the importance of Zone 2 cardio for overall health and how to incorporate it into your weekly routine.
    Dr. Andrew Huberman is a tenured professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford University School of Medicine and host of the Huberman Lab Podcast.
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    The Huberman Lab podcast is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine, nursing or other professional health care services, including the giving of medical advice, and no doctor/patient relationship is formed. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast is at the user’s own risk. The content of this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their health care professionals for any such conditions.
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Komentáře • 508

  • @MrQuestful
    @MrQuestful Před 4 měsíci +216

    Cycling is great for zone 2. I’ve made it my primary means of transit, and while it took some time to adapt to that norm, it’s now second nature for me to ride everywhere.

    • @graymccarthy685
      @graymccarthy685 Před 4 měsíci +16

      Cycling to work was the one best thing I did for my health and fitness - all my ‘training’ was a bonus on top. I’m now WFH and the change is huge, a still do the ‘training’ but with out that bike two times a day it doesn’t touch the sides - keep it up mate !

    • @oddinary30
      @oddinary30 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Is stationary cycling counted?

    • @oongieboongie
      @oongieboongie Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@oddinary30 Lol yes zone 2 is a heart rate zone

    • @dismiggo
      @dismiggo Před 3 měsíci +6

      ​@@oddinary30Yes, of course. In fact, stationary cycling can be even better than "normal" cycling if you're doing this kind of structured training, because you can just do your training in a very predictable fashion, whereas there are many variables in traditional cycling, such as hills. I for one am really competitive, so I often sprint race against cars at green lights, even though I really shouldn't, just to name one example.

    • @BrianErwin
      @BrianErwin Před 2 měsíci +1

      best to use a trainer for zone 2 cycling. too much starting and stopping on the streets, along with inclines and declines

  • @petebagi
    @petebagi Před 4 měsíci +217

    Sending a virtual hug to you Andrew. You’ve helped me through so many things this year from mental health to physical health. I’m the healthiest I’ve ever been and finally feel empowered with the accurate information I need to continue on this upward spiral. 🎉 thanks for all you do.

    • @vamosabv
      @vamosabv Před 2 měsíci +1

      All the best petebagi :) Which of his stuff have helped you out the most, particularly with respect to mental health ? David Goggins' video was of great help to me.

    • @grodrigues3
      @grodrigues3 Před měsícem +1

      You try the cold showers and sunlight in the AM? It's so painful, but feels amazing afterwards. Better than a cup of coffee!

  • @johnhawkins4908
    @johnhawkins4908 Před 4 měsíci +52

    My grandfather, born in the 1890s, got his zone 2 cardio via his work as a lead miner, after the mines closed, he was a carpenter and painter. After a day's work, he came home and helped my grandmother maintain their small farm, which included their chickens, pigs, and a few cows as well as the garden because they raised most of their food. He lived into his 90s, and thought working out was a strange concept.

    • @ProfessorFatMan
      @ProfessorFatMan Před 2 měsíci +9

      They don’t make them like they used to. That was a hardworking man no doubt.

    • @WilliamsPinch
      @WilliamsPinch Před měsícem +5

      😂 why workout when you can just labor the farm lol.

  • @MegaBeetle65
    @MegaBeetle65 Před 4 měsíci +49

    I roller skate 3 hours x two sessions every week. Love skating. I also do 3 days callisthenics with resistance training. 58 years old.

  • @essray
    @essray Před 4 měsíci +75

    Zone 2 is a fantastic base layer for overall health. I did four to five Z2 a week all last winter. My first mountain bike ride in the spring was better than my best ride in from the last fall. My Stamina and HR recovery was so much better after those punchy climbs & sprints.

    • @GoGoGadgetGiveadamn
      @GoGoGadgetGiveadamn Před 4 měsíci +1

      fout to five a week of homany minutes each tho

    • @willakana3369
      @willakana3369 Před 2 měsíci

      @@GoGoGadgetGiveadamn According to Andrew Huberman, the science says 150-200 minutes of zone 2 per week minimum to achieve the longevity and health benefits.

    • @essray
      @essray Před 2 měsíci

      @@GoGoGadgetGiveadamn I did 45 min to an hour per session.

  • @aggieagata6577
    @aggieagata6577 Před 4 měsíci +64

    I do Strength Training, HIIT, Tabata, Power Walks and sometimes when I feel energised I'd go for a short run. I always thought that my Power Walks are not considered real Zone 2 exercises 😊 and I'm lacking Zone 2 work so I'm glad to hear it they actually are. I love my 1h Power Walks in the evenings after dinner, when I go outside and listen to some science backed podcasts or blast some music. Thank you 😉 Loving HubermanLab content ❤️

    • @noxuification
      @noxuification Před 3 měsíci

      I have no clue how to find my zone 2

    • @aggieagata6577
      @aggieagata6577 Před 3 měsíci

      @@noxuification I personally think that as long as you do different types of exercise with various pace/heart rate you should be fine 👊 Don't get discouraged and most importantly have fun! 😉

    • @treali
      @treali Před 3 měsíci +1

      At my normal walk speed I blast past "power walkers", be sure to actually exert some effort. Even though I walk at a high speed I don't consider it zone 2. I think the main benefit of walking is not that it's zone 2, but that you're not sitting down on your butt.

    • @aggieagata6577
      @aggieagata6577 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@treali I find my power walks doing great for my mental health and blood glucose plus when I get home and sit down I can see my resting heart rate going down to 47bpm, feeling relaxed for sure 😌 🙌 Even though it's maybe not true Zone 2 nevertheless it serves me well.
      And I agree. Whatever movement you do is much better than sitting on your butt 😉 right?!

    • @st14
      @st14 Před 2 měsíci

      Power walks probably stay in zone 1. Depends on the person.

  • @anitahernandez1207
    @anitahernandez1207 Před 4 měsíci +40

    This reminds me of the movie "Back to the Future Part 3", where Doc Brown is back in the western time period 🤠 and is trying to explain what life is like in 1985, where people "run for fun" or exercise. Before the need of the 9 to 5 office job or just modern life in general, most people were on a circadian rhythm clock, got their vitamin D from the sun, plants and meat, did "Zone 2" cardio and resistance training daily and were probably relatively healthy under their harsher circumstances. They may not have had clean drinking water all the time but ours needs to be filtered from tap for microplastics, pharmaceuticals, heavy metals, pesticides, etc. Fun movie, doesn't get old. 🎬

    • @BiswasTharakath
      @BiswasTharakath Před 25 dny

      And the average life expectancy was under 25 years. What a time it was to be live right...

  • @Femi_Anime_Dub
    @Femi_Anime_Dub Před 4 měsíci +20

    I love this!! It spoke to my spirit!! Let's get it done!!!

  • @WillTio13
    @WillTio13 Před 2 měsíci +7

    For most of my life I exercised 5-6 days a week, mixing strength, Hiit, basketball and endurance.
    Then depression hit me and I almost stopped everything for close to a year. I was so afraid to lose all the muscle and performance I built for decades.
    Recently I've been feeling better and started training regulary again and to my surprise my physique dont disappear completely, I still look fit compared to general people even though I probably lost more than half of my muscle and performance.
    Also my body bounced back pretty quickly as well.
    What I didnt realized during that year I spent 1-2 hours a day taking care of 9 stray cats I adopted and those were definitely a zone 2 exercise 1-2 hours a day, 7 days a week.
    Im just sharing my experience so people who are very busy, currently not in the best condition, or in a mental struggle and lost all motivation can do this kind of activity. Then when youre back to your own self you would be thankful. Keep fighting everyone, youre stronger than you thought.

  • @FrankensteinintoFranken-FINE.
    @FrankensteinintoFranken-FINE. Před 4 měsíci +16

    Learning about zone 2 has changed my life in terms of running. I was running to fast. Such an easy thing but I think ego has something to do with it. Now I've slowed down and do one small run a week and a 8 mile run every week. Before I didn't think it was possible.

  • @x-Musashi-x
    @x-Musashi-x Před 4 měsíci +38

    I dislocated my right shoulder so Zone 2 on the assault bike and jogging helps me maintain my athleticism. Also I feel it has speeded up my recovery.

  • @HexlGaming
    @HexlGaming Před 2 měsíci +3

    That's an interesting perspective shift, because if you don't look at your zone 2 cardio as training or a workout you can easily stop to smell the roses or to admire the view from whereever you are with that mindset, instead of pushing through aggressively if it's a workout. That's such an incredible trick, because it allows you to get all the benefits, but still lets you stay soft and loving while doing it. It also allows you to give up with no hesitation if you do notice that you have injured yourself; because when you're injured durring your time in nature because you love it you'd go home and let your body heal while if the same thing happened under the umbrella of training you'd be way more likely to push through and at least finish what you've started. The only thing holding you back to not cancle your time in nature is the actual love for it, instead of like this whole mental toughness thing. It's like going to the shops: if you need milk you still really want to get it, but if you're injured you're going to take it way easier and potentially find another solution. That's such a powerful take.

  • @slice66
    @slice66 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Thank you for doing these clips! I love your full episodes but it get lost in the depth of information

  • @debbiepottscoaching
    @debbiepottscoaching Před 4 měsíci

    Great simple tips! Plus I would add If people don't know what their true ZONE TWO session is ...get a test as with PNOE or we used Phil Maffetone's MAF formula for 20-30 years as most people are really in their zone three. Plus women don't need as much of zone 2 than man - as per Dr. Stacy Sims research she shared recently. One day a week doing a longer outdoor in nature Zone 2 cardio is a realistic goal for most (most times of the year!).

  • @anthonydotnet
    @anthonydotnet Před 4 měsíci +5

    This works out to be at least 40min per day over 5 days. This is reassuring, as many people can do a foot commute to work instead of taking the bus/train.

  • @PatBurnz
    @PatBurnz Před 4 měsíci

    Love it. Thanks for the great information as always 🔥

  • @Appofinterest
    @Appofinterest Před 4 měsíci +7

    Doc you are truly really out there giving us some of the best info!

  • @Marcelotop
    @Marcelotop Před 3 měsíci +2

    I work on the 5th floor and started taking the stairs everytime instead of the lift. By week 4, I could see a massive improve already in my respiratory capacity

  • @NiallC980
    @NiallC980 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I recommend getting Kolie Moore on to discuss Zone 2. He’s definitely on the ball on this subject!

  • @victoria5885
    @victoria5885 Před 4 měsíci

    Gracias Gracias Gracias thanks for all the information you share

  • @ideatorx
    @ideatorx Před 4 měsíci +6

    When I zone 2 train I can see a massively significant difference in my HRV and my resting HR. coupled with HIIT it’s the cardiovascular ultimate cycle, everything improves massively.

    • @na-dk9vm
      @na-dk9vm Před 4 měsíci

      What is your weekly training regime??

  • @stacyjamesnear
    @stacyjamesnear Před 4 měsíci +12

    I basically go for a daily walk through the woods with my Nordic walking sticks which increases my rate probably puts me at the lower end of zone 2, but then there are steps that I'll do which brings me up. Could certainly focus on going faster to make sure I'm staying in zone 2 but a daily 50 minute walk should be something everybody could do, it shouldn't be something that's hard to fit into one's schedule. And if it is you might rethink your schedule

    • @mav3ric100
      @mav3ric100 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Walking is zone 1. Unless you're speed walking.

    • @TrixxPlay
      @TrixxPlay Před 4 měsíci

      Did you even watch the video?@@mav3ric100

    • @marinaluna2799
      @marinaluna2799 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@mav3ric100walking is zone 2 for people who aren’t very fit. If you’re fit, it’s prob on the high end of 1. Hiking or incline walking is zone 2 for everyone.

  • @tombaker8445
    @tombaker8445 Před 4 měsíci +132

    Some people consider walking around the block as zone 2. My Polar app considers zone 2 as 117-130bpm. Peter Attia considers 140-145bpms zone 2.
    We're obsessed with the metric because we've heard the study that Peter Attia and others have mentioned, saying that if you do 150-200 minutes of Zone 2 cardio/week you might live forever.
    I don't really think it matters that much. Make sure you're doing some form of exercise 4-5 days a week. Just get out there and get sweaty!

    • @stacyjamesnear
      @stacyjamesnear Před 4 měsíci +9

      For ne, at 48 years old, my Zone 2 heart rate range (which is 60-70% of your maximum heart rate) would be approximately 103 to 120 beats per minute. ​This is based off the idea that one's maximum heart rate is 220 - your age. So my max heart rate would be 178. So if you're younger, yeah you're going to have a higher zone 2, but then also if you're more fit you'll have a higher zone 2. It's not a one size fits all. But then if I went and did a stress test and got my true VO2 max and actual max heart rate, It would be more specific. But then again it all depends on one's age and conditioning level.

    • @ocho33
      @ocho33 Před 4 měsíci

      It literally can't matter that much. All these necessities are coming from lab studies fed to us by academics abd health care professionals trained in a corrupt system.

    • @ocho33
      @ocho33 Před 4 měsíci +11

      Worrying about getting your "zone 2 cardio" in likely is worse for you than not getting your zone 2 cardio in

    • @cynicalmonk870
      @cynicalmonk870 Před 4 měsíci +14

      I think Peter atira likes to hear his own voice

    • @karlrobb1654
      @karlrobb1654 Před 4 měsíci

      Read up on Phil maffetone please maf method is all you need to know about endurance

  • @indeswma4904
    @indeswma4904 Před měsícem

    I do a ton of casual zone 2 with various martial arts practices, hitting the bag slow and low for a bit or similar is good for the brain, my technique, and zone 2 cardio apparently.

  • @catalinamariei9037
    @catalinamariei9037 Před 4 měsíci

    Lovely work you do, lovely explanations, Andrew. Thank you!
    I'm trying to hit the gym 3 days for week and add outdoor activities in the week end days. I'm also using a Garmin device and i noticed, during the gym days, it double my time as worked out based on the intensity of the activity (eg. in a 52 minutes training session it calculates 11 minutes - moderate activity + 42x2 minutes - intense activity). The 3 sessions lead to 300ish minutes of total activity...
    My question is: should i rely on these measurements? Are they = with the 200 you mentioned in your video?
    Thx!

  • @MartynHoffmann
    @MartynHoffmann Před 4 měsíci +2

    Would be great for you to interview Peter Attia on this subject. He has a different point of view and is much more focused on getting zone 2 as a solid uninterrupted block. I prefer your approach and it’s a relief to hear, but it’s still confusing to hear such different perspectives.

    • @brandilynnw5410
      @brandilynnw5410 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Out of everyone I have read Dr. Attia has the most comprehensive approach when it comes to exercise. I think some of these others assume the average person won't make it a priority so they give us watered down versions like this. Of course it's better than nothing but I walk around for hours at work and never get get in zone 2. I appreciate Dr. Attia for those of us that really want to make it a priority and put in the work. Most people have the time. After all the average American watches up to 4 hours of TV a day not to mention the time they spend on their butts scrolling on their phone like I am doing now😅. It's all about priorities.

  • @banerjeehome5913
    @banerjeehome5913 Před 4 měsíci +20

    Zone 2 Cardio, that's like the 1 hour brisk walking that I (oh-so easily) do around the park when it's empty, getting my average HR to 120+ Cool. Gonna do more of it now. It also helps burn all the excess calories while still not being enough to impede my hypertrophy training or recovery. Thanks, Andrew!

    • @Ooweeeooo
      @Ooweeeooo Před 3 měsíci +2

      Brisk walk is usually zone 1… unless it’s on incline or weighted. At least according to my Apple Watch

    • @Fremmy
      @Fremmy Před 2 měsíci

      @@Ooweeeooo Depends on walking speed, body weight, height etc. A brisk walk for me at around 6 kph/3.7 mph usually ends up with Zone 2 heart rate @ 140-152 pulse.

  • @ninadbawkar3331
    @ninadbawkar3331 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Huberman delivers when required the mosttt

  • @cokebottles6919
    @cokebottles6919 Před 4 měsíci

    by that definition of zone 2 cardio, I get 20-60 hours of zone 2 a week because of my job. My understanding of zone 2 is it needs to be 60% to 75% of your maximum heart rate and I'm not sure if I could get my heart rate to even 60% walking unless it's up a long steep hill.

  • @jsmithsemper4848
    @jsmithsemper4848 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I do not even like it until I get into it about 3-6 months in. Then I love it.

  • @dm_podcast_takeways
    @dm_podcast_takeways Před 4 měsíci +6

    Summary:
    Andrew Huberman discusses the importance of Zone 2 cardio, recommending 150 to 200 minutes per week for cardiovascular and overall health. He shares his personal approach, incorporating a weekly slow jog or hike lasting 60 to 90 minutes, emphasizing nasal breathing and outdoor exposure.
    Huberman mentions his discussion with Dr. Andy Galpin, who reassures that Zone 2 cardio is crucial for health and can complement other fitness aspects. Galpin suggests viewing it as part of daily activities, like brisk walking, carrying groceries, or engaging in work discussions while pacing. Huberman highlights the flexibility of integrating Zone 2 cardio into daily life, providing relief for busy individuals.
    The key message is to accumulate 200 minutes of Zone 2 cardio weekly, with Huberman setting the minimum threshold at 200 minutes. He emphasizes that it doesn't necessarily have to be scheduled treadmill time and can be seamlessly integrated into daily movements. Huberman shares his shift in perspective, considering his outdoor activities as movement rather than structured exercise, allowing for a more enjoyable approach to fitness.

  • @jimjr4432
    @jimjr4432 Před 25 dny

    Love this video and advice. I'm 79 yo and try to ride Z2 on a stationary bike. When I ride outside, I pretty much Z3, but it does not feel very hard and I have time in Z2 and Z4. Z5 has not been experienced very much. So the question is can I add up the Z2's for my weakly (yes, weakly within a week) to see how many minutes to meet the 15 minutes lower goal. Thanks ever so much. So I'm not much of cyclist, say 1000 miles per year, mix of MTB, Grvl and road.Seated resting pulse is 50 bpm. Cheers!

  • @definit1on119
    @definit1on119 Před 4 měsíci +19

    Love zone 2 training. Most of my training is zone 2. My zone 2 is 131-145

    • @remiwulff8979
      @remiwulff8979 Před 2 měsíci +1

      And how can you reach that HR by simply Walking?

  • @davidkao
    @davidkao Před 4 měsíci +5

    I'd love to see a discussion on what general health benefits (if any) can come from zones 3 or 4. Basically, besides the extra lactic acid build-up, can you get the same benefits as zone 2 from the "grey area" zones?

    • @richardmiddleton7770
      @richardmiddleton7770 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Zones upto 6 are all aerobic, you simply can't do the volume of work required to build the CV system with anything above zone 2. Fatigue plays a big role in performance and zones above 2 are too fatiguing.

    • @davidkao
      @davidkao Před 4 měsíci

      @@richardmiddleton7770 I'm wondering specifically about general health and not performance, and the baseline volume recommended here (in terms of minutes of zone 2) is certainly a doable for zone 3/4 (think of a couple of 5k/10k runs per week).

    • @martinlutherkingjr.5582
      @martinlutherkingjr.5582 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@richardmiddleton7770But if you only have 30 mins for cardio per day, is it harmful to do zone 3 instead of zone 2 if you can maintain zone 3?

  • @memastarful
    @memastarful Před 4 měsíci +8

    I ride stationary bike every day for one hour. I level up intensity every 5 minutes until I reach level 12 then I come back down. Plus I walk 2 miles every day as well.

  • @troymartin4700
    @troymartin4700 Před 4 měsíci

    Hello, I’m a new subscriber and find your videos very educational and helpful. Thank you. My question to you is I have plantar fasciitis and really can’t run but instead I walk on an incline to get my heart rate up. Would that still be considered zone 2 cardio?

    • @mattwade646
      @mattwade646 Před 4 měsíci

      Yes. Any movement, bike, eliptical etc, that gets you in the right range.

  • @HaraldHofer
    @HaraldHofer Před 4 měsíci

    I run around 700min/week, 80% in Zone 2. In general a little bit more from spring to autumn, a little bit less in winter. Where I'm living the sub zero temperatures can be really hard on the lungs.
    For me the 60-90min after-work-run is my mental "cool down" phase. Nothing that happend during the day stays, nothing that will have to happen the next day is important yet.
    In other words: It's part of my mental self care and not only to stay physically fit...

  • @in4theride75
    @in4theride75 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Latest data I have read is that zone 4 cardio, 75+ minutes per week, has the same effect has zone 2 cardio at 150+ minutes per week. Has newer research been released in the last couple of years with different information?

  • @soulofexistence
    @soulofexistence Před 2 měsíci

    I play Stepmania for cardio, it's really fun and If you do it for long enough you sweat like crazy. I don't play videogames and I think there's no benefit in playing them but I make an exception for games that trick you into doing excercice

  • @brianb1733
    @brianb1733 Před 4 měsíci +24

    I have to take exception with a bit of this. For me and my fitness level, just moving around or going for a walk is Zone 1 or even Zone 0 cardio, not Zone 2 cardio. It would be great if we could put more of a standard definition around what Zone 2 really is. For me, it’s a 9:00-9:30 min/mile run based on heart rate and it is, in fact, exercise.

    • @sdaniels101
      @sdaniels101 Před 4 měsíci +8

      I agree. It seems to easy to water down zone 2 with a slow walk. A slow walk is more like zone 0.5 and even though it is beneficial for mental health and does get the blood moving, I don't see it really moving the needle in terms of overall fitness.

    • @eddyjroth
      @eddyjroth Před 4 měsíci +2

      Typically its a measure of heart rate with a target around 70% of HRM. For me with a HRM around 185 I try to stay 129-138 BPM, as others state that is the level of output where I can talk to my wife if she comes in the room to ask me something or be on a phone call (although people can tell you are exercising as it shouldn't be 'easy' to do)

    • @brianb1733
      @brianb1733 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@eddyjroth That's one definition, and one I was using for quite some time. Then I found that for me and my fitness level, I could get to about 78% of my measured HRM before I hit the RPE that you are talking about (which I agree with, btw). In other words, 70% of HRM is in the low end of Z2.

    • @hardboiledPhil
      @hardboiledPhil Před 4 měsíci +1

      Why did he feel the need to make this and then give some generic fitness advice that does not involve actually doing zone 2. So many better videos out there on this subject

    • @argentinaencanada
      @argentinaencanada Před 4 měsíci

      I was able to get my range on my Apple Watch app. The only calculators were pretty close as well.

  • @beamka89
    @beamka89 Před 4 měsíci +24

    But isn’t the definition of zone 2 cardio that a person’s heart rate gets within a certain range, which is widely debated from being within 60-70% max heart rate or more along Attia’s thoughts of 75% of a person’s heart rate? My walking, even at a faster than normal pace, gets my heart rate at around 50% which isn’t zone 2.

  • @jamesbondisamonkey
    @jamesbondisamonkey Před 4 měsíci +13

    zones are dependent on your heart rate, and what your heart rate maximizes at during training...it is specific to YOU, so just figure it out through testing and training ...but zone 2 is typically 115-130bpm for most people

    • @dooderman8361
      @dooderman8361 Před 4 měsíci

      Yea and it also changes over time as you improve your cardiovascular health

    • @orbifold4387
      @orbifold4387 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Zone 2 refers to a lactate model, consisting of 6 zones, all of them defined by lactate levels. Zone 2 is typically between 65-85 of your maximum Heart rate.

    • @StudiousCattery
      @StudiousCattery Před 4 měsíci

      My zone 2 is a sprint, unfortunately.

    • @normw4705
      @normw4705 Před 4 měsíci

      Do you think that zone 2 training would be a tempo pace in cycling terminology or 1 zone lower? I know threshold would be above zone 2 training.

    • @orbifold4387
      @orbifold4387 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@normw4705 Zone 2 is easier than tempo. Tempo would be zone 3 in the Iñigo San Millan model.

  • @C2B1303
    @C2B1303 Před 4 měsíci +7

    Seems somewhat dilutive, e.g. going for a walk or unloading the groceries doesn't approximate zone2 training benefits (for me at least). I'll stick with 3x week zone2 (spin/rucking) + and 1x week HIIT and resistance training, Zone2 training also minimizes any chance of injury, which can be a devastating setback.

  • @RaoVenu
    @RaoVenu Před měsícem

    My way of getting zone 2 is to walk in room while watching / listening to these podcasts / tutorials.

  • @BlakeArmstrong-bf2xh
    @BlakeArmstrong-bf2xh Před měsícem +1

    Hi everybody. I’m not a know it all by any means, but do want to let you know the guidelines are 150 minimum of “moderate” intensity and 75 minutes of “vigorous” intensity. Zone 2 cardio is squarely within the “vigorous” category, as measured by METs.

  • @Fourty-Six
    @Fourty-Six Před 4 měsíci +4

    My interpretation is, and I think it's worth mentioning that zone 2 He discusses in this video isn't the same on the screens of your smart watch e.g Garmin. That would be 3. I believe the threshold we should be aiming for is around 60-80% of your max heart rate. Please correct me if I'm wrong on this ?

    • @brandilynnw5410
      @brandilynnw5410 Před 4 měsíci

      There are zone calculators online. It considers your age, resting heart rate, max heart rate etc. It's a rough calculation but I like to have a general idea. And I also go by feel. In running it's called an "easy run" and "LSD" as in long slow distance vs say a tempo run comfortably hard which puts you in zone 3. Uncomfortably hard zone 4 then I can barely do this zone 5 like something you can do for 30 seconds max.That's how I have always understood it at least. As far as the Garmin mine shows my heart rate throughout the day. And working at a restaurant even the busiest nights never put me in zone 2. So I think it just depends on the person and how conditioned they are. The more conditioned someone is the more they have to do to elevate their heart rate. If someone is a couch potato going for a walk can put them in zone 2 vs someone that's already conditioned.

  • @HeidiIuliano
    @HeidiIuliano Před 4 měsíci

    I bicycle back and for from my office. It's about half an hour a day totally and now it's an habit

  • @JohnDoe-zw5jr
    @JohnDoe-zw5jr Před 22 dny

    Cycling to office is my zone 2 cardio workout

  • @richardmiddleton7770
    @richardmiddleton7770 Před 4 měsíci +30

    If you're an endurance athlete, zone 2 is life! However, being an athlete means you can't get into zone 2 simply walking, even fast walking. Zone 2 should be the bread and butter of any exercise regime.

    • @cokebottles6919
      @cokebottles6919 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Same, there's no way I could get to even 60% of my max HR walking unless it's up a steep hill. I wouldn't call myself an athlete, but I bike 5-10 hours a week and I'm also on my feet working actively 20-60 hours a week. It would be different if someone only does strength training and has a sedentary job.

    • @normw4705
      @normw4705 Před 4 měsíci

      If you bike 5 to 10 hours a week you are fairly athletic at least from a fitness perspective.@@cokebottles6919

    • @debbiepottscoaching
      @debbiepottscoaching Před 4 měsíci

      Agreed but for us aging female endurance athletes - we need more sprint interval training and less chronic cardio zone 2 we have done for years (as per Dr. Stacy Sims)

    • @marinaluna2799
      @marinaluna2799 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Zone 2 for an athlete would be a medium level hike or incline brisk walk - my coach says

  • @hirawstra8edge137
    @hirawstra8edge137 Před 4 měsíci

    i'm sadly in the phantom zone currently and they do not allow any exercise equipment there, i'd like to get top zone 2 but as i'm outside the space/time continuum, i'm not sure i'll be able to get there, to make things worse apparently no ones ever escaped the phantom zone just found out the other day, so feeling pretty bummed out.

  • @felixf4378
    @felixf4378 Před 4 měsíci +4

    The Stair Master is great for zone 2 cardio. I personally find running very difficult. I don’t know if I have bad form or what but I feel a lot of impact while running. I also get very hot and itchy when running.
    Meanwhile my heart rate easily goes over 150bpm while walking up the stair master at a comfortable speed.

    • @angelobarela6875
      @angelobarela6875 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Ok,help me here !
      I’m still confused
      So I’m not understanding what (bare with me guys)
      makes zone2 work out.
      Due injuries I’m on the stationary bike for about 40 to a hour 5 days a week. Some days i end with sprinting for 30sec to one minute full speed on level 10. Is this considered level 2? And does this have to be done every night?

    • @felixf4378
      @felixf4378 Před 4 měsíci

      Do you track your heart rate?
      Zone 2 just basically means hitting a high heart rate, that is comfortable and maintaining it. If your heart rate is too low, whatever exercise you do doesn’t count as zone 2.
      If you spend 40 min on the bike but your heart rate is stable at 100bpm during the workout it’s not counted as zone 2.
      However if you did 40 minutes on the bike and as soon as you started your heart reached 130bpm and was stable for 40 minutes you did 40 minutes of zone 2 cardio.
      If you hit 40 minutes of zone 2 daily, 4-5 days a week should be enough.
      It also depends on your age. Im 27 so for me i feel comfortable at 160bpm for 30 min straight, 5 days a week. I’ve tried doing 180bpm but I usually feel nauseous afterwards.
      Someone who is 70 years old only needs to hit like 110 beats per minute to be in “zone 2”.

  • @0anant0
    @0anant0 Před 4 měsíci

    How does Zone 2 relate to fat burning? If the glycogen levels in the liver and muscles are full, will the body still burn fat or will it first deplete its glycogen levels and only then burn fat? Thanks!

  • @poopmgee100
    @poopmgee100 Před 4 měsíci

    That’s what’s so cool about lifting/resistance training, it ends up being zone as you rest between sets.

  • @marieladrah7318
    @marieladrah7318 Před 4 měsíci

    que bueno saber que no soy la única que se habla asi misma!

  • @028fn48dne
    @028fn48dne Před 4 měsíci +10

    Can you and/or Peter Attia please do a deep dive on the studies that show why doing about 80/20 zone 2/zone 5 is best?
    Why is Zone 3 not beneficial? Why is Zone 4 not beneficial? Most people, while running long or middle distance races, stay in zone 3 or zone 4 for most of the race. Why doesn't practicing in those zones help performance in those zones?
    And why does Peter Attia think 4 minutes of Zone 5 followed by 4 minutes of rest, repeated, is ideal, when many running coaches have different preferences for minutes of zone 5 vs minutes of rest?
    I've seen a lot of videos about WHAT you guys think we should do. I haven't seen a lot about why we should do cardio this way,, and based on what data.

    • @kyle943
      @kyle943 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I think you are having a conversation of performance while the zone 2 / zone 5 conversation is about health / longevity in general. You would train completely differently when trying to optimize for a sport or event than simply making your heart tick for longer.

    • @028fn48dne
      @028fn48dne Před 4 měsíci

      Attia says that this 80/20 zone 2/zone 5 regimen is the key to increasing VO2 max. Increasing VO2 max most of what it takes to improve performance in endurance sports. @@kyle943

    • @davidkao
      @davidkao Před 4 měsíci +1

      ​@@kyle943 I still would love to see a discussion on (for general health) whether time in zone 3/4 is can be thought of as equivalent to zone 2 in any sense but with extra recovery required.
      As a runner, I find trying to stay in zone 2 means going frustratingly slow and my feel good/mental health pace typically puts me in 3/4. Basically, besides the extra lactic acid build-up, can you get the same general health benefits from the "grey area" zones?

    • @luciocastro1418
      @luciocastro1418 Před 4 měsíci +5

      @@davidkao What I've gathered is that from an evolutionary standpoint we seem to have mechanisms that expect us to do either light movement or acute high intensity efforts. Thats why they recommend that protocol. Chronic stress is not the norm in the wild, rather, playful movement or gathering of resources until a threat shows up. There are plenty of tribes that don´t do this and they are extremely healthy, hence why the key factor is just to be active. If you are an athlete you should be fine, but if you find that you are too sedentary when not training, just walking more will get you those 200 minutes of zone 2 cardio minimum per week.

    • @brianb1733
      @brianb1733 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Attia discusses this in great detail in 2 podcasts with Iñigo San Milan.

  • @amirrabieekenaree1016
    @amirrabieekenaree1016 Před 4 měsíci

    watch Inigo San-Millan videos on Z2 training. He is Tadej Pogacar's (best cyclist of our time) coach.

  • @Dieterbe
    @Dieterbe Před 2 měsíci

    During a lifting workout you also get elevated heart rate. Like maybe 2 minutes for each set. Does that count as well ?

  • @jaye739
    @jaye739 Před 17 dny

    When putting away laundry, I put away 1 item at a time. We sort and fold our clothes in the guest bedroom so by putting 1 item away, you get a lot of steps in. I also do it when putting the dishes away.

  • @archiemaclellan6228
    @archiemaclellan6228 Před 2 měsíci

    Active travel is the answer I reckon. I do my commute to work by bike means 2 birds with one stone. Nice n slow on bike and it's found time that I don't need to schedule in at gym etc.

  • @andersonandrew112
    @andersonandrew112 Před 23 dny

    I do 3hrs of zone 4 cardio. Backpack full of rocks and huge mountain hike as fast as possible

  • @deeplybrown
    @deeplybrown Před 2 měsíci

    My zone 2 range is approximately 119 - 148 bpm. It's nearly impossible for me to get into that zone during an "everyday" activity. Even if I'm walking at an extremely brisk pace, my HR is only going to the low 90s. So unfortunately, it needs to be planned out ahead of time.

  • @brucelin5842
    @brucelin5842 Před 2 měsíci

    Can u do zone 2 after weightlifting?

  • @gailtaylor6488
    @gailtaylor6488 Před 4 měsíci

    Do you think priming is a good idea ?

  • @alcazarfreddy
    @alcazarfreddy Před 2 měsíci +1

    great info…. but HOW do I get zone 2? is it the same for all? should I do some type of test or analysis to know what the HR range should be?

    • @ThomasLundyRealtor
      @ThomasLundyRealtor Před měsícem

      I think it depends on your fitness level. But generally it should be 180 minus your age. Then maybe add 5-10 if you already exercise regularly. I'm no expert though.

  • @nukemall3678
    @nukemall3678 Před měsícem

    Can I do zone two with dumbbells? Like maybe curls or benchpress for 60-90 minutes?

  • @PhilipDeans
    @PhilipDeans Před 3 měsíci +6

    I think that you missed the "real" Zone2 training concept and intent.

  • @khanhnguyennurmagomedov3944
    @khanhnguyennurmagomedov3944 Před 4 měsíci

    Wow, I love it.

  • @Suncoastrealestatemedia
    @Suncoastrealestatemedia Před 3 měsíci

    I went for a 3 mile hike around my neighborhood with 30lb weight vest mile pace of 17 mins and was only Zone 1. I guess I need to walk a lot faster to get my heart rate up.

  • @carloricottaoverfiftymtbslayer

    It is ok to do Zone 2 after Sauna? Let say after an hour (Of course after replenish all fluids too )

  • @martinlutherkingjr.5582
    @martinlutherkingjr.5582 Před 4 měsíci +412

    You’d have to be pretty out of shape for pacing in your office during a call to be zone 2.

    • @bumfuzzlebro
      @bumfuzzlebro Před 4 měsíci +24

      You could do it with a weighted vest or weighted backpack to increase HR to zone 2.

    • @seth3683
      @seth3683 Před 4 měsíci +68

      Yeah... But most people are genuinely that out of shap

    • @martinlutherkingjr.5582
      @martinlutherkingjr.5582 Před 4 měsíci +56

      @@seth3683 That may be but I would guess most of them aren’t watching videos on zone 2 cardio workouts.

    • @bumfuzzlebro
      @bumfuzzlebro Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@seth3683 very true

    • @DavidHoughtaling
      @DavidHoughtaling Před 4 měsíci +9

      Yea def a Ruck sack would work but in front of your co-workers? 😂 maybe if you wfh lol

  • @NintCondition
    @NintCondition Před 3 měsíci

    I would love to hear Andrew speak about Rebounding/mini tramp. I’m sure he’ll never see this comment but maybe since NASA did research on this he might one day, hopefully sooner than later, speak on the topic.

  • @mtrout3394
    @mtrout3394 Před 2 měsíci

    There's alot of comments about being in or out of zone 2 with walking. It seems some people are missing the point, it doesn't matter whether you are walking or jogging, your heart doesn't know which it's doing. It's about being in that 60-70% HRmax. For some that's jogging, for me that's walking (I am 47, training for an ultra marathon, have HRmax of 187, bench and squat 220lbs so considered 'fit' by most).
    We are all different, and have different ways of getting our HR in zone 2

  • @nitinkapoor4752
    @nitinkapoor4752 Před měsícem

    The long and short of it - pick up a racquet sport. Play - Badminton, Tennis or Sqaush. Chances of injury are minimal. You can play at your own pace(find a partner of similar calibre). You don’t need a big team(only 2 or 4 people). It’s fun…
    That’s it….thats what everyone needs to get started. You can add other things to it once this has become a routine… I would first add freehand exercises like squats, tricep dips, pushups, planks ..
    …then, other strength training…other cardio like walking/running… etc etc…

  • @grahammiller2857
    @grahammiller2857 Před měsícem

    On top of training I walk my dogs for 2 hrs everyday. Heart rate will be in that zone 2 level 👍Great to have it confirmed!

  • @riffraffgc
    @riffraffgc Před 4 měsíci +14

    As noted in some of the comments, big error in this zone 2 cardio is neither hiking nor very easy walk which both are zone 1, zone 2 is steady runs with higher hrb, i.e. not that easy for many to reach 150-200min per week

    • @normw4705
      @normw4705 Před 4 měsíci +1

      You obviously do not hike where I do At least half of my hikes are above zone 2. I hike up mountains. If you cannot hold a conversation you are above zone 2. I agree with a flat walk unless you walk at the fastest pace without running.

  • @mosubekore78
    @mosubekore78 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Someone, watching this on his/her couch, eating chips, planning to do the excercise tomorrow, but will likely never happen.

  • @cuongo9296
    @cuongo9296 Před 16 dny

    So, 150 - 200 minutes of zone 2 cardio workouts for maximum benefit.
    Also, walking fast is counted as zone 2 cardio workouts too so you can just walk faster in your daily life and it will hit that mark. No need to be stressed too much about this workout.
    Thanks, I will increase the pace when walking in the morning.

  • @embarq12
    @embarq12 Před 4 měsíci

    I am not training to be an athlete. I want to be deliberately working on a good health span. I follow the exercise pattern that Peter Attia has mentioned.

  • @lomaleks1332
    @lomaleks1332 Před 4 měsíci +1

    My question is:
    if I do a HIIT (high intensive training) with the the max heart rate in zone 4 and min in zone 1 which at the end equals to avg zone 2 heart rate, will it be the same as if I make jogging in zone 2 only?

    • @brandilynnw5410
      @brandilynnw5410 Před 4 měsíci +1

      No. Not from any literature I've ever read. Supposed to be sustained somewhat easy and steady.

    • @Harrythehun
      @Harrythehun Před 4 měsíci +1

      Nope. You are totally missing the point.

  • @Spudsmachenzie1
    @Spudsmachenzie1 Před 4 měsíci +5

    What is the confusion on zone 2 here? Love your stuff Andrew but both you and Attia seem to suggesting zone 2 is more of a state like “easy” than an actual number (range of numbers). But unless something changed zone 2 is a range of heart rate 60-70% of max heart rate. Am I missing something? Walking and casual exercise is certainly beneficial but I’m not sure why it’s being referred to as zone 2

    • @manamana6117
      @manamana6117 Před 4 měsíci

      exactly. just getting up off the couch and going for a walk is the best thing we can do.
      unless our ancestors had smart watches that said slow down guys your going to fast for the pray

  • @whispers555
    @whispers555 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I been doing this for four months religiously months on the stair master for 30 -40 minutes fine to six days a week minutes before I lift because I’m tryna get lean and honestly I don’t really see any improvements in daily life but I do it to be healthy and lose fat

  • @Dimitar997
    @Dimitar997 Před dnem

    This goes against what Peter Attia has said about Zone 2, that it should be a continuous interval of at least 15-20 minutes, but also that Zone 2 is usually around 75-80% max HR and imo you're (very) unlikely to reach that intensity in your day to day activities. It seems unlikely that you'll get the training effect of Zone 2 this way. And even if you do manage to reach that intensity in everyday activities, we're talking about constant sweating and showers. Zone 2 is not "easy" running or easy anything.

  • @danielstrm5940
    @danielstrm5940 Před 3 měsíci

    If i have my workouts on workdays, i have 25-30k steps a day, i also have 4-5 workouts a week.
    This would go for those 200 minutes sone 2 cardio-sessions?

  • @SMC4117
    @SMC4117 Před 2 měsíci

    Hmmmmm… so, I take a brisk ( medium fast-zone 2 ) walk for 30-40 minutes every morning as the sun rises, and go to the gym, lift weights ( HIT ) 3-4 times a week. After lifting I typically do a 15 minute “cool down” walk on the treadmill. So, if I’m understanding the Zone 2 concept, I’m doing around 300 minutes per week not counting walking her and there, doing this and that… which would add up to 350-400 give or take! Not quite sure I’m getting it, or understanding fully what the F Zone 2 is 🙆🏼

  • @FilipeJorgeSilva
    @FilipeJorgeSilva Před 4 měsíci

    What is the best method to calculate training zones?

    • @Harrythehun
      @Harrythehun Před 4 měsíci

      Many out there. Best and most accurate are those made by professional sports medicine test centres, with the essential equipment. The hardest part is to find out your maximum heart rate. Most of us don't train/test in zone 5.

  • @LegionNetworkCH
    @LegionNetworkCH Před 4 měsíci

    Well my zone 2 starts at 108 bpm and playing metal on my guitar is enough to achieve it. Since I play about 45min per day, I guess I don't need much walking routine :D
    Thoughts about that?

    • @machado6377
      @machado6377 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Heart rate is actually a proxy for the muscular/cardio load. So 108 bpm from guitar is likely due to the mental rather than physical stimulation. For example, I don’t get a cardio benefit if I go and watch a scary movie, even if my heart rate spikes. But that’s awesome that you play every day! I am also getting into guitar :)

  • @chriss.2776
    @chriss.2776 Před 4 měsíci

    WOW ! ! Excellent 💪😎👍

  • @SportsF1boxingetc-qh4ym
    @SportsF1boxingetc-qh4ym Před 4 měsíci +3

    What you are describing is not zone 2 from what I have been researching. The jog is the only thing you have described correctly.

  • @zahrawanhussaini-it5tj

    15 mins of walk after every meal really helps me.
    I usually have 3 meals a day.

  • @coleo1356
    @coleo1356 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I walk my dog 3 miles everyday at an avg 16:30/mile pace. Which feels like we’re walking pretty quickly. But I never get to Zone 2 (per my Apple Watch). I’m doing Zone 2 on the bike…is something wrong? I do have a very low resting heart rate. Or am I overshooting what Zone 2 should be?

    • @st14
      @st14 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I think your watch is right. Andrew underestimates here what it takes to stay in zone 2. Unloading the groceries will not do it. And even if it does for a few seconds, you need it sustained...

  • @kelseywhite3014
    @kelseywhite3014 Před měsícem

    Getting your hr to zone 2 is roughly 140-150 bpm. You really have to work to get your hr that high. You can’t usually just work that into your day. You have to dedicate time to get a hr like that for any extended period of time

  • @daniel_bernhard_
    @daniel_bernhard_ Před 4 měsíci +4

    By talking a brisk walk I can´t get my heart rate in to zone 2. I guess it means I have to schedule bike, running sessions etc?

    • @st14
      @st14 Před 2 měsíci

      Easy jogging does it

  • @havegregory
    @havegregory Před 4 měsíci +4

    If you get into zone 2 by walking around your office you've got issues

  • @nonlivingworld
    @nonlivingworld Před 4 měsíci

    Does doing household chores etc. count as zone 2?

  • @Alex1s1
    @Alex1s1 Před 2 měsíci

    Not sure how that should work with daily activities I‘d say my cardio performance is pretty lacking but I would never get to zone 2 by just walking without something to get my heart rate up before like weight lifting or running

  • @millionsuponmillions
    @millionsuponmillions Před 2 měsíci

    My zone 2 is >130 bpm, no daily activity can make me reach such bpm, unless I'm rope jumping or running, not even strength/resistance training

  • @readingrainfall
    @readingrainfall Před 3 měsíci

    Thx for a very informative video // Running channel RunMinded

  • @dannygarcia763
    @dannygarcia763 Před 4 měsíci

    Hello! I always walk to the gym (although I’m considering doing it after gym). It’s an average of 30min. Is that zone 2 cardio? Thanks.

    • @Harrythehun
      @Harrythehun Před 4 měsíci

      How high is your heart rate?

    • @dannygarcia763
      @dannygarcia763 Před 4 měsíci

      @@Harrythehun It could reach between 90 - 100

  • @AntonsGarage
    @AntonsGarage Před 4 měsíci +1

    Zone 2 for me is 130-145bpm. I hit that for half hour or more during my weight training sessions 5 times a week I have an app that adds all that time spent in the zone 2 to around 180min a week. So if I understand this correctly that should be good enough even though it wasn’t a dedicated Z2 sessions.

    • @manujha665
      @manujha665 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Whats that app?

    • @DmitriyParamoshkin
      @DmitriyParamoshkin Před 4 měsíci +1

      It's not counted as Z2 training until you are staying in zone 2 for a prolonged time. YOu shouldn't constantly go in and out of the zone 2.

    • @AntonsGarage
      @AntonsGarage Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@DmitriyParamoshkin that’s what I thought but he mentioned that he will count his existing resistance training as part of it from now on. I guess things are constantly changing.

    • @TheLazyGarden3r
      @TheLazyGarden3r Před 4 měsíci

      @@AntonsGarage honestly what this guy is talking about really isnt zone 2 AT ALL. Look up Iñigo San Millán.

  • @SyriusStarMultimedia
    @SyriusStarMultimedia Před 4 měsíci +1

    I've heard so many people say Zone 2 Cardio in the last year that I have come to believe that saying Zone 2 Cardio is as important and maybe more-so than actually doing Zone 2 Cardio. I'm just gonna keep enjoying whatever I do and call it Zone 2 Cardio.

    • @augurcybernaut4785
      @augurcybernaut4785 Před 4 měsíci +1

      😂 for reelz - hard to keep track of
      But there is an actual Zone 2 (up to Zone 5).