Review: Oofos OOahh Sport Slide Recovery Sandals

I had the good fortune to get my hands on a free pair of Oofos recovery sandals at an event at my local Roadrunner Sports last month. I’d been eyeing them up in the store for a while, so when I discovered Oofos was a vendor at the party I took the opportunity to give them a shot! First off, what exactly ARE Oofos?

20170110_090614Oofos are sport recovery shoes made from super thick foam for maximum support and comfort, designed to absorb impact so your feet can recover from those long, hard runs.

I’ve worn them for about a month now almost every day so here is my honest review (ignore my grody feet).

20170110_090552They. Are. COMFY.

I have exceedingly high arches and a bone spur, so I’m really not supposed to go around barefoot. I slip these on like sandals and walk around my apartment like I’m strolling on a cloud. In the evenings if I’m short on hitting my step goal I’ll even jog in place in them in my living room and I get plenty of support there too. They’re super squishy but still totally stable. And just look at how thick this sole is!

20170110_090559This style retails for $59.95, which I think is well worth the comfort level provided. I could easily imagine kicking around in a pair of these all day on the boardwalk down the shore and my feet never getting tired.

Now, the negatives.

I am NOT a fan of this style. I probably won’t wear them out to do anything other than walk the dog or immediately after a run to walk to the car.

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Okay, I wore this outfit to take out the garbage. IT WAS DARK, OKAY.

The good news is they have super cute more traditional sandal styles like these in dozens of colors!

women-s-ooriginal-sandal-oofosAlso, this style makes my feet sweat. Like a lot. Again, this could easily be solved by me wearing the Ooriginal Sandal style. I definitely plan on picking up a pair of these sandals for kicking around this summer because they are RIDICULOUSLY COMFY.

Have you tried Oofos? Would you? Let me know in the comments!

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Review: Orangetheory Fitness

Author’s Note: This is my personal, unbiased opinion of Orangetheory Fitness and I was not compensated in any way for this review.

20160918_152405I had the good fortune of having an incredibly active visit to Chicago. I asked my cousin, Susan, with whom we were staying, if she wanted to work out while I was there, and I got an eager YES! as a response. She did not disappoint! Between a gym workout, walking sightseeing, and a run clinic, I managed to offset all the amazing food we enjoyed and come home weighing less than when I left. Here’s how my trip went:

Friday – Orangetheory Fitness (60min/668 calories), walking around downtown and 19,512 steps total

Saturday – Art Institute of Chicago and 14,316 steps total

Sunday – Run Clinic (1hr 6min/3.54mi/578 calories), Architectural Boat Tour and 16,109 steps total

Not bad eh? Made up for having deep dish pizza and beef sandwiches!

The Workout

So how was Orangetheory Fitness? Well it’s easier if I start with what Orangetheory Fitness is. From their website:

The physiological theory behind the Orangetheory workout is known as “Excess Post-Exercise Oxygen Consumption,” or EPOC. By providing you with a heart-rate monitor and POD, we can monitor your 5-zone interval training sessions that we call the Orange 60. During the 60-minute workout, you will perform multiple intervals designed to produce 12 to 20 minutes of training at 84% or higher of your maximum heart rate, which translates to Zones 4/5. This program design produces workout “afterburn” effect, which is an increased metabolic rate for 24 to 36 hours after the workout. When combining the amazing workout with EPOC, our clients burn an average of 500 to 1000 calories.

So essentially you’re getting a varied 60-minute HIIT (High Intensity Interval Training) workout that includes cardio and strength training. You’re wearing a heart rate monitor the whole time, and your heart rate, %max and calories burned are displayed on a large monitor so you can easily glance up and see if you’re hitting the target zone (they make it really easy to see if you’re in orange by changing the color of your square according to your heart rate).

What I love about their system is the DATA. They e-mail you your results after your workout so you can see how you did. I wore both their wrist heart rate monitor and my Polar heart rate monitor. My Polar had me at 668 calories burned, so they’re a bit low but not too bad! They promise you’ll burn 500-1000 calories an hour so either way you read it I was in that range. They provide 3 different types of sessions, one strength-based, one endurance-based and the one we did, which was tabata-style. There were about 20 people in the class, so half of us started on the treadmills and the other half on the floor. Treadmill people switched between three phases, Base, Push, and All Out. You could choose between running and power walking, and during the course of the workout I tried both. I started with jogging at a 4 mph pace for my Base. Push was 6 mph and All Out was 7 mph. Each interval was between 30 seconds and 2 minutes and were varied.For power walkers, the goal was to stick to the same speed but raise elevation between 4 and 15%.

After about 8 minutes, we switched and moved to the floor. Floor exercises were TRX and ab based: crunches, plank toe touches, the dreaded burpees. Once we finished a set of each, we moved to the water rowers, which I’d never used before. Really fun! Our goal there was to finish a specific yard length of rowing in a certain time before moving back to the floor exercises and repeating until the block was complete. All in all we had 3 treadmill sessions and 3 floor sessions total, with each set of ab exercises being different and each rowing session being longer and faster. Before I knew it the 60 minutes was over and I was pooped!

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The best part? I abhor group exercise classes, but the pace was so fast it almost felt like a solo workout. You don’t have time to chitchat with your neighbors, and if you’re able to hold a conversation during this workout you’re not trying hard enough. And the way the room is laid out isn’t conducive to watching other people workout, you’re all in a line and often in front of a mirror so you can only really watch yourself, so it removes the comparison to others. A group workout for people who don’t like group workouts, who knew?!

Pricing

I went to an Orangetheory in Chicago, and they have premium pricing there. $79 a month will get you 4 sessions, or almost $20 a session! Now you know I’m frugal (in the case of gym memberships I’m a flat out cheapskate) so $20 a SESSION is very high for someone like me, but if you can afford it I think it’s a really great workout and it was challenging while still being enjoyable. Okay okay, I still hate burpees but that was a very small part of the whole thing. Their website is kind of vague regarding pricing (I had to search a bit) but my local Orangetheory Fitness in Moorestown, NJ (still about 30 min from home) is $59 a month for up to 4 sessions, which is a bit more reasonable. Even so, out of my budget. The good news is you can try the first workout for FREE.

Conclusion

I really enjoyed the workout at Orangetheory Fitness, which says a lot considering how much of a lone wolf I am when it comes to workouts. I burned a lot of calories in that 60 minute session, and I was sore for the next few days (all those public transit stairs were groan-inducing). I got to try new equipment in the form of water rowers and TRX suspension, and I got to workout with Susan, which was a blast! I’d say if it’s within your budget and you prefer to have someone else guiding your workouts, then this is a great option and well worth the money. If Orangetheory sponsors the Adventure Run again and I won a free membership I’d absolutely use it!

So what about you? Have you tried Orangetheory? Let me know in the comments!

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Wool: My Current Obsession

I admit it, dear readers, I have been distracted. Summer is in full swing and I’ve been spending time outdoors and spending quiet time enjoying my favorite pass time: reading. Yes, my lovelies, not writing for you, as I should be, but getting lost in a world not my own. The world of Wool.

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Img Source hughhowey.com

Wool is a 5-part series written by Hugh Howey, and is a post-apocalyptic science fiction book. If you’re not into the post-apocalyptic thing like I am, it might not appeal to you. But Howey can write rich, nuanced characters in a well-developed world that keeps me “page turning” (I read on a Kindle, okay?).

 

From Amazon.com:

For suspense-filled, post-apocalyptic thrillers, Wool is more than a self-published ebook phenomenon―it’s the new standard in classic science fiction.

In a ruined and toxic future, a community exists in a giant silo underground, hundreds of stories deep. There, men and women live in a society full of regulations they believe are meant to protect them. Sheriff Holston, who has unwaveringly upheld the silo’s rules for years, unexpectedly breaks the greatest taboo of all: He asks to go outside.

His fateful decision unleashes a drastic series of events. An unlikely candidate is appointed to replace him: Juliette, a mechanic with no training in law, whose special knack is fixing machines. Now Juliette is about to be entrusted with fixing her silo, and she will soon learn just how badly her world is broken. The silo is about to confront what its history has only hinted about and its inhabitants have never dared to whisper. Uprising.

I haven’t even finished READING this yet, and I’m itching to recommend it. I can also recommend Sand, which I read a few years back.

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Img Source hughhowey.com

I hope you check out Hugh Howey!  I’m gonna go finish reading Wool. 😉

 

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