Released: Feb. 17, 2017
Grab your shoes: Walk Kansas starts March 19
More than 14,000 a year participate in accessible program.
MANHATTAN, Kan. – Walk Kansas, a program that’s open to anyone who’s interested in working toward or maintaining a healthy lifestyle, this year runs from March 19 to May 13. It is for all fitness levels.
The eight-week program is team-based, with six people to a team. Participants do not have to live in Kansas. Many teams form with family members or friends in other parts of the country and around the world. “Technology connects us,” said Sharolyn Jackson, K-State Research and Extension family and consumer science specialist and Walk Kansas coordinator.
“Walk Kansas addresses critical issues in our state,” Jackson said. “Less than half of Kansas adults meet the minimum recommendations for physical activity (150 minutes a week of moderate exercise) and only 19 percent eat enough fruits and vegetables. Chronic disease is responsible for more than 70 percent of health care costs.”
If Americans were to stop smoking, exercise regularly and eat well, they could prevent up to 80 percent of heart disease and stroke, 80 percent of type 2 diabetes and 40 percent of cancers, she said, citing the Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease.
“Think of health as something you earn every day, just like you work to bring home a paycheck,” Jackson said. “If you practice healthy lifestyle behaviors, you can delay and even prevent chronic disease. If you have an illness, symptoms can be managed better if you make choices that support a healthy lifestyle.”
For most Walk Kansas participants, the cost is less than $10. Purchasing a t-shirt is optional. Registration will be available at most K-State Research and Extension offices after Feb. 20 and on the Walk Kansas website at www.walkkansas.org on Feb. 22. Participants are encouraged to register by March 10, but check with the local extension office for registration deadlines.
Teammates do not have to walk or exercise together, but are encouraged to connect and support each other. Participants receive a weekly emailed newsletter which includes articles about health, including tips on how to manage stress. Many local programs in Kansas offer special events and classes for participants.
Participants log minutes of moderate or vigorous exercise daily and report online or to a team captain. Activities besides walking, such as strengthening exercises, yoga, bike riding, team sports and others count toward Walk Kansas minutes.
The goal is to meet one of three challenges the team sets for itself before the program starts:
- Challenge 1 – Each person reaches the minimum goal for physical activity – 2-1/2 hours of moderate-to-vigorous activity per week. Collectively the team would walk 423 miles – the equivalent of the distance across the state of Kansas.
- Challenge 2 – Take the equivalent of a meandering trek diagonally across the state from Troy to Elkhart. Each person logs 4 hours of activity per week which would take the team 750 miles.
- Challenge 3 – Walk the equivalent of the perimeter of Kansas – 1,200 miles – with each person logging 6 hours of moderate-to-vigorous activity per week.
Walk Kansas began in 2001 and now reaches more than 14,000 a year. More than 254,000 people have participated since it began.
“Health brings a freedom we often take for granted until we no longer have it,” Jackson said. “Preserving and protecting your health is what Walk Kansas is all about.”
To find your local K-State Research and Extension office, check the website www.ksre.ksu.edu and click on “County and District Offices.”
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K‑State Research and Extension is a short name for the Kansas State University Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service, a program designed to generate and distribute useful knowledge for the well‑being of Kansans. Supported by county, state, federal and private funds, the program has county Extension offices, experiment fields, area Extension offices and regional research centers statewide. Its headquarters is on the K‑State campus in Manhattan.
Story by:
Mary Lou Peter
mlpeter@ksu.edu
K-State Research and Extension
http://www.ksre.ksu.edu
For more information:
Sharolyn Flaming Jackson - 785-532-2273 or sharolyn@ksu.edu
www.walkkansas.org
https://www.facebook.com/walkkansas