Home Organically Grown
Healthy Living Good News
the Lunchbox Blog!
On Campus! Games & Fun
Downloads eCards
Dear Amy Back to Amy's
Welcome

Slim Sleek Pilates video
By from our friends at 10 Minute Solution

Pilates DVDIf you like this workout- try the whole DVD! Try a 10 Minute Solution DVD today & SAVE $2 instantly!

Log onto www.deepdiscount.com/DVD10MINUTE
Use Promo Code: GETFIT

Offer Expires: April 30th, 2008

Line

The Calm Traveler
By habits expert and educator Havi Brooks | Website
Featured in the May 2007 issue of Yogi Times magazine

FlyingIf you're on a plane, I'm easy to spot. You’ll always find me sitting right next to the person who is just about to flip out. In fact, I’m pretty sure the airlines know in advance that I’ll be the calmest person on the plane and deliberately seat me next to the passenger most terrified of heights, closed spaces, flight attendants, or just likely to have a midair panic attack.

Truth be told, I don’t mind at all. I once suffered from claustrophobia myself, and remember very well what it's like to spend entire flights hyperventilating and crying. But now, teaching people to be calm is what I do - and it gives me something to do on long trips.

I hold hands, teach mudras and breathing exercises, tap on pressure points, give away my acupressure secrets and listen to their stories. Sometimes the people in the rows around us get curious about what we’re doing and it turns into an impromptu midair-calming class. This has happened so often that now I actually bring worksheets on board.

>> Read Ful Article

-----

Habits expert and yoga educator Havi Brooks trains people to untangle their problem patterns, tap into their potential and start doing things differently. See her website here.

Line

Dance Off Those Calories
Monica Neave: BellaOnline's Exercise Editor

Just 20 minutes of disco dancing, ballroom dancing, or square dancing burns 114 calories, while fast dancing like ballet or twist burns around 125 calories, and slow dancing like the waltz or foxtrot burns 62 calories. These figures are calculated for a 130 pound woman and the numbers could be higher if you weigh more or have a good amount of muscle. The cool thing about dancing is that you don't have to spend money on classes or even go out to clubs to do it, although it's a great excuse to get out of the house. You can do it in the comfort of your own home, any time of day, in many different ways. Just turn on the radio or mtv and start bouncing around for 5 minutes and you'll soon feel your heart rate soar. Looking for something more structured? Your options are unlimited. Just check out the best of the best dance workout videos below.

The Classics
coverRichard Simmons - Dance Your Pants Off! Richard Simmons is the king of fun! He's loud, flamboyant, gets you motivated, and he loves to dance. In this video you'll dance to celebration, she works hard for the money, sweet dreams, call me, maniac, and other fun 80's hits. If you're looking for a fun dance workout this is definitely the video for you.


Cal Pozo's Learn to Dance in Minutes:Swing
Great instruction and so cool to do at parties or weddings. You do need a partner for this one.

Get Your Groove On

Darrin's Dance Grooves
You've all seen the infomercial for this and although some people think it's silly, most of us think how cool it would be to dance like Brittney or NSYNC. Nobody has to know about it unless you decide to bust a move at your company x-mas party. Everyone who has it raves about it so it's definitely worth trying.

Learn To Dance : Go Fatima !
is another great video to try. Fatima has choreographed for the Backstreet Boys, Aaliyah, and other groups. Can't go wrong with that.

Be A Ballerina

coverThe New York City Ballet Workout was in high demand months before it was released and for good reason. It takes you through a fullbody workout using basic ballet moves (just try the plie move for a tighter butt). You also get a glimpse into the lives of the four NYC dancers featured in the video including performing, practicing, and eating.

Line

Amy’s Kitchen sponsors Mountain Bike Champion, Addie Stewart - UPDATED!

Addie Lepper

Addie Stewart
Born: May 30, 1975
Resides: Roy, Utah

Athletic Highlights
2004 Utah Series Sport Women DH Champion
2005 Utah Series Expert Women DH Champion
2005 NORBA National Champion Expert Women’s DH & DS/MTNX

An avid outdoors enthusiast, Addie got seriously into mountain biking at age 29. After riding mountain bikes recreationally for 5 years, she was introduced to DH (downhill) in June 2004 and completed her first race in July in Utah that same year. Her number one ranking in Utah’s Sport class in 2004, grew to a national #1 ranking in the Expert class by the end of the 2005 season.  She raced DS/MTNX (Dual Slalom/Mountain Cross) for her first time in 2005 and won the US Women’s National Title. Currently, Addie is ranked 10 in the world!

In addition to biking (which she does every chance she gets) Addie love snowboarding and took 1st place at a 2004 Big Air Competition. She is also a certified skydiver, rock climber, back packer and runner.

Addie Lepper Amy's Foods!Addie is not only a vegetarian, but, she is also lactose intolerant. In the past it was difficult for her to get the proper nutrition an athlete needs. Nowadays, companies, such as Amy’s Kitchen make it possible and convenient for Addie to get the nutrients she needs. Her favorites? Amy’s Bean and Rice Burrito and the Roasted Vegetable Pizza.

Amy’s is a proud supporter of this awesome athlete.

Cheer Addie on at any of these upcoming events: 2007 Racing Schedule

Sea Otter Classic April 12-15
Fontana Norba May 5-6
Chile Challenge Angel Fire May 26-28
Park City Norba June 16-17
Wildflower rush Crested Butte June 23-24
Blast the Mass Snowmass July 14-15
Full Tilt in Telluride July 28-29
Snowmass Norba Aug. 11-12
UCI Master World Praloup, Fr. Aug 15-19
Keystone Climax Sept. 1-3

Addie Stewart

Line

The Better Fitness Walk
Learn proper form techniques to make your walks more efficient.
Source: Cooking Light By Gin Miller

Amy and Stormy
Fitness walking is an excellent way to tone muscles and burn calories.
In fact, you can burn almost as many calories with a vigorous walk as you can running, and fitness walking is much less stressful on the body. You will need to average about 12 to 15 minutes per mile (measure your distance with a pedometer, available from sporting goods stores). Start by walking for at least 20 to 30 minutes three to four days per week. Increase this to five to six days per week if you're trying to lose weight.

Here are tips for proper walking form:

  • Elongate your body by standing tall with head up, chin level, and eyes gazing forward.
  • Lift chest, and relax shoulders. Breathe deeply as you walk to get the maximum amount of oxygen to your muscles.
  • Bend arms slightly and swing them front to back, not side to side or crossing the body. Do not swing elbows higher than chest level.
  • Tilt pelvis forward slightly, and keep abs tight.
  • Push off with toes and land on heel, rolling back through to toe to push off again.
  • Maintain a natural stride length.

Add speed intervals to your walks to burn up to 10 times more calories than you would during an ordinary fitness walk. After warming up, fitness walk for three minutes, then add a one-minute speed interval. Increase your walking pace to about eight or nine on an intensity scale of one to 10. At the end of one minute, slow back to your fitness speed. Continue alternating three-minute segments of fitness walking with one-minute increments of speed for a total of 10 intervals. You should interval train only twice a week to allow your body time to recuperate between workouts.

Quick Tip: Drink plenty of water before, during, and after your walk, and start with a slow five- to eight-minute warm-up of slow walking. At the end of your walk, cool down and stretch.

+ See Full Article at Cooking Light

Line

Take a Hike!
Access your inner Mountain Lion and get moving!
Source: Seventeen

Take A HikeIck. The gym is always packed, and whenever you're doing your lat pulls, there always seems to be an ex-football player in a too-tight tank top sighing impatiently, waiting for you to finish. You want a workout, but breathing the re-circulated air in the gym is not your idea of a healthy activity. Do you really need to sacrifice your emotional well being for a workout? No way! If you want a workout that will let you breathe fresh air, connect with your inner self, and burn serious calories, hiking is your perfect match!

A 130-pound person hiking for four hours with a twenty-pound pack will burn more than 1,200 calories! You'd have to rack up some pretty serious mileage on the elliptical to come close to that -- plus you don't even have the option of deer and bear sightings. Even if you're a city girl, there's bound to be a national park with hiking trails pretty close to your home. Check out the National Park Service for a complete directory of national parks, or check out your state's website for a list of state parks. Once you have an idea of your destination, round up some buds, and plan what hike you'd like to do. Once you get to your destination, get a map of the trail and talk to the Park Ranger about environmental conditions and things to watch out for. Don't have gear? No worries! Although plenty of people on the trail look like they were caught in an EMS outlet explosion, all you need for a beginning day hike are a good, supportive pair of sneakers, an extra pair of socks, lightweight, layering clothes, a flashlight, a compass, sunscreen, insect repellent, a big bottle of water, and trail mix or granola bars for energy. Sounds like a lot, but think of all the stuff you bring just to go to the gym! And, if you decide you need a new water bottle or jacket, check out REI for the best gear for any outdoor sport.

If you're a beginning hiker, try a relatively easy trail first to get the feel of it (i.e., don't plan to hike the entire Appalachian Trail your first time out). If you want to try staying overnight, pick a spot that's not too far from the car or ranger station. For some ideas on food preparation and safety, check out the tips on the Food Safety and Inspection Services, and check out RecipeSource for some ideas on meals to prepare. And, of course, make sure to dispose of your food properly, and not leave anything lying around, because cuddling up with a black bear or cougar in the middle of the night is probably not your ideal camping situation. Finally, when you leave, be respectful of your environment and take everything you brought with you.

+ Read Full Article at Seventeen

Line

Birding as a Hobby
by Norma & Sandy Rubin, Galveston, TX

BirdingOne of the most awe-inspiring phenomena in nature has to be the migration of birds. Many of our songbirds and water birds leave the U.S. during our winters for Central and South America and then fly north in the spring to court, breed, and raise their young in North America – some fly as far north as the Arctic Circle. Then, in the fall they head south again for the winter. They know the way by instinct! And the most amazing of all is that many of these birds fly north across the Gulf of Mexico with no stopping for food or rest. Experts believe that they leave the Yucatan Peninsula in the early evening, fly and pilot by starlight, and arrive in the U.S. by mid-morning to early afternoon the next day. What a feat! Can you imagine tiny ruby-throated hummingbirds making this trip? The Arctic Tern migrates the farthest -- from Canada and even farther north to the coast of Africa and then south to Antarctica. Some migrate over 20,000 miles a year! Appreciation of this feat has made me and many others devoted birdwatchers.

BirdingWhat a rewarding hobby! When I see these colorful migrants in the spring, I just wish each could tell me about its travels. At this time of year they are so colorful, the males especially in their breeding plumage – reds, blues, yellows, oranges . . . all colors of the rainbow. Each is so beautiful one has to wonder how they even evolved to have such distinct coloration. Identifying them with the aid of a good field guide is the challenge. Soon, one learns to look not only at colorful feathers but other distinctive characteristics. Here are but a few examples: the habitat it likes (shoreline for sandpipers, mulberry trees for tanagers, red flowers for hummingbirds), the length of the legs (long in herons, very short in chimney swifts), the shape of the bill (spoon-shaped and elongated in roseate spoonbills and chisel-like in oystercatchers), and the pattern of flying (hovering like a paper kite for white-tailed kites, and dive-bombing into water for fish like brown pelicans).

Don’t we all need a stress reliever! Just being outside, on a spring or fall day, tromping in the woods or on the shore of a lake or ocean, and enjoying the beauty and behavior of these little creatures, some of which weigh only a few ounces – this is a relaxing hobby! It can be competitive, of course, if you want to keep a list of birds that you have seen, and then you are constantly looking for new birds to add to your list. One always hopes to see a bird that is not usually found in that geographical area – a “rare bird alert” is sent out to other birders, and they converge from all over to try to find it.

One of the best things about this hobby is that whenever you travel, there are new birds to look for. I take my binoculars on every trip. No matter how long you have been birding, you always want to see new ones, and interest in birds is a fantastic excuse to travel to new places.

Get Started Now!

Bird watching, requires only a pair of binoculars and a handy field guide. Here are some good binoculars for every price range:

Nikon Travelite under $200
Eagle Optics Rangers -- $200 – 400
Nikon Monarch, Swift Ultralite -- $500 - $700
Leica, Swarovski -- > $1000


These field guides are great choices and are widely available:

Stokes Field Guides to Birds by Donald and Lilian Stokes
National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America
Silbey Field Guides To North America (this is the book that Norma uses) by David Allen Silbey
Roger Tory Peterson’s Field Guides

Line



In This Section
Home
Famous Vegetarians
Nutritional Information
Links
Archive

Latest Articles:

> The Calm Traveler
> Dance off those Calories
> Amy's Kitchen sponsors Mountain Bike Champion, Addie Stewart
> The Better Fitness Walk
> Take a Hike!
> Birding as a Hobby

Amy's Newsletter!
Stay up to date on the goings-on at Amy's Kitchen!
>> Sign Up Here!

New eCard!
eCards!

Send your best wishes with one of our animated eCards!

>> Go Now!