By NATALIA HAWK
Do you participate in an outdoor fitness group?
Beach pilates? Group kayaking? Bootcamp in the park? A running team? All of the above?
If your answer is ‘yes’ – prepare yourself. You may soon be saying goodbye to your beloved outdoor fitness group, because they’ve just been SLAMMED by one of Australia’s leading authorities on fitness and health.
Professor Garry Egger, who has previously advised the federal government on exercise and weight control, has said that outdoor fitness groups are a “middle-class”, “indulgent” and “high-cost” activity that might be “embarrassing to onlookers”.
He reckons that councils need to crack down on trainers who are taking advantage of parks, beaches and other “common recreational services” by holding group fitness sessions in these locations.
According to Fairfax, Egger said: “We need better programs to appeal to the majority of the population who are inactive, rather than visible high-cost programs to a small minority who can afford it.”
Well.
I know that outdoor fitness groups can be hugely polarising.
Some people swear by them. Other people agree with Garry.
But after all the slurs that have been thrown their way, I kind of feel like it’s my duty to defend them.
So let’s unpack Garry’s points, one by one:
Top Comments
Ha! Love this post. Couldn't agree more. What bogus objections.
Brisbane City Council runs a program called Active Parks where there are literally hundreds of free - yes you read correctly - FREE group training sessions covering different activities at different fitness levels (many designed specifically for new mums and their babies or toddlers).
How shocking, eh Garry?