The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pandemic helps push Georgians off couch

One study says nearly half of Americans began exercising more.

- By Christophe­r Quinn cquinn@ajc.com

he arrival of COVID-19 early in 2020 brought an end to Jimmy Smith and Mary Anne Walser’s plans to head to Europe and walk the Camino de Santiago, the medieval pilgrim’s path that ends in Spain.

Then their gym closed, restaurant­s shuttered and social activities skidded to a halt. Their occasional consolator­y neighborho­od walks became longer and more frequent, leading them to the section of the Chattahooc­hee River National Recreation Area that abuts their northwest Atlanta neighborho­od. By summer, they were walking for hours each week, “forest bathing,” as Walser calls it.

“I had no clue — until it was the only place we could go — how many trails are back there,” she said.

While some found solace in cocooning, comfort food and streaming “Tiger King” and “The Mandaloria­n” when the virus locked Georgia down, the couple are among those who rebelled against the isolation by getting out and exercising more.

“We just started thinking, ‘Well, I wonder what’s down here?’” Smith said. So they just kept going and going.

Though the coronaviru­s has killed more than half a million Americans, there are signs it inspired and gave many people time to get physically active, which could have a positive impact on U.S. health trends.

The Physical Activities Council, representi­ng eight large U.S. sporting trade groups, surveyed 18,000 people and estimated that 6.9 million potatoes got off their couches in 2020, dropping the number of inactive Americans to 74.3 million.

A survey of 873 people by the College of Saint Benedict/st. John’s University found 34.9% decreased weekly physical activity from March to June, but 48.1% increased it, while 17% remained at the same level.

Mary Stenson, who helped conduct the St. John’s study, said she can’t recall any other event that created such a dramatic impact on Americans’ physical routines. The length of the pandemic gave people time to develop exercise habits, which makes them more likely to stick to them and bodes well for a drop in health problems, such as high blood pressure and diabetes.

Daniel Andretta, a 34-year-old Cherokee County father of four, was another one of those changed by the pandemic.

His post-college weight had ballooned to about 240 pounds. In late 2019, a doctor told him he faced health problems unless he started exercising. So, he joined F3, a free men’s exercise fellowship, for two 45-minute sessions a week.

“Once the quarantine happened, I said this is the time I can kick my butt and get into gear,” he said.

He started going to outdoor workouts every morning, mixing in boot camps, trail runs and organized 5K or half-marathon races. He began cooking healthier meals for the family. He’s lost about 50 pounds and says he’s never felt better.

“For me, getting out there every single day whether I want to or not is what is keeping me going through this quarantine,” Andretta said.

Even as gyms closed — nearly one in five in the U.S. for good, according to the Internatio­nal Health, Racquet & Sportsclub Associatio­n — metro Atlantans took over county parks, town greens, parking lots and neighborho­od roads to exercise.

Bike shops sold out of stock, leaving anxious buyers on weekslong waiting lists. Lines of cars stacked up outside Georgia state parks — attendance was up half a million visitors in 2020 — as drivers waited for parking spots. The National Golf Foundation recorded a 13% rise in rounds played nationally.

Pegi Amend, 60, from Sandy Springs, saw her gym close in March. She started doing a 5K power walk every morning in her neighborho­od. After two weeks, she set a goal of 365 consecutiv­e days. By late last month, she had logged 342.

“I’m on my fourth pair of shoes,” she said.

Kyle Beardon’s two-year-old gym, the Milton Athletic Club, was ordered closed in April. He pivoted to Zoom classes, personal training and outdoor exercise for members.

After reopening in May, membership grew by 30%, he said, which he attributed to other gyms closing for good.

“Another factor is, I think, people are getting stir crazy at home and need a little social aspect to life,” he said.

In Gwinnett County, Brian and Mckenzie Lamb started Camp Gladiator in January 2020, a paid-membership business that uses church, business and public spaces for workouts.

“When it started getting warm and nice outside, the pandemic smacked us,” Brian Lamb said. “There was a lot of fear. We thought we were going to have to shut down like everyone else.”

But they begin to add members rapidly as they moved events outside. There are now more than 1,000 members, he said.

Ryan Rivera, a Cobb County attorney, hadn’t played a round of golf since the birth of his son Parker five years earlier. Parker loves playing sports, including basketball, soccer and baseball. When the pandemic closed down spring baseball season, the two went on a few walks, tried fishing and would go to a field by themselves to hit and catch.

When a cloudy Saturday in May broke into sunshine, “I looked at Parker and said, ‘This may be the time to give golf a shot,’” he said.

They did, and young Parker was a natural. On his first hole — a par 3 built for adult players — he shot a 5 and immediatel­y loved the game.

“I never could have dreamed or imagined he would have taken to it like he has,” Rivera said.

When they played other courses, Parker hit so well that friends suggested he enter children’s golf programs and tournament­s run by the PGA and U.S. Kids Golf.

He did, and they began practicing together often, playing with Ryan’s father and entering tournament­s. Parker finished third in his age group in his first one last October.

On Feb. 27, the 6-year-old got a fourth-place medal in the U.S. Kids Golf tournament in Hall County.

“The shutdown gave us the time to try something new,” Rivera said. “And that time we get to spend together is really just priceless.”

Walser, the Chattahooc­hee walker, doesn’t want to give the wrong impression. Many have suffered because of the virus.

“But it really has changed our lives in a wonderful way, strangely,” she said.

 ?? COURTESY OF NATHAN FOWLER ?? Members of the F3 men’s exercise fellowship in Cherokee County practice plank exercises. Daniel Andretta began meeting with the group every weekday once the pandemic hit, a routine that is “keeping me going through this quarantine.”
COURTESY OF NATHAN FOWLER Members of the F3 men’s exercise fellowship in Cherokee County practice plank exercises. Daniel Andretta began meeting with the group every weekday once the pandemic hit, a routine that is “keeping me going through this quarantine.”
 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? Ryan Rivera (left) gives pointers to his 6-year-old son, Parker, during a junior golf tournament at the Chattahooc­hee Golf Club. Parker, who loves playing other sports, took up golf when the pandemic closed down spring baseball season.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC Ryan Rivera (left) gives pointers to his 6-year-old son, Parker, during a junior golf tournament at the Chattahooc­hee Golf Club. Parker, who loves playing other sports, took up golf when the pandemic closed down spring baseball season.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Jimmy Smith (left) and Mary Anne Walser, joined by their Goldendood­le Zaha, hike the East Palisades Trail in the Chattahooc­hee River National Recreation Area. When their gym closed, they discovered the trails near their neighborho­od.
ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Jimmy Smith (left) and Mary Anne Walser, joined by their Goldendood­le Zaha, hike the East Palisades Trail in the Chattahooc­hee River National Recreation Area. When their gym closed, they discovered the trails near their neighborho­od.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States