Hiking Equipment Maple Heights OH

This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Hiking Equipment. You will find helpful, informative articles about Hiking Equipment, including "Stressed Out? Take a Hike". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Maple Heights, OH that will answer all of your questions about Hiking Equipment.

Dick's Sporting Goods
216- 706-9400
Legacy Village, 24545 Cedar Road
Lyndhurst, OH
Dick's Sporting Goods
440-449-9199
Highland Heights, 6235 Wilson Mills Road
Highland Heights, OH
Appalachian Outfitters
(330)655-5444
60 Kendall Park Road
Peninsula, OH
Dick's Sporting Goods
440-268-9153
500 Southpark Center
Strongsville, OH
Dick's Sporting Goods
440-686-2400
Great Northern Mall, 200 Great Northern Mall
North Olmsted, OH
Dick's Sporting Goods
440- 845-2684
Parmatown Mall, 8282 Day Drive
Parma, OH
Dick's Sporting Goods
330-562-4200
The Marketplace Plaza at Four Points, 7305 Marketplace Drive
Aurora, OH
Keelline Canoe And Kayak Supply
440-729-2047
PO Box 561
Chesterland, OH
Dick's Sporting Goods
330-668-1231
Montrose, 4036 Medina Road
Akron, OH
Dick's Sporting Goods
440-835-3723
300 Crocker Park Boulevard
Westlake, OH

Stressed Out? Take a Hike

When faced with a 40 plus hour work week, bills to pay, and trekking the kids to-and-fro, how do you let loose? This summer, make it a point to relieve your stress by utilizing the great outdoors.

Exercise has long been touted as an excellent and natural way to manage stress. According to Harvard Public Health, exercise can help improve your mood, combat depression, and boost your self-esteem. But where you exercise makes a difference, too. A study conducted by the College of Forestry at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, VA, found that nature-based recreation had a significant effect on improving one's mood.

What's more, researchers at Loyola University Chicago's Marcella Niehoff School of Nursing (MNSON) found that vitamin D-a vitamin produced in the skin after exposure to the sun's rays-improves mood and prevents depression when more time is spent indoors.

Making the Outdoors Part of Your Life 

With the right approach and know how, you can reap all the benefits of getting outside and shaking the anxiety of the daily grind. 

  1. Look locally. Access your town's recreation commission for information about local parks and forests as well as any organized activities they may offer. Also, the U.S. Forest Service can provide information about national parks in your area. For more information, visit http://www.fs.fed.us/
  2. Take a hike.  Remove yourself from all air, noise, and light pollution and immerse yourself in the call of native birds and bubbling brooks. Free your mind of the sensory overload associated with city life by taking a day trip to tackle the trails with a loved one.
  3. Go camping. For some, the thought of sleeping on the ground, cooking meals over an open flame, and a weekend spent without electricity sounds like heaven. For others, it sounds hellish. However, slowing things down and getting away from it all with your family may provide you with some much needed respite from the rigors of the week.
  4. Hop on a bike. Cycling can be an excellent, low-impact way for you to connect with the outdoors. Can't dedicate a whole weekend to taking the family on a getaway? Designate an evening each week for a family bike ride. Not only will you spend quality time together, but you may find out something new about your neighborhood.
  5. Exercise outdoors. Now that the warm weather has melted the freeze of winter, many gyms and town parks offer exercise classes outdoors. Whether it's yoga in the park, tai chi in the ...

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