What are the studies on doing this daily, long term, on things like lung, heart, kidneys, etc.
We used to ice bath our legs/ knees, and shoulder packs on ice as needed after hockey games. Trainers told us not to fill the ice bath higher than waist high so large internal organs weren’t in the ice bath.
Going on day 20 now for at least 5 min to the longest being 15 with the water averaging 44 deg. I ordered an ice pod for $120 then got the insulated lid. Inflatable and pvc pipe combo that works fine. Ice gets pricey so I took vacuum sealed bags, put enough water in them so they don’t pop and freeze them. Have about 20lbs or so and I put them in if the water is above 50 and let it cool. I think it has been beneficial for a few different reasons.
Same here. Hot shower to soap up and then a cold rinse.I turn the shower to cold at the end.
I just go for it. Turn it all the way down at once and rinse cold. It’s invigorating. I also shave cold.I’ve been doing that for a while. Start it at luke warm and every few seconds turn it a little more to the cold until it’s as cold as it’ll go.
Lottttta hype, not nearly enough clinical support to substantiate the hype or claims.I did a quick search on here and didn’t find much discussion so I’m curious, does anyone do regular ice baths/cold water plunges?
I initially wanted to try it just to help with mental toughness and willpower but the more I read about it there seems to be a lot more benefits. From reduced inflammation to improved circulation and even improved fat burning.
I tried it for the first time this morning at 5:15am. It was 21° outside and I had to use my kids toy shovel to chop the thin layer of ice off the stock tank I set up in the back yard. I was calm, cool and collected when I sat down in the tank but my lung’s immediately went into panic mode of short, rapid breathing. I tried to slow my breath down but to no avail, probably had something to do with the immediate shock of the cold and having never done it before. My goal was 90 seconds and I believe I made it about 20 seconds before I got out and was immediately very very disappointed in myself.
I feel like I could have easily done 90 seconds or a few minutes if I could have gotten my breath under control. I’m gonna keep at it every morning, but does anyone have any tips to getting your breathing under control??
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Step out of the shower, turn it all the way to cold and give it time to get cold, take a deep breath and hold it while stepping into the shower and insuring all your skin gets wet, including under the arms.I’ve been doing that for a while. Start it at luke warm and every few seconds turn it a little more to the cold until it’s as cold as it’ll go.
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Lottttta hype, not nearly enough clinical support to substantiate the hype or claims.
That said, I’ve seen nothing to suggest it’s harmful, so why not try it. If 10% of the hype is real, then you’re in the positive.
Please share some pics and any other details! I think I’m going to go this route soon.Been doing them regularly for a few months now and think they really help with the inflammation in my knees. Could just be placebo but if it works it works. I figured the ice method could get expensive long term so just built a DIY one with a chest freezer. Simple concept and much cheaper than the commercially sold ones.
- acquire deep freezer
- seal all the seams
- I painted mine with epoxy pond liner since ozone eats metal
- temp regulator to turn freezer on/off set at 34
- ozone generator set on 30min daily cycles
- spa filter to circulate the water
There’s tons of info online for doing this but if you’re interested I can share some photos of my setup.
I started doing cold plunges in late January this year and have grown to really like them, specifically how I feel after them. So far just using a stock tank in the backyard and water temp ranges from 33-38 depending on weather outside. Not sure what I’ll do once it warms up. Maybe try converting a chest freezer.