logo icon
  • Treks
    New Category
    • Kedar Kantha Trek
    • Har Ki Dhun Trek
    • Chopta Tugnath Trek
    • Beas Kund Trek
    Medium
    • Valley of Flowers Trek
    • Hampta Pass Trek
    • Sundakphu Trek
    • Goecha La Trek
    Hard
    • Chadar Trek
    • Stok Kangari Trek
    • Rupin Pass Trek
    • Pin Parvati Pass Trek
    image
    Choose your trek difficulty
    View All Treks
  • Expeditions
    New Category
    • New Link
    • New Link
    image
  • Skiing
    • Skiing
  • Why Bikat
  • Full On Travel
  • Blog
  • Shop
  • About

Pure Grit. Pure Adventure.

Bikat means difficult. But with us, that’s not a warning—it’s a promise. Of stories worth telling. Of adventures worth chasing.

Region

Month

Difficulty

Adventure Name

brand
  • Treks
    • Difficulty
      • New Category
        • Kedar Kantha Trek
        • Har Ki Dhun Trek
        • Chopta Tugnath Trek
        • Beas Kund Trek
      • Medium
        • Valley of Flowers Trek
        • Hampta Pass Trek
        • Sundakphu Trek
        • Goecha La Trek
      • Hard
        • Chadar Trek
        • Stok Kangari Trek
        • Rupin Pass Trek
        • Pin Parvati Pass Trek
    • Region
      • Uttarakhand
        • Kedar Kantha
        • Har Ki Dhun
        • Rupin Pass Trek
        • Valley of Flowers Trek
      • Himachal Pradesh
        • Hmpta Pass Trek
        • Beas Kund Trek
        • Pin Parvati Pass Trek
        • New Link
      • Ladakh
        • Chadar Trek
        • Stok Kangari Trek
        • Markha Vallery Trek
        • Lumayuru Trek
      • Sikkim
        • Goecha La Trek
        • Dzongari Trek
        • Greem Lake Trek
      • Bhrigu Pass Trek
        • Annapurna Circuit Trek
        • Langtag valley
        • New Link
    • Season
      • Summer (Apr-Jun)
        • Valley of Flowers
        • Hampta Pass Trek
        • Kedarkantha Trek
      • Monsson (Jul-Sep)
        • Sundakphu Trek
        • Goecha La Trek
        • Markha Valley Trek
      • Autumn (Oct-Nov)
        • Rupin Pass Trek
        • Pin Parvati Trek
        • Har Ki Dhun Trek
      • Winter (Dec-Mar)
        • Chadar Trek
        • Kedarkantha Trek
        • Chopta Tungnath Trek
    • Family Trek
      • Family Treks
        • Chopta Tungnath Trek
        • Har Ki Dun Trek
        • Beas Kund Trek
        • Bhrigu Lake Trek
    • Beginner Friendly
      • Beginner Friendly
        • Kedarkantha Trek
        • Hampta Pass Trek
        • Sandakphu Trek
        • Dzongri Trek
    • Off-beat
      • OFF-BEAT
        • Green Lake Trek
        • Lumayuru Trek
        • Lantang Valley Trek
        • Rupin Pass Trek
    • High Adventures
      • High Adventures
        • Stok Kangari Trek
        • Chadar Trek
        • Pin Parvati Pass Trek
        • Everest Base Camp Trek
    • Bikat Recommends
      • Bikat Recommends
        • Kedarkanth Trek
        • Valley of Flowers Trek
        • Goecha La Trek
        • Chadar Trek
    • Fresh Explorations
      • Fresh Explorations
        • Lamayuru Trek
        • Green Lake Trek
        • Langtang Valley Trek
        • Bhrigu Lake Trek
  • Expeditions
    • New Column
      • New Category
        • New Link
        • New Link
  • Skiing
    • Skiing
  • Why Bikat
  • Full On Travel
  • Blog
  • Shop
  • About
Whatsapp
Chat With Us
Pre Sale
Pre Booking - 8448680062
Post Sale
Post Booking - 9319028363 /8588878499
Email
Email - info@bikatadventures.com
Email
support@bikatadventures.com

Follow us on social media

Subscribe to our newsletter

Get the latest updates and offers.

Contact Us

Whatsapp
Chat With Us
Pre Sale
Pre Booking - 8448680062
Post Sale
Post Booking - 9319028363 /8588878499
Email
Email - info@bikatadventures.com
Email
support@bikatadventures.com

Company

About Us
Careers
Blog
Why Bikat

Support

Contact
Environment Policy
Privacy Policy
Terms and Conditions
Sitemap

Services

Treks
Mountaineering
Crossover Expeditions
Cycling
Bikat Experiences
Skiing
Custom

Mobile

Download on the
Apple Store
Get in on
Google Play
© 2026 Bikat Adventures. All Rights Reserved|Powered by: Novel Knett Software Solutions
Privacy PolicyTerms of Service
FacebookTwitterInstagram
Home
>
Blog
>
6 Health Benefits of Trekking or Hiking
Knowhow | Trekking | First Aid
Informative

6 Health Benefits of Trekking or Hiking

S
Written by
Sushant Singh
04 Jan 2018
0 views
0 comments

Health Benefits of trekking or hiking

 

Along with the physical health benefits, the climbs & descents also strengthen you mentally & emotionally. Enhanced physical stamina, demolished mental blocks, and restored faith in yourself, trekking or hiking transforms in ways more than you can think! As it naturally follows, trekkers lead a happier and healthier life than the rest of the crowd. Trekking surely is holistically therapeutic. In fact, hiking is a good exercise to start with. Let us understand the key health benefits of trekking or hiking. We are beginning with the physical aspect, shifting later to the mental & emotional ones:

1) Musculo-Skeletal Health


Trekking helps tone the muscles while enhancing their elasticity. This strengthens and powers up the muscles. Needless to add, the biggest beneficiary is the legs, particularly gluteal muscles (buttocks), quadriceps (legs), hamstrings (back of the thighs), inner & outer thighs, hips, and calves. Oblique muscles (abdomen) neck, shoulder,& arms muscles & bones are also groomed. All this while, your bone density is increasing and the density loss or osteoporosis is slowing down. Trekking is especially helpful for people with joints & back pain, a condition called arthritis. The mountain trails are comfortable and softer for the feet, ankles, knees, back, and hips as compared to the concrete ground. Carrying a backpack enhances the benefits and works additionally on your upper body strength. A stronger & toned musculoskeletal system and reduced body weight with intense practice on an unpredictable and steep terrain help in improving your body balance.

2) Control Body Sugar and Lose Those Extra Pounds


Trekking also aids the body to fight Type 2 diabetes. Since muscles are intensely working during trekking and hiking, they need energy. The body uses blood sugar to fuel muscle activity. This reduces the excess sugar in the blood, while also increasing the body’s insulin tolerance. In addition, when the blood sugar levels fall inadequate, the body uses its fat reserves to provide energy. Due to intense bodywork for long hours during climbing, initially sugar and then fat fuel up the body. You burn around 200 calories per hour when trekking with approximately 30 pounds (13.6 kgs) backpack. The weekend treks are the shortest and even they include some 15-18 hours on foot. Try calculating the approximate fat burn! Note that the amount of calories lost is directly proportional to the weight you carry during trekking and the altitude you scale. An increase of 10% incline in hiking boosts calories burn by around 30-35%, while a backpack weight increase of 10-15 pounds accelerates the fat burn by approximately 10-15%. This does not mean you overburden yourself. Stay moderate and within your body’s capacity.

3) Increased Heart & Lung Capacity


Regular trekking and hiking are said to reduce the blood pressure by 10 points and balance the body’s cholesterol & triglycerides levels as well. This helps improve the circulatory & respiratory system health, thereby reducing the probability of heart attack, stroke, cardiovascular pains & respiratory disorders. In addition, the more you breathe fresh air the more active your lungs become, more blood the heart pumps, and healthier it all turns. Use a trekking stick for walking support. Fixing the stick on the ground and pushing your body against it to move further, works on your upper body muscles and heart.

4) Grow on your softer skills


A practical way to gain management skills is a trekking expedition. Target setting, planning, organizing, team building, goal orientation, adaptability to change, and mental strength – read perseverance & determination – all traits are cultivated as a ‘necessity’ to help you reach where you need to. You have to pull yourself up and then push exactly as you arrive at that line of ‘undoable.’ This is your learning point and from here, you form your learning curve. Be ready to surprise yourself, to discover yourself, to know that you spent a significant part of your life underutilized. By the time you reach your goal, you have the foundation for personal growth.

5) Anti-Depressant and Mood Swing Counter


While traversing through the ‘magnanimous’ mountains, you savor the ‘simplest yet life-changing’ experiences. You connect with the bountiful nature, its healing sounds, and the myriad colors, spans, & creatives, like the hills, the meadows, the brooks & lakes, the greens, the frolicking fauna, and the most indispensable ‘you’ & your ‘inner peace.’ Even the routine and ignored sun, moon, and stars seem to shine like never before. Kindness & empathy starts kicking in. Concisely, you become more active, feel adequate, positive, & stress-free, sleep well, and grow happy. You are evolving. Keep trekking.

6) Fight Diseases like Cancer


According to a study, hiking can even help the patients fight the deadliest of diseases like colon, breast, lung, and endometrial cancers. International Journal of Sports Medicine measured the antioxidants levels in the breast cancer patients, before and after hiking. The levels improved after the activity. Higher the antioxidants in the human body, higher is its capacity to fight infections and catalyzes recuperation. Life is bigger than the diseases and nature helps you cope very effectively. Hiking and trekking are one of the best ‘body-friendly’ activities.

With a host of trekking related physical benefits, fresh oxygen infusion, positive mental frame due to endorphin hormone, emotional pleasure, social interactions, reduced confusion, anxiety, & anger, increased energy because of adrenaline hormone, and improved life skills, naturally your happiness index is high. Nature can fill your life to the brim. Just give it a chance to take its own course. Make that first effort of going on a trek and change your body, spirit, and life for good!

Also, read Sun Protection 101 - Staying Safe in the Bright, Sunny Outdoors ( Especially on High Altitudes )

Share
Knowhow
Trekking
First Aid
Prev
Why doing Kuari Pass with Bikat Adventures is pure awesomeness?
All blogs
Next
Trek to Ponmudi

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Max 5 images, total size 3MB
Preview images

Related content

Discover these similar Blogs

10 Mountain Features Every Trekker Should Know: Master the Lingo of the Himalayas

10 Mountain Features Every Trekker Should Know: Master the Lingo of the Himalayas

02 Apr 2026
Kedarkantha vs Dayara Bugyal: The Ultimate Winter Trek Showdown

Kedarkantha vs Dayara Bugyal: The Ultimate Winter Trek Showdown

01 Dec 2025
Skiing in Kashmir: A No-Nonsense Guide to the Gulmarg Skiing Scene

Skiing in Kashmir: A No-Nonsense Guide to the Gulmarg Skiing Scene

09 Nov 2025
Go Nuts November — Official Explainer (How to Enter + Win)

Go Nuts November — Official Explainer (How to Enter + Win)

31 Oct 2025
Gulmarg vs Auli: Where to Learn Skiing in India  (An Honest Guide for 2025)

Gulmarg vs Auli: Where to Learn Skiing in India (An Honest Guide for 2025)

31 Oct 2025
Sleeping Bags that Actually Work in the Himalayan Winters (Not Just on Websites)

Sleeping Bags that Actually Work in the Himalayan Winters (Not Just on Websites)

27 Oct 2025
Snowfall Areas in India You Can Actually Trek Through

Snowfall Areas in India You Can Actually Trek Through

19 Oct 2025
Skiing in India: All You Need to Know Before You Hit the Slopes This Winter

Skiing in India: All You Need to Know Before You Hit the Slopes This Winter

10 Oct 2025
Trekking in Winter: Why Winter Trails Are a Different Kind of Magic

Trekking in Winter: Why Winter Trails Are a Different Kind of Magic

08 Oct 2025
Snow Trekking Shoes in India: What Actually Works on the Himalayan Trails

Snow Trekking Shoes in India: What Actually Works on the Himalayan Trails

08 Oct 2025

Popular tags

Explore more categories and themes from the same trail journal.

March

March

0 treks
April

April

0 treks
Skiing Courses

Skiing Courses

4 treks
May

May

0 treks
June

June

0 treks
Kayaking Courses

Kayaking Courses

0 treks
July

July

0 treks
6000M+ Peaks

6000M+ Peaks

1 treks
Nepal Treks

Nepal Treks

6 treks
Offbeat Treks

Offbeat Treks

26 treks
Scuba Courses

Scuba Courses

2 treks
August

August

0 treks
Wild Life Treks

Wild Life Treks

2 treks
Winter Treks

Winter Treks

28 treks