Sher Monfore was so hobbled by back pain that she retired early from her career as a nurse. During a visit to the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum, she came across a woman who was demonstrating Nordic walking and insisted that Monfore join the group.
"As I was saying, 'No, no,' she put the straps around my wrists and told me the poles would support my back. The group started going and I was chugging along behind," Monfore recalled. "I didn't walk fast but I walked an hour. An hour! Right after that, I bought my own poles and I've never put them down."
That was eight years ago. Since then, Monfore has become a bit of an evangelist for this way of walking. A certified Nordic walking instructor, she's started two year-round Nordic walking groups through the Maple Grove Community Center and been named the city's Nordic walking coordinator.
"Using poles increases the exertion of your walk by 40 percent, no matter if you go fast or slow. It doesn't take any more energy or effort, but you get so many benefits," she enthused. "It makes your posture better, it's easy on the joints, cardiologists love what it does for your heart."
Walking is already the most popular form of aerobic exercise in the country, according to the Centers for Disease Control, with 145 million Americans saying they walk regularly. Those numbers have likely spiked since the pandemic shuttered gyms and sent the cautious outdoors to exercise.
This fall, the YMCA of the North saw "a huge" increase in the number of members calling on personal trainers to learn the Nordic technique and custom-fit their poles, said Jennifer Menk, director of health and well-being.
"Nordic walking is a full-body workout," she said. "Adding poles engages the core and upper-body muscles and burns more calories."
With its loping, arm-swinging, pole-pushing stride, Nordic walking is like walking on steroids, its adherents say.