Consider the animals with the largest bones – cows, elephants. What do they eat? Leafy plants.
Vitamin D is also important for strong bones and a good source is the sun. Colbin recommends being out 20 minutes a day with no sunblock, but others would dispute the wisdom of ever going out without sunblock and recommend instead, a multivitamin or vitamin D supplement.
Exercise
"Bones last longer if you stress them more. Exercising – putting the weight of your body or an outside weight on the bone – makes it lay down more bone material to strengthen it. Use it or lose it! Any exercise is better than none."
"Ideally, several times a week – and you need aerobic, weight bearing, and resistance. But be careful – heavy weights or too vigorous exercise in women with osteoporosis might trigger a fracture. Basically", she says, "walk a lot and carry stuff."
It works. A study done at the University of Toronto shows that aerobic exercise, such as walking, jogging, or dance, improved the amount of calcium in the upper body and upper thighs, two areas at risk for fractures.
Check out the website www.aircycle.co.nz for more details about the value of this exerciser.
Find the AirCycle in Shop here.
*Quotes from "The Whole-Food Guide to Strong Bones" by Annemarie Colbin Ph D.