Dietitian Magician Nutrition

Dietitian Magician Nutrition Dietitian Magician Nutrition Dietitian Magician Nutrition is a speaking and consulting business located in Burlington, Iowa.

Strawberry Smores!
06/18/2025

Strawberry Smores!

Had potatoes for dinner
05/30/2025

Had potatoes for dinner

Happy Tater Day !!!! 🥔♥️🥔♥️🥔♥️🥔♥️🥔♥️🥔♥️🥔

05/04/2025
05/02/2025
Strength training often overlooked, is more important with age. With stability, you reduce frailty.Murray - certified pe...
04/25/2025

Strength training often overlooked, is more important with age. With stability, you reduce frailty.
Murray - certified personal trainer

Aging doesn’t mean slowing down—it just means running smarter. Some of the world’s most impressive runners are in their 50s, 60s, or even 70s, proving that with the right approach, you can stay fast, strong, and pain-free well into your later years.

The biggest difference as you age isn’t speed—it’s recovery. What used to take one day might now take two or three. Your muscles, joints, and connective tissues don’t bounce back as quickly, which means training has to adapt. The key is to listen to your body instead of blindly following rigid training plans.

First, prioritize strength training. Muscle mass naturally declines with age, but lifting weights, doing bodyweight exercises, and incorporating resistance bands can keep your legs powerful and joints stable. Stronger muscles mean better running economy and fewer injuries.

Second, adjust your mileage and intensity wisely. Instead of running high mileage every week, focus on quality sessions—tempo runs, hill workouts, and strategic long runs that build endurance without overloading your body. Cross-training with cycling, swimming, or rowing can keep your cardiovascular fitness high while reducing impact stress.

Third, give your body more time to recover. Older runners often benefit from running four days a week instead of six, allowing extra time for muscles to repair. Sleep becomes even more critical—seven to nine hours of deep rest will make a massive difference in performance and energy levels.

Lastly, keep mobility a priority. Stiffness becomes more common with age, but stretching, foam rolling, and yoga can help keep joints and muscles flexible. A 5-10 minute dynamic warm-up before every run reduces injury risk and makes running feel smoother.

Running as you get older isn’t about trying to be as fast as you were at 25. It’s about staying strong, moving well, and continuing to enjoy the sport for decades to come. The best runners don’t stop because they age—they adapt, adjust, and keep going. And so can you.

Happy Dietitians day!
03/13/2025

Happy Dietitians day!

03/10/2025

Webinar: Tackling Fiber Complexity: Evolving Definitions and Data Impacting Diets

Hop to good health with more produce
03/09/2025

Hop to good health with more produce

Char-CUTE-erie board!

I’m going to try this! The honey crisp apples for the bunny cheeks is a genius idea!







Photo by Our Happy Corner

02/18/2025

Address

Burlington, IA
52601

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 6pm
Wednesday 10am - 6pm
Thursday 9am - 6pm
Friday 10am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 1pm

Telephone

+13197592532

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