Actually you can buy any three promotional packs of kelloggs which says "free fitband" the price may vary according to what pack you buy.
I bought special k cereal bars £1 each so three packs for £3 only from sainsbury on offer and then pay £3 postage. There were other special k products on offer too but this was the cheapest.
Then just go on the url and pay for postage and wait for it to arrive which may take upto 3 week or more as i have experienced they send out the product late!
Top comments
vfxuk
8 May 1624#4
Buys food packed with sugar to get wristband to be healthy.
Seems legit.
fyke
8 May 1611#5
Its just an offer if you dont want to buy it then just dont!
mamboboy to vfxuk
8 May 1610#8
How are they 'packed with sugar' though? I mean, you don't ever say that when someone has cereal with milk, right? But why not? Semi skimmed milk has around 9.5g sugar per 200ml, so before you've even added cereal to breakfast you're getting more sugar than these cereal bars.
The stigma around these is hilarious to be honest, mainly due to the ridiculous Daily Mail articles, etc. I personally think they are absolutely fine as long as you don't sit on your **** all day expecting to lose weight! Low in salt, low in saturates, low in calories, but a pretty good source of vitamins, fibre and slow burning energy if you buy ones with nuts/seeds/wholemeal cereal etc. Sure there's a few bad breakfast/cereal bars - worryingly the ones aimed at kids, but then you should always read nutritional info, etc.
I'm really quite intrigued on how the HUKD Anti-Sugar Division Food Police survive without sugar. I'm amazed they have the energy to even browse this site tbh!
andyluv
8 May 164#12
I think you guys need to so some research instead of shamelessly accusing people.
Sugars in milk come from lactose, which is a natural sugar produced by milk and enzymes.
This is different to added simple sugars present in cereal.
Honey has a high sugar content and is not as good a substitute as sugars present in fruit for example, from fructose. Fructose in fruit won't spike your blood sugar due to the high fibre content in fruit.
Not all sugars are equal.
All comments (60)
powerjumps18
7 May 161#1
whats the spec of the band?
eternaldragonuk to powerjumps18
8 May 161#2
What are the main features of my fitband?
The main features of the fitband are:
Step counter
Time mode
Distance mode
soon basically a pedometer.
Tmu54
8 May 16#3
The question you should be asking is... Does the fitband actually work?
micpwelsh to Tmu54
8 May 161#7
The simple answer is no you won't get fit from a fitband
vfxuk
8 May 1624#4
Buys food packed with sugar to get wristband to be healthy.
Seems legit.
mamboboy to vfxuk
8 May 1610#8
How are they 'packed with sugar' though? I mean, you don't ever say that when someone has cereal with milk, right? But why not? Semi skimmed milk has around 9.5g sugar per 200ml, so before you've even added cereal to breakfast you're getting more sugar than these cereal bars.
The stigma around these is hilarious to be honest, mainly due to the ridiculous Daily Mail articles, etc. I personally think they are absolutely fine as long as you don't sit on your **** all day expecting to lose weight! Low in salt, low in saturates, low in calories, but a pretty good source of vitamins, fibre and slow burning energy if you buy ones with nuts/seeds/wholemeal cereal etc. Sure there's a few bad breakfast/cereal bars - worryingly the ones aimed at kids, but then you should always read nutritional info, etc.
I'm really quite intrigued on how the HUKD Anti-Sugar Division Food Police survive without sugar. I'm amazed they have the energy to even browse this site tbh!
fyke
8 May 1611#5
Its just an offer if you dont want to buy it then just dont!
vfxuk to fyke
8 May 16#22
Phew! Glad you've given permission!
mocmocamoc
8 May 161#6
Seems to be pretty good for the price, seems a little better than a basic step counter, pretty much all a fitbit does really.
aau1
8 May 16#9
I think the thread title should reflect the £3 p&p because this is not really free
fyke to aau1
8 May 16#11
Yes thats whay the amount thats written says £6 minimum which includes postage and £3 packs of cereal bars! Or else you may choose any other pack which will be more expensive.
therealclaireh to aau1
8 May 16#17
Agreed, it does annoy me when something is labelled as free then you have to pay money to get it meaning it's not actually free
vyp3r_snyp3r
8 May 16#10
Haha exactly, people are like sheep these days and hang on the word of the media etc, instead of doing their own research.
andyluv
8 May 164#12
I think you guys need to so some research instead of shamelessly accusing people.
Sugars in milk come from lactose, which is a natural sugar produced by milk and enzymes.
This is different to added simple sugars present in cereal.
Honey has a high sugar content and is not as good a substitute as sugars present in fruit for example, from fructose. Fructose in fruit won't spike your blood sugar due to the high fibre content in fruit.
Opening post
I bought special k cereal bars £1 each so three packs for £3 only from sainsbury on offer and then pay £3 postage. There were other special k products on offer too but this was the cheapest.
Then just go on the url and pay for postage and wait for it to arrive which may take upto 3 week or more as i have experienced they send out the product late!
Top comments
Seems legit.
The stigma around these is hilarious to be honest, mainly due to the ridiculous Daily Mail articles, etc. I personally think they are absolutely fine as long as you don't sit on your **** all day expecting to lose weight! Low in salt, low in saturates, low in calories, but a pretty good source of vitamins, fibre and slow burning energy if you buy ones with nuts/seeds/wholemeal cereal etc. Sure there's a few bad breakfast/cereal bars - worryingly the ones aimed at kids, but then you should always read nutritional info, etc.
I'm really quite intrigued on how the HUKD Anti-Sugar Division Food Police survive without sugar. I'm amazed they have the energy to even browse this site tbh!
Sugars in milk come from lactose, which is a natural sugar produced by milk and enzymes.
This is different to added simple sugars present in cereal.
Honey has a high sugar content and is not as good a substitute as sugars present in fruit for example, from fructose. Fructose in fruit won't spike your blood sugar due to the high fibre content in fruit.
Not all sugars are equal.
All comments (60)
The main features of the fitband are:
Step counter
Time mode
Distance mode
soon basically a pedometer.
Seems legit.
The stigma around these is hilarious to be honest, mainly due to the ridiculous Daily Mail articles, etc. I personally think they are absolutely fine as long as you don't sit on your **** all day expecting to lose weight! Low in salt, low in saturates, low in calories, but a pretty good source of vitamins, fibre and slow burning energy if you buy ones with nuts/seeds/wholemeal cereal etc. Sure there's a few bad breakfast/cereal bars - worryingly the ones aimed at kids, but then you should always read nutritional info, etc.
I'm really quite intrigued on how the HUKD Anti-Sugar Division Food Police survive without sugar. I'm amazed they have the energy to even browse this site tbh!
Sugars in milk come from lactose, which is a natural sugar produced by milk and enzymes.
This is different to added simple sugars present in cereal.
Honey has a high sugar content and is not as good a substitute as sugars present in fruit for example, from fructose. Fructose in fruit won't spike your blood sugar due to the high fibre content in fruit.
Not all sugars are equal.