BIERMAIER CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC OFFERING STAY ACTIVE CROOKSTON GIVEAWAY

Biermaier Chiropractic Clinic is giving away $25 in Chamber Bucks each of the next three Fridays – April 17, 24 and May 1 – through a drawing.  The giveaway is meant to get people active while they are staying at home, said Dr. Lukas Biermaier. “We came up with this fun promotion spur of the moment to try to get people a little more active because we’re all staying home during this stay home order,” said Biermaier.  “So, we thought we’d have something fun to do to get people out and about.  And especially because the weather hasn’t been cooperating with us, we thought we’d ad a little incentive to get people moving a little bit.”

People can enter every day by Facebook or email explained Biermaier. “It’s a pretty simple giveaway,” said Biermaier.  “All we’re having people do is they can find our clinic, Biermaier Chiropractic Clinic, on Facebook.  They can tag us in a Facebook post of a picture of them working out.  It can be as simple walking your dog or taking your kids for a walk or something a little more extravagant like doing a big workout.  Simply tag our clinic, so we get notified that you’re doing some sort of activity.  You can also email us a picture if you don’t have Facebook.  They can email the clinic at biermaierchiropractic@gmail.com.  That’s one of the simplest ways you can let us know that you are doing something.  What we do is we take whoever has done a workout of some sort and put their name into a drawing for a $25 gift card at the end of this week, Friday, April 17.  We will also do it on Friday, April 24, and Friday, May 1.  We’re trying to hit these three weeks that the governor has us staying home to get us out and about.  You can enter every day that you’re working out, so you can tag us every day to get entered into the drawing, and we’ll keep it going for the next week as well.”

Biermaier said it’s important to stay active to avoid injuries that come with underuse and being sedentary. “The big thing we want to promote with this is to get people out and active,” said Biermaier.  “The one thing that we’ve seen a little more frequently is some acute underuse injuries, which means people are staying home.  That is good, but people also are not doing as much as they normally do when they are in their workplace or around town going for those walks and shopping.  This provides a little incentive for people to get out and about and hopefully prevents those underuse and sedentary type injuries that we’ve seen in here to keep people up and active, which is what our bodies are meant to do.”