Based on @TwoBitOperation's answer

>! and assuming his feet are 25 centimeter apart, if he walks $n$ circles with a radius of $r$ meters in a single direction, one feet walks $2 \pi r n$ meters, and the other one $2 \pi (r + 0.25) n$. The difference, $\pi n / 2$ is 100 meters, so $n = 200 / \pi \approx 63.6$. The value of $r$ is then determined from $2 \pi r n = 3000$ so $2 r = 15$ and $r$ = 7.5 meter.

Whether these

>! 63.6 rounds around e.g. a fountain or pond with a 15m diameter constitute a "normal walk" remains an open discussion.