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Nutrition Hints |
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The following is an article on nutrition supplied by the UMCA, and
used by permission: Nutrition Preparations for Century-Riding By Jenny Hegmann, MS, RD For more information on nutrition, training and equipment for
endurance riders visit www.ultracycling.com When you are planning for a century or double century, your
nutritional preparedness is as important as your physical training. Being nutritionally prepared, however,
means more than just carbohydrate-loading the night before. During the months and days leading up to
your ride you must eat wisely and learn what, when, and how to eat to fuel
the distance. Your Daily Training Diet You should carbo-load not just the day before the century/double
century but also every day during your training. This allows you to: prevent chronic glycogen depletion train
better (because muscles are better fueled), and then ride better on event
day, continue eating your usual foods pre-event, so there are no unwanted
surprises. A cyclist’s daily carbo-loading menu should derive 55 to 65 percent of
the calories from carbohydrates.
Achieve this by choosing wholesome grains, fruits, vegetables, and
legumes the foundation of your daily meals.
Eat lesser amounts of lean meat, seafood, or poultry, and low-fat milk
products. Months Before You have three tasks during your months of training for your century
or double: 1. Learn your carbohydrate targets. Before riding: Replenish your
morning-low liver glycogen levels by consuming 0.5 gram of carbohydrate per
pound of body weight one hour before riding.
This is 75 grams (300 calories) of carbohydrates for a 150-pound cyclist,
roughly a bowl of cereal and a banana.
If you can’t tolerate solid food in the morning, consider liquid
carbohydrates—juice, sports drink, or low-fat chocolate milk. If your stomach
prefers no fuel the hour before riding, then consume a good meal—a bagel,
peanut butter, fruit, and yogurt—three to four hours before the ride to give
yourself time to digest (you may need to get up at 3 a.m., eat, then go back
to bed). During riding: Maintain blood sugar levels and help spare muscle
glycogen by targeting 0.3 to 0.5 grams of carbohydrate per pound of body
weight per hour. For a 150-pound
cyclist, that’s 45 to 75 grams (200 to 300 calories) of carbohydrates each
hour while riding. Learn during
training how much you tolerate and if you do better with liquids only or in
combination with solid food. 2. Learn your sweat rate and fluid targets. Every cyclist should know his or her sweat rate, the rate at which you
lose body water. For optimal hydration
you should replace fluid as you lose it.
To find your sweat rate, weigh yourself naked before and after a ride.
Each pound you have lost represents two cups (16 ounces) of fluid. To this amount, add the amount of fluid you
drank during the ride. Divide this
total amount by the hours you rode.
This is your hourly sweat rate and is the amount of fluid you should
drink per hour while riding. For
example, let’s say you rode for two hours and drank two cups of water. If you
lost three pounds (6 cups of fluid) your sweat rate is eight cups for two
hours of cycling, or two cups per hour.
You therefore should plan to drink one cup of fluid every 15 minutes
while riding. 3. Practice during training to
reduce unwanted surprises on event day. Thus you can avoid the stress of wondering if you have fueled appropriately, or if what you have eaten or plan to eat
and drink will settle well. Experiment
during training to: • Learn what and how much food/fluid work best for you, and when. Do you feel best eating one hour before a
ride, or three? Should you consume just a banana, or a banana plus a bagel? • Develop a schedule to meet your carbohydrate and fluid targets
during the ride. For example, mark
your bottles in 8-ounce increments and drink eight ounces of water every 20
minutes. Divide your food into stashes
to be consumed each hour: raisins and
pretzels tossed into a baggie, an energy bar, or a few oatmeal cookies, etc. • Learn what to carry and where to keep it. How will you carry your fuel? In which
pocket will you always carry your raisins and nuts, sandwich, spare
tube? Will your new CamelBak be comfortable for the duration? • Practice consuming the foods/drinks that will be available during
the event. If you plan to eat event
food, contact ride organizers to learn what will be served. • Train at the time your event will occur. If your ride begins at dawn (or lasts all
night), make sure you have ridden (and eaten) at this time. The Week Before Taper your training and maintain your usual, carbohydrate-based diet
during the week before a big ride.
This allows your body to become saturated with glycogen. Don’t worry that you will “get fat”—by
tapering, the extra carbohydrates that you eat (or rather that you do not
expend) will be stored as glycogen in your liver and muscles. Yes, you will gain weight, up to three to
four pounds by the end of your taper.
This is water: for every ounce of carbohydrate stored in your body,
you store about three ounces of water. Be sure to carbo-load, not fat-load. Cheesy pastas and French-fried
potatoes fill the stomach with fat and leave you eating fewer
carbohydrates. The result is poorly
fueled muscles (and bigger fat cells!). Trade extra fat calories for extra
carbohydrates: On toast, use honey
instead of butter; instead of creamy pasta, enjoy spaghetti and tomato sauce.
Plan your event-day menu and buy the foods you need. If you will be traveling, plan to bring all
your foods and drinks with you in a cooler. The Day Before Today is the day to maintain glycogen stores by enjoying your usual
carbohydrate-based meals. Try nothing
new. Drink extra fluids to ensure you
are fully hydrated. Your urine should
be pale and of significant quantity.
Abstain from excess wine or beer as they can be dehydrating (and do
not contribute significant carbohydrates).
Prepare your food supplies so that you won’t have to think about this
tomorrow morning (when you are already stressed). The Morning Of Your Ride Novice riders tend to either eat too little before a big ride, fearing
an upset stomach, or else eat too much, fearing that they will bonk. Today is
not the day to figure out what to eat before riding! You should experiment in training, and on
event day have a tried-and-true plan of familiar foods and fluids. Some cyclists prefer a light breakfast the
hour before a century or brevet; some prefer food at the starting line;
others have learned to wake up at 4 a.m., eat a bowl of oatmeal, and then go
back to bed. Drink plenty of familiar fluids up to two hours before the ride so you
have time to absorb the water and urinate the
excess. Drink one more glass 5 to 15
minutes before you start riding. If
you are used to having coffee or tea in the morning, do so today as well. Don’t forget to bring your foods and
fluids that you prepared the night before. During Your Ride Do nothing new, special, or different during a century or double. Your goals are to meet your fluid and
carbohydrate targets, just as you did during your training rides. In doing so, you can be confident that you
will be adequately fueled and hydrated.
You will be able to sit back, pedal strongly, and enjoy the distance
with energy to spare. Jenny Hegmann, MS, RD, is co-author of The
Cyclist’s Food Guide: Fueling for
Distance (© 2005 Sports Nutrition Publishers) with Nancy Clark, MS, RD. To order: send
check for $18 to Jenny Hegmann, 12C Carnation
Circle, Reading, MA 01867. Hegmann is a sports nutritionist and long-distance
cyclist. She lives and works in the
greater Boston area. She may be contacted at jhegmann@verizon.net. © 2005 by the UltraMarathon Cycling
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