Jiffer
04-26-2010, 09:04 AM
I did a 59 mile ride with 4500 feet of climbing yesterday. I did this same ride twice recently (minus some of the flat miles) very strongly. My fastest ever. But yesterday just wasn't my day. Didn't feel as strong as soon as we started to climb, but managed to do the first section fairly well. During the next grueling 11.5 mile section, it just seemed way harder than usual and my pace was down quite a bit. It was warmer than it has been, but not super hot. In the low 70's. Just as I was about to the top of the climb, my leg started cramping, which rarely happens and never in the spot it cramped. When I reached the group, I got off the bike and didn't feel so good. Dizzy. I sat down to recover, but they wanted to take off pretty quickly to get water nearby. Bummer. I got back on the bike, got to the water stop and was just "done". Very fatigued and a little lightheaded.
Luckily the rest of the ride was mostly either downhill or flat, so I did alright. My cramp got super bad at one point, then was manageable. And I felt twinges of cramping in various places. But after I got home I felt like a total zombie the rest of the day. Way different than usual. I figured out I was definitely dehydrated. Fatigue, dizziness, cramping are all symptoms. As well as nausea and a couple of others. What makes it frustrating is I DID drink more than usual, but obviously not enough. It sure didn't seem necessary to drink more than I did, since it was in the high 50's when we left and eventually got into the low 70's. Yet, I've pretty much only been riding in the 50's-60's this year so far. And if it was warmer than that, it wasn't on a day that I was doing any significant climbing or distance.
That whole "bottle an hour" guideline seems to go out the window when it's cool. I never drink that much in cool weather (I also have the larger bottles). I do drink more when it's hot, but when you're not used to drinking that much and it's really more "warm" than hot, you just don't think you need to be guzzling fluids.
I went through the same thing at Heartbreak Hundred last year. 100 miles with 8500 feet, the hardest ride I have done to date. It got into the low 80's that day, which was, again, warmer than I had ridden in that year. I knew I definitely needed more fluids. Dh and I had talked about it beforehand and I was very conscious of it. Once again, I THOUGHT I was drinking enough ... but I had similar fatigue and dizziness issues, along with a touch of nausea that time.
One thing that seems to be the same in these two scenarios is the fact that it was the first time in the year doing a hard climbing ride in a higher temp. So part of it may be that I need even more fluids when my body isn't used to a certain temp, than it might after I've ridden in that temp several times. Does this make sense?
At any rate, I do intend to do more heat training this year. I'm doing Heartbreak again this year and it has been known to get into the 90's during that ride. So I'm going to purposefully ride in the middle of the day for some of my training rides. Yuck!
Luckily the rest of the ride was mostly either downhill or flat, so I did alright. My cramp got super bad at one point, then was manageable. And I felt twinges of cramping in various places. But after I got home I felt like a total zombie the rest of the day. Way different than usual. I figured out I was definitely dehydrated. Fatigue, dizziness, cramping are all symptoms. As well as nausea and a couple of others. What makes it frustrating is I DID drink more than usual, but obviously not enough. It sure didn't seem necessary to drink more than I did, since it was in the high 50's when we left and eventually got into the low 70's. Yet, I've pretty much only been riding in the 50's-60's this year so far. And if it was warmer than that, it wasn't on a day that I was doing any significant climbing or distance.
That whole "bottle an hour" guideline seems to go out the window when it's cool. I never drink that much in cool weather (I also have the larger bottles). I do drink more when it's hot, but when you're not used to drinking that much and it's really more "warm" than hot, you just don't think you need to be guzzling fluids.
I went through the same thing at Heartbreak Hundred last year. 100 miles with 8500 feet, the hardest ride I have done to date. It got into the low 80's that day, which was, again, warmer than I had ridden in that year. I knew I definitely needed more fluids. Dh and I had talked about it beforehand and I was very conscious of it. Once again, I THOUGHT I was drinking enough ... but I had similar fatigue and dizziness issues, along with a touch of nausea that time.
One thing that seems to be the same in these two scenarios is the fact that it was the first time in the year doing a hard climbing ride in a higher temp. So part of it may be that I need even more fluids when my body isn't used to a certain temp, than it might after I've ridden in that temp several times. Does this make sense?
At any rate, I do intend to do more heat training this year. I'm doing Heartbreak again this year and it has been known to get into the 90's during that ride. So I'm going to purposefully ride in the middle of the day for some of my training rides. Yuck!