dear solo biker,
Good luck with your very (perhaps overly ambitious goal). All I can say is that taking 4 years to lose the weight I did, my typical workout these days is an hour of weights and resistance and an hour of fast HR on the treadmill 3 x a week alternating with long distance biking (50 miles a go each time this month) at 15-17 rpm. For either of those two workouts, 2 hours at the gym or 3 hours on the bike, my maximum calorie burn has never gone higher than 400 calories and hour. On this program I can do 5-6 days a week for 5-6 weeks before I burn out and have to take a week to ten days full out recovery. My average calorie deficit is 300-500 calories a day, which means that I am eating enough to maintain my current activity level and continue a slow steady weight loss. I am currently focusing in a bit more on the long distance riding since I will be doing a cross country south to north along the Mississippi in May and June.
Perhaps instead of focusing on how many calories you aim to burn through exercise, it would be helpful to also take a look at how many calories your body requires for your weight, body fat %, age and level of activity and fitness, and aiming to burn x amount more than that, or alternatively consume x calories less than you require for body maintenance.
If you burn tremendous of calories without balancing out your diet, you risk continuing damage to the muscles, organs and nerves. It might be better to set some more realistic goals in terms of calorie burn and make sure your diet (paleo, semi vegetarian, normal whole food emphasis on less beef and more fish, whatever) helps the whole balance.
Some sort of a calorie counting monitor is helpful. You can find charts for calories burned vs. cardio rate by using a heart monitor. I use a bodybugg which is an armband mounted monitor with a membership in a computer site that has the ususual amenities of being able to enter measurements, activity levels and download the calorie burn from the monitor. They also have various eating programs and a pretty good selection of recipes and tips plus access to a data base of calorie count for regular foods, an ability to track your measurements and progress but there are many others.
I would be interested in how it all goes for you. Yay for the 20 pounds lost and here's to the next twenty and some added core arm and leg strength from weight and resistance training. Like me, you might very well just be at the point where although you are not actually losing mssive amounts of weight, but you are replacing bady fat weight with lean muscle mass which is always a good thing.
Just my thoughts- I am not an expert, nor a nutritionist, nor a sports coach, ust raining the brain of thoughts that you posting brought forward.
marni
Perhaps rather than setting



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Fruit, nuts, chia seeds, raw sprouted protein powder and milk analogue, and I barely even notice not putting in a couple of flakes.
