I use Accelerade on most of my training rides. If it's hot, if I'm climbing, or if I know I'm going to be out for a long ride, I'll bring along Motortabs or electrolyte caps.
I use Accelerade on most of my training rides. If it's hot, if I'm climbing, or if I know I'm going to be out for a long ride, I'll bring along Motortabs or electrolyte caps.
Brandy,
If you like Accelerade, you might want to check out the REI Outlet. Right now they have it on super-duper discount (around 42 cents/serving):
http://www.rei.com/outlet/search?vca...ery=accelerade
If you have them send it to the store for pick-up, you can save the shipping costs as well.
Unfortunately, for me, I've found that I don't tolerate it well. So, if anyone wants an opened jar with about 20 servings left, let me know and you can have it for the cost of shipping!
Last edited by michelem; 10-15-2008 at 02:31 PM.
I use Shaklee's Performance - its a maximum endurance sports drink. On long rides, I put extra powder in a baggie and can refill my water bottles with it. It comes in two flavors - Orange, my personal favorite and lime. I would try different products and drinks on shorter rides. I find that all that fancy stuff upsets my stomach. I use shot bloks and Luna moons, but for carbs, protein and salt - I always carry a package of peanut butter crackers. I have been riding for 30 years and do about 5 centuries a year and I always carry my crackers. When I have friends that need something extra to eat - it always helps them. Nothing fancy - just something that works. I have another friend who carries small boiled potatoes with her. Find what works for your body and stick with it! Bekki
I don't suffer from insanity. I enjoy it.
Maybe I should start a separate thread but anyhoo. I have the opposite experience: drinking a regular sports drink on longer rides my belly swells up which is quite uncomfortable! so I think I'm retaining more water than I need. And I had to stop munching a handful of salted nuts before bedtime (always get the munchies then..) instead of the unsalted ones I usually buy because I'd swell up like a beach ball. I like salt but I rarely crave it. And I sweat a whole lot on my bike but I never notice the salt stains some people have mentioned. Does this mean I'm not a "salty sweater"? And I'm guessing I'm a little sensitive to sodium. Not noticeable during a normal day, but squeezed into tight lycra I do notice the difference.
But I guess I still need the various minerals I lose in my sweat, so I'd better go looking for a sports drink with less sodium.
Winter riding is much less about badassery and much more about bundle-uppery. - malkin
1995 Kona Cinder Cone commuterFrankenbike/Selle Italia SLR Lady Gel Flow
2008 white Nakamura Summit Custom mtb/Terry Falcon X
2000 Schwinn Fastback Comp road bike/Specialized Jett
Elyte Sport...
http://www.elytesport.com/
The thing I like about this is that doesn't have the calories in it.
No, it doesn't taste all "yum yum", but anything with a sweet taste just makes me sick anyway, so that's ok to me. I have not tried adding anything for taste, but maybe a bit of lemon juice or a sweetner packet might cut it for a try.
I'm not a dainty sweater. Regardless of what I'm doing, I look like someone poured a bucket of water on my head.
EDIT: The web site has a lot of good info, but here's one link from it that has a chart comparing the components to a variety of other drinks. Kinda interesting...
http://www.elytesport.com/sportshealth/comparison.html
Last edited by Miranda; 10-17-2008 at 02:19 AM.
One of our spin instructors at the gym mentioned one day weighing yourself immediately before and after a ride. She had read somewhere that if you lose a pound, drink more water. If you gain a pound, consume less. I know the later doesn't make sense. Usually the push is to drink more. But there is such a thing as water toxification in certain situation. I'm sure how your body processes the fluids has something to do with it too.
I like Gatorade, which is a little beneficial since that's most of the supported long rides use at the rest stops. I like the green kind and the blue kind best (Gatorade doesn't really have flavors... just colors) and buy it in the powdered form both for convenience and to avoid the HFCS that they use to sweeten the liquid version.
Some old school stuff:
John Forester's recipe, Effective Cycling (pp. 216-217)
-- 1 2-quart envelope of powdered Kool-Aid or Wyler's unsweetened lemonade mix
-- 8 tablespoons sugar
-- 1/2 teaspoon salt
Mix well, and divide into 4 equal portions. Use one portion per water bottle.
Arnie C. Baker, Nutrition for Sports:
-- 16 oz. water
-- 1/2 cup maltodextrin
-- 1-2 tablespoons lemonade or fruit juice concentrate
-- 1/16 teaspoon salt.
This mix provides 200 calories per 16 oz. bottle, and 100 mg of sodium. Baker admits this is a little sodium lite, and recommends that if you need the extra sodium, include salty snacks (potato chips, PayDay bars, peanuts, etc.) in your ride day snacks.
He also recommends 100% fruit juice, cut 50/50 with water as a during or post-ride recovery drink.
Something that I've started using back the middle of the summer, and that's really worked well for me has been these little individual tubes of powdered drink mix that are made up to add to bottled water. Crystal Light is one brand, but what I like is the Kroger generic, in apple flavor. The CL brands in green tea blends are good, as well. They don't really add a lot of caloric value, but then I'm trying to ride off some of the extra insulation. They do make tepid tap water taste a lot better, so that I'll drink more of it.
Tom
Actually, it makes perfect sense. I wish I had a link to the thing I was just reading about hyponatremia in long distance runners - the number one sign of hyponatremia was weight gain during the run. It was a much stronger correlation than quantity of water consumed or several other factors that were studied.
That said, it's difficult to get into trouble either way in a one-hour gym class unless you're dehydrated or hyponatremic going into it, and weighing yourself before and after the class won't tell you that. In the past - when all my workouts were afternoon gym workouts of short duration - I'd typically gain a couple of pounds during the workout, because of the simple fact that before the class, I'd be dehydrated from being at the office all day (this was before I learned to carry water with me wherever I go).
A lot of people were drinking pickle juice at the rest stops on the Lone Star Ride. That's one way to get your sodium without sugar... but with just as many preservatives and artificial colors as the sugary drinks![]()
Last edited by OakLeaf; 10-17-2008 at 07:05 AM.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
Hello everyone (newbie to the board),
When I ran, I made my own drinks.
I use the following:
2TBS of lemon juice
1TBS of blackstrap molasses or maple syrup
a pinch of two of salt
a very small pinch of epsom salt (for magnesium)
10 - 12oz of water
I prefer the maple syrup during the ride. After, the ride I prefer to have a drink with blackstrap molasses because it has potassium, iron, and calcium.