Search around here and you'll find lots of good advice and suggestions about what/how much to eat. My advice is to try to make sure you eat during your rides. If you ride more than an hour some solid food is good - energy bars, fig bars, bananas, bagels, pretzels, trail mix, etc. are all popular - try to stick to things that are easy to eat, easty to digest and mostly carbohydrate. Gels are good for quick energy. For less than an hour a good sports drink with some carbohydrate should get you through. If you eat better during your ride you should be less starving after you are done. Before a ride I like oatmeal, but I have to make sure I eat well ahead - at least an hour or better yet 2 hours if it will be a hard/fast ride otherwise I will get stomach cramps - ouch! In any case I think that it is pretty common to be quite hungry after a ride especially when you first start out. You are burning lots of calories! I have found the more I've ridden the more that feeling has gone away.
Lots of things can cause knee problems so it may be a bit hit and miss for you for a while. A few things that I found helped me get rid of knee problems - don't try to push big gears - that will hurt your knees quickly. Learn to spin a bit more. Be sure you aren't too stretched out on the bike. I found that when I got a smaller frame and I was no longer over reaching that any knee agravation that I used to have up hills went away and I could use bigger gears without knee strain. It was mostly a change for my upper body position, but it really did make a difference to my legs as well. I also found that I had fairly weak hamstrings -common in cyclists - and as soon as I worked on those my knees were fine too - in fact what I was feeling at the back of my knees may have been hamstring strain. The best exercise for me was the leg curl machine at the gym - the one where you lie on your stomach with the bar at your ankles and bend your knees toward your butt.



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