Welcome guest, is this your first visit? Click the "Create Account" button now to join.

To disable ads, please log-in.

Shop at TeamEstrogen.com for women's cycling apparel.

Results 1 to 15 of 36

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Location
    Boise Idaho
    Posts
    1,162
    I am a "nuuner" but also like Ultima, no sugar, gluten free, vegan yada, yada, 10 calories per 12 oz.

    just a note of caution on coconut water - I am allergic to coconut so make sure you don't have that issue

    My go to food for a 40 mile ride is flour tortilla with peanut butter and honey. slips into your pocket in a baggie, isn't bulky and for the hard cores can be eaten while riding

    Hate heat stroke, glad you recovered okay
    Last edited by Sky King; 05-08-2012 at 06:54 AM. Reason: spelling
    Sky King
    ____________________
    Gilles Berthoud "Bernard"
    Surly ECR "Eazi"
    Empowering the Bicycle Traveler
    biketouringnews.com

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Denver Metro
    Posts
    834
    Stepping in here on a nutrition point.

    Even if you cut out sugars throughout your daily life- don't cut them out on the bike.

    When you are on the bike, the calories you take in(via liquid, gels,etc) and transferred into energy almost ASAP (granted you are riding for over 1.5 hours, longer ride or harder,etc.- does not count for an easy recovery ride)

    There is a reason that energy gels, drink mixes, etc. are what they are- your body turns it into fuel asap.

    When you hit the point of bonking, you have gone to far- it is your body telling you it needs energy to keep going.

    I eat almost no sugar in real life- I use agave or honey in coffee and that is it, I eat pretty paleo(with the exception of some ezekial bread a few times a week) but on the bike I feed my body what it needs to perform at it's best.

    That might mean gels, blocks, home made bars, drink mixes, just this past Sunday on a slow 5 hour ride(75 super slow miles) I had to stop at about hour 3.5 due to me bonking at a gas station and I had a Dr. Pepper and a Snickers.

    Sometimes I just need some fig newtons or vitamin water at the gas station.

    Also if you are riding over 3 hours, you should be taking in protein also(I get eggs at a gas station if I have a chance to stop, since protein mix doesn't sit well in the Florida heat in a bottle and bars tend to melt).

    If you want to keep it so you know what the ingredients are- check out www.nomeatathlete.com

    There are some great recipes on there for home made gels and bars(I eat meat, but on the bike you don't usually want meat- so great ideas on here).

    Or, if you want real food- you could take a small baguette with you, some butter, honey and ham in it and snack along the way(sodium, sugar, carbs, protein).

    Just please please please realize that taking your body off of all sugar while riding is detrimental to your improvement.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Denver Metro
    Posts
    834
    Also,

    I do use Nuun for electrolyte source. If my ride is under 2 hours I try to take only water and no food, but each person is different. Weekend hard group rides- I have a drink mix in 1 bottle so I make sure I am getting the needed calories into my system and electrolytes in the other. I may only do 45 miles if I do the short loop but there is a good chance I will have gone through 2 gels by the time I get home.

    But you need to look at where your body is right now and when you start to feel worse- if you feel good and then at 1.5 hours you feel horrible- then you need to start putting nutrients into your body 30 minutes before that point on the next ride and then continue to do it every 30-45 mins or so until you get home.


    Not fueling your body during these rides would be like not putting gas in your car- it can't run without the proper fuel and electrolytes are important but there is more then just that to keep you running

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Location
    TE HQ, Hillsboro, OR
    Posts
    1,879
    Quote Originally Posted by ehirsch83 View Post
    Also if you are riding over 3 hours, you should be taking in protein also(I get eggs at a gas station if I have a chance to stop, since protein mix doesn't sit well in the Florida heat in a bottle and bars tend to melt).
    Have you tried Perpetuem Solids? I love Perpetuem in my bottles on my long rides, but in hot weather, the bottles can get skunky. Perpetuem Solids solves this problem. I can have plain water (or a carb-only mix like Heed) in my bottles, and get some protein from the Solids.
    http://www.hammernutrition.com/produ...solids.ps.html

    Susan
    Susan Otcenas
    TeamEstrogen.com
    See our newest cycling jerseys
    1-877-310-4592

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    Huh. Never heard of that.

    On long unsupported rides I usually stop at a convenient store or Subway for an egg salad or tuna salad sandwich, but on supported rides where there's often no access to food other than the food stops, and they NEVER give you enough protein, I've carried pre-measured Ziploc bags of Perpetuem and mixed them with water as needed. Doesn't take too much room in a jersey pocket.

    I try to avoid soy though - lately I've been making my own with one part Garden of Life Raw Protein Powder to two parts HEED. Got me through the marathon last weekend.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Location
    TE HQ, Hillsboro, OR
    Posts
    1,879
    Quote Originally Posted by OakLeaf View Post
    On long unsupported rides I usually stop at a convenient store or Subway for an egg salad or tuna salad sandwich, but on supported rides where there's often no access to food other than the food stops, and they NEVER give you enough protein, I've carried pre-measured Ziploc bags of Perpetuem and mixed them with water as needed. Doesn't take too much room in a jersey pocket.
    I'm partial to smoked turkey breast sandwiches on long brevets. Usually after 10-12 hours in the saddle, a turkey sandwich goes down REALLY well and gives me the motivation to get back on for the rest of the night. I've done turkey breast on tortillas made at home and eaten after 10-12 hours but will only do that on brevets when temps are in the 40s or lower. Any warmer than that and I buy them at Subway or a grocery deli.

    On PBP I used 40 bottles of Perpetuem, all individually measured and carried in little ziploc baggies just as you described. Takes up less space in my trunk bag than the solids. But for shorter/warmer rides, a few tubes of solids (same size tube as Nuun) in my bento box works really well.
    Susan Otcenas
    TeamEstrogen.com
    See our newest cycling jerseys
    1-877-310-4592

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Posts
    10,889
    Quote Originally Posted by OakLeaf View Post
    Huh. Never heard of that.

    On long unsupported rides I usually stop at a convenient store or Subway for an egg salad or tuna salad sandwich, but on supported rides where there's often no access to food other than the food stops, and they NEVER give you enough protein, I've carried pre-measured Ziploc bags of Perpetuem and mixed them with water as needed. Doesn't take too much room in a jersey pocket.

    I try to avoid soy though - lately I've been making my own with one part Garden of Life Raw Protein Powder to two parts HEED. Got me through the marathon last weekend.
    It seems like my long rides always take me places where there aren't any stores, or anything else outside of corn/soybean fields. Great places to ride, but I have to take everything with me. Probably why I've really not considered any water option outside of my Camelbak - I won't run out of water that way

    Good idea about making your own Oakleaf - I do like HEED...and my long rides are getting long enough to start thinking about something more substantial than HEED. I will check out Garden of Life Protein powder...

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Posts
    8
    I guess I would have died for food if I had only eaten a couple of bananas on that ride. Electrolytes are indeed very helpful and the nutrition suggestions above should be appreciated - but I also wonder what type of clothes you were wearing, which let you heat up so "tragically"... huh. Actually, I never feel so hot when riding, the sweat cools me well. There might be an antibodies supplier which offers applications to study the results of overheating on the immune system. Might be worth a look.
    Last edited by airrace; 05-21-2012 at 11:28 PM.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Columbia, MO
    Posts
    2,041
    Quote Originally Posted by airrace View Post
    I guess I would have died for food if I had only eaten a couple of bananas on that ride. Electrolytes are indeed very helpful and the nutrition suggestions above should be appreciated - but I also wonder what type of clothes you were wearing, which let you heat up so "tragically"... huh. Actually, I never feel so hot when riding, the sweat cools me well.
    I was wearing a jersey & shorts. It wasn't a bike jersey, but it was a tech-t. It was hot & humid. The breeze cools me off on the downhills but there is no breeze going uphill.

    I've taken V8 with me on the last few rides, and it does wonderfully. In fact I wasn't quite so ravenous at the end of the rides as I usually am!

    One of my biking buddies is a pharmacology prof and he looked askance at the 320 mg potassium and 290 mg sodium in one little can of V8, and I drank 4 of them. But I also drank a lot of water, and I sweat A LOT. I think I sweat more than others, certainly more than the people I bike with. So I have to replace more water & electrolytes. Yeah, that's almost 1.2 g of sodium I took in, and maybe I didn't sweat out quite that much, I probably would have been all right with 3 cans. But 4 was not overdoing it.
    2009 Trek 7.2FX WSD, brooks Champion Flyer S, commuter bike

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Posts
    3,176
    Quote Originally Posted by Catrin View Post
    It seems like my long rides always take me places where there aren't any stores, or anything else outside of corn/soybean fields. Great places to ride, but I have to take everything with me...
    *giggle* I just got a funny image of Catrin's bike by the side of the road while she gnaws down a few soybeans in the field.
    Each day is a gift, that's why it is called the present.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    Quote Originally Posted by malkin View Post
    *giggle* I just got a funny image of Catrin's bike by the side of the road while she gnaws down a few soybeans in the field.
    That's not what we use the cornfields for around here.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

 

 

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •