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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Michigan
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    477
    When I would commute on hot (90* + days) I would wet my hair and jersey down before I left. I usually do not like to commute on very hot days though. My commute is 16 miles. Always drink a lot of water even before you ride, that seemed to help me too.

    I would drink water constantly throughout my workday, for my long commute home.
    2012 Trek Lexa SL
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  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Columbia, MO
    Posts
    2,041
    I read an article about the physiology of adapting to heat. It involves an increase in your blood volume-- to compensate for the blood being shunted to the periphery which is part of the cooling mechanism. In very athletic people it's a matter of days, otherwise it can be weeks.

    Loading up on the water might do more harm because you dilute sodium & potassium. I don't know if shot blocks have potassium and might not have enough sodium for the rides you are doing.

    I was very upset Monday night. After 60-80 miles a day for Bike Across Kansas, I came home and tried to do a one-hour evening ride. I nearly throw up. We didn't actually have much heat last week in Kansas, oddly enough.
    2009 Trek 7.2FX WSD, brooks Champion Flyer S, commuter bike

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Posts
    10,889
    Quote Originally Posted by Melalvai View Post
    I read an article about the physiology of adapting to heat. It involves an increase in your blood volume-- to compensate for the blood being shunted to the periphery which is part of the cooling mechanism. In very athletic people it's a matter of days, otherwise it can be weeks.

    Loading up on the water might do more harm because you dilute sodium & potassium. I don't know if shot blocks have potassium and might not have enough sodium for the rides you are doing.

    I was very upset Monday night. After 60-80 miles a day for Bike Across Kansas, I came home and tried to do a one-hour evening ride. I nearly throw up. We didn't actually have much heat last week in Kansas, oddly enough.
    I think I read the same article and that makes sense. I've certainly ridden longer distances in recent weeks in similar temps - though for those rides the temps were rapidly rising, it wasn't already at the high point for the day. While I got hot on those rides, I didn't get sick to my stomach. Shot blocks do have potassium (I am pretty sure at least, and the Hammer Heed does) and I had the Margarita blocks which have double the sodium of the regular blocks.

    Good food for thought, every season is a learning experience! Thankfully I hope to be on the trails this weekend, it is so much more comfortable to be in the woods when it is hot

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Utah
    Posts
    532
    Quote Originally Posted by Melalvai View Post
    I read an article about the physiology of adapting to heat. It involves an increase in your blood volume-- to compensate for the blood being shunted to the periphery which is part of the cooling mechanism. In very athletic people it's a matter of days, otherwise it can be weeks.
    If anyone has a link to that article I would love to read it.

    I always have a very difficult time with the heat. Went on a club ride this morning in what I'm sure was 90+ degree weather (at least towards the end) and my jersey basically stayed dry because any sweat immediately evaporated (I knew I was sweating because my face tasted very salty). It was so dry and windy it felt like riding in an oven. As we were nearing the end of the ride I noticed my heart rate was hovering in zone 5 and just wouldn't come down, even though it was a flat ride with lots of tailwind in the 2nd half. I'm sure all the soot in the air from the fires wasn't helping either. I was squirting water on me to try & cool down, and finally cried uncle when we got back to the starting point - asked hubby to come get me so I wouldn't have to climb the hill to get home. If I lived in a humid climate I don't know that I would be riding at all.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Posts
    10,889
    Quote Originally Posted by Muirenn View Post
    What is your helmet like? Is it lightweight and vented? Just one or the other? Or neither?

    Is your hair damp with sweat at the end of a ride? Can you feel any air getting to your scalp when you ride?
    This is the helmet I ride on the road - it is a UVEX mtb helmet. The color is different but I think it is just last year's version - it doesn't seem overly heavy and has bug netting on the front vents. I have a more robust mtb helmet for trail riding.

    I can't seem to remember feeling any air getting to my scalp, but my hair wasn't drenching wet when I got home last night - though generally is at the back of my neck. I will pay more attention to this,

    Quote Originally Posted by Trek-chick View Post
    When I would commute on hot (90* + days) I would wet my hair and jersey down before I left. I usually do not like to commute on very hot days though. My commute is 16 miles. Always drink a lot of water even before you ride, that seemed to help me too.

    I would drink water constantly throughout my workday, for my long commute home.
    Good idea about doing that before you leave the office. So far I've not commuted in very hot temps as the one day I commute is my short, 4 hour day (I work 4 nine hour days and 1 four), which means I am typically home between 12:30-1:00. My ride home is close to the distance you ride, and features more climbing than the flat/downhill, and shorter, route to work.

    The almost-nausea started almost immediately after getting on the bike, it may have been hotter than I realized. With the low humidity it just didn't FEEL that hot.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    I was going to suggest sodium but Mel beat me to it.

    Nausea is the #1 symptom I get when I'm not getting enough sodium. For me, though, it persists throughout the day (and will go on and get worse for as many days as it takes for me to figure it out and drop a few Zenergize tablets or whatever ), so I'd still wonder in your case whether it wasn't simple overheating.

    I know people who keep water bottles in the freezer, so they'll thaw and provide cool water as they ride.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Posts
    10,889
    I've been experimenting with something called "Salt Stick", they are in capsules like Enduroytes but are said to have a better nutritional profile. I had intended on taking one before the ride, and will try this next time.

    It may well have simply been hotter than I realized and was tricked by the low humidity. Usually, however, that kind of problem presents in the latter half of the ride not the first...and I felt much better by the end of the ride.

    Good thoughts everyone, and thanks!

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    Whitmore Lake, Michigan
    Posts
    920
    For me, an hour after eating would be too soon to ride. In addition to the weather it could be that also, as you said you felt better toward the end of your ride. I've had the same thing happen if I tried to ride too soon after eating and it makes me feel queasy. If I take it easy I find that as the ride progresses I feel better and can ride stronger.

    This happens wether it is warm or cold. So now I only snack before a ride and have a regular meal afterwards. If I know I want to ride in the evening I'll take a late lunch. For me the heat only exacerbates the whole thing.
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  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    northern Virginia
    Posts
    5,897
    How long was the ride? If I wasn't on vacation, I would have gone for a 90 minute ride last night. I never drink more than usual or eat anything special before an evening ride on a hot day. I do bring two water bottles with me to drink during the ride, but it's just water. I eat half a sandwich (probably ~350-400 calories, in some cases) about 2 hours before the ride, because it's my usual afternoon snack (I eat 1/2 sandwich for lunch the other 1/2 sandwich for snack).

    If I ate dinner an hour before a ride (or any exercise) I'd probably wind up with stomach cramps.

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  10. #10
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Posts
    10,889
    hmmm, didn't think about food perhaps being the problem. It was a 90 minute ride. I eat an hour before riding all the time, and now that I think about it, it was just a little heavier than my usual pre-ride meals and, of course it was hot.

    I ALWAYS eat before exercise as it helps to keep my blood sugar stable; the diabetes may have been reversed but I've always had problems with low blood sugar without fueling beforehand (it's dropped as low as 29). 2 hours is too long a wait for me. My body is normally fine with 1 hour but perhaps it was a combination of different food than usual and the heat.This makes sense - I probably would have been fine with a banana/PB sammy or something like that.

    I remember my first ride as a stoker last month on a day where the temps were similar, and I had eaten an entire 2 hours before. The ride was only 24 miles but I was bonking at the end, thankfully I wasn't alone and we ended at a restaurant. Unsure why I didn't have anything with me, I always do, but things worked out.
    Last edited by Catrin; 06-21-2012 at 10:17 AM.

 

 

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