Long distance runs & breakfasts ...
"Don't be afraid your life will end; be afraid it will never begin."
--Grace Hansen
Weight lost: 140 pounds
I don't eat anything before exercise most of the time. I rely on glycogen stores. I'm not positive about this, but I think the more we deplete them, the better they will want to build enough up for the activity we need. I'll look this up, but I think that's the way it works. In my mind, part of training is to get the body to be its best, most efficient machine so that it will carry you through. Maybe I'm wierd, but I don't eat before and almost never drink during. I went the full triathlon without eating before or drinking during, and I do all running races of half marathon or less that way also. Maybe I already have a good capacity for building up glycogen, I don't know. Linn
"Don't be afraid your life will end; be afraid it will never begin."
--Grace Hansen
Weight lost: 140 pounds
Ahhh... Long distance exercising and the associated nutrition... my daily battle. :)
I'm experimenting with all kinds of things. Using gel packs exclusively just don't do it for me and if you had RNY probably won't do it for you either. I can do 1 or 2 during a 5 hour event but anything over that and I spend more time in the porta-pottys then on the course. I've had success with Accelerade drinks because they have a 4 to 1 carb to protein ratio but even with that I have to limit intake.
The trick and our challenge is that we have to train our bodies to ultize protein instead of carbohydrates for energy during long distance exercising. Carbohydrates are 'quick fuel' like paper. You throw paper on a fire and it burns up fast. Protein is like the 'log'. It will burn but it takes a nice fire to get it burning. Also, protein, like the log, is much more efficient fuel. The problem is the fire, which in this example, is our metabolism. HOW do we get the 'fire' hot enough to burn the logs. That my friends is the problem! I can imagine the looks I would get when I pull a baked chicken leg out of my race belt. Heh heh.
What KINDA works for me now is peanut butter but it's just not as 'portable' as I need it to be. I had success during the marathon by eating peanut butter on a bagel before the race. In the second half I hit the wall because of a combination of total exhaustion and dumping from gel packs but I didn't have any gastic explosions for the entire race. I've also dipped a platic spoon into a peanut butter jar and wrapped it with saran wrap and used that as my 'gel' pack on long runs. I'm currently searching for a peanut butter pack tube / gel pack thingie that I can put in my bento box on my bike or in my pocket that's on my race belt. When I was in the Army they gave us MREs that had a squeezable peanut butter packet in it. I'm looking for something a little smaller but I'd settle for anything at this point. The plastic spoon method just isn't going to work as the weather (and distances) in the triathlons increases.
Good luck and if you have any success with anything post them.
Chad
"Don't be afraid your life will end; be afraid it will never begin."
--Grace Hansen
Weight lost: 140 pounds