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Eating for Endurance: Strategies for Extraordinary Runners
By Nancy Clark, MS, RD March/April 2005 For the Washington Running Report
Some of us are just ordinary mortals. We enjoy a daily 3-mile
run, work out at the gym for 45 minutes, participate in an
occasional 10K. Others of us are extraordinary athletes --
runners preparing for a marathon, triathletes in training for an
Ironman (2.4 mile swim, 112 mile bike, 26.2 mile run), ultra-
marathoners spending hours running up and down hills in
preparation for a mountain race. As a sports nutritionist, I
marvel at the number of runners who push themselves to the
limit. But I am dismayed at how many fail to make nutrition an
integral part of their training program. They get their training
down pat but miss an important link--fueling well. My job is to
help these athletes optimize their eating despite their busy
lifestyle. If you have high expectations from your body, this
article can help you fuel at your best, so you can train at your
best, so you can compete at your best. The information can also
help ordinary exercisers who struggle to find energy to simply
survive this marathon called life.Tip #1. Make eating an integral part of your training
program, not an afterthought. By practicing fueling your body
during exercise (as you will be doing during your endurance
event), your intestinal tract will learn to manage food while
you run. This means less diarrhea, fewer pit stops, more
comfort, better performance. Experiment with different foods and
fluids to determine what ones settle best: Gatorade or iced tea
with honey? Energy bars or gummy bears? Dried fruit or gels?
Consuming 200 to 300 carbohydrate-calories per hour of exercise
enhances stamina and endurance. Learn how to do it! Some runners
believe commercial sports foods are better than natural foods.
They are better only if they taste better and digest better. But
sometimes, they cause intestinal problems. (Many runners
complain gels cause diarrhea.) During training, develop a menu
of tried-and-true foods that digest well and taste good. This
food may be the most pleasant part of your exercise experience;
choose it wisely! Also think about the "taste bud burn out"
factor. That is, how many gels per hour can you endure in a
triathlon? Will you get "sugared-out" on sports drink during the
marathon? Think about v-a-r-i-e-t-y. Tip #2. Schedule time to food shop, so you can optimize
your daily food intake. All too often, in the midst of juggling
work, family, friends, sleep, and training, endurance athletes
find no time to plan meals and shop for (or otherwise obtain) a
well balanced sports diet. The result: yet-another donut for
breakfast, cookie for lunch, vending machine snack, and a
fast 'n fatty meal that fills the stomach but leaves muscles
poorly fueled. Muscles need carbohydrates for fuel: GrapeNuts,
oatmeal, granola, bagels, fruit, juice, hearty breads, bean
burritos, spaghetti. Your job is to eat carbs evenly throughout
the day (as opposed to skimping on meals by day, then gorging on
treats at night). By having breakfast, a mid-morning snack,
lunch, and an afternoon snack, you'll have steady energy all
day, without lags. Make time to develop an eating strategy that
fits your training schedule. For example, one triathlete devised
this routine: he drank a tall glass of juice (i.e., carbs)
before his morning swim, refueled afterwards with breakfast in
his car while commuting to work (big bagel with peanut butter,
milk in a travel mug, banana); ate a hot dinner at noon (from
the cafeteria at work). At noon, he also bought his afternoon
snack (muffin, juice) and his evening meal (turkey sub, yogurt);
he kept these in the office refrigerator. This program prevented
the evening "junk eating" that happened when no healthful food
was conveniently waiting for him once he finished his second
workout of the day and was too ravenous to cook. Tip #3. Erase the thought, "I'm lazy if I take a day
off." Taking a rest day is being smart, not lazy! Rest days are
essential to not only reduce the risk of injury and provide
muscles with time to refuel, but allow time for you to food shop
(and even cook a big pot of chili for the week, if so inclined).
Performance improves when you do quality exercise, not excessive
quantity of exercise. Yet, too many long distance runners,
feeling overwhelmed by their impending tasks, fill every
possible minute with (sometimes poor quality) training. They
become exhausted, if not sick. Take note: You have a better
chance of beating your competitors if you enter the event well
rested, not overtrained. Don't be one to lament, "I wish I had
rested more before my event." Tip #4. Consult with a sports dietitian who can tell
you: how many calories you need to fuel-up, fuel during, and
refuel after your workouts, how many grams of protein you need
to build and repair muscles, how many protein bars (if any) you
need. This "food coach" will create a personal fueling plan that
prevents (or delays) fatigue and optimizes recovery. To find a
sports dietitian, put your zip code into the referral network at
www.eatright.org. Tip #5. Monitor your urine to be sure you are drinking
enough fluids on a daily basis. You should be urinating
frequently (every two to four hours); the urine should be light
colored, like lemonade. Smelly, dark urine signals dehydration.
Bad. To help you drink more, keep a quart of ice water on your
desk or juice boxes in your car. During training, learn your
sweat rate: weigh yourself naked before and after an hour-long
run during which you consume no fluid. For each one pound of
sweat lost, you need to rehydrate with at least 16 ounces of
fluid. For example, if you lose two pounds (32 oz.) during an
hour of race-pace training in weather similar to that
anticipated on race day, your target race day fluid intake
should be at least 32 ounces per hour (8 ounces every 15
minutes). Tip #6. Be flexible. Tastes change during exhausting
exercise. Tired athletes commonly resort to sweets and "junk,"
but that can be OK as long as the fuel settles well. Even
lackluster treats can delay fatigue and provide comfort when you
need it the most! Many an ultra-runner swears by his Coke and
Twinkies. [Editor notes:Twinkies celebrates its 75th year]
Nancy Clark, MS, RD offers personal nutrition consultations to
endurance athletes and ordinary mortals at Healthworks, (617)
383-6100, the premier fitness center in Chestnut Hill MA. Her
Sports Nutrition Guidebook ($23) and Food Guide for Marathoners
($20) are available via www.nancyclarkrd.com or by sending a check
to Sports Nutrition Services, PO Box 650124, West Newton MA
02465.
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