disneygpa
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2018
- Messages
- 797
Since this was probably pushed a bit too hard, be sure to take the next few workouts very very easy.
Will do!!!
I'm looking forward to taking it easy for the next few day!
Since this was probably pushed a bit too hard, be sure to take the next few workouts very very easy.
I can't get 17 oz in, in 15 min. @DopeyBadger Billy, how critical is the 15 min window? Can I stretch that to maybe 25 min?
Also ran into a little problem at 5 miles. After downing that much Maurten/water I needed to relieve myself!
I can't remember the research article off-hand. If I remember correctly, the further it gets from race start the less it is treated like in-race nutrition. So I think the valuable part of it is that it's like you're consuming on the run, but your body isn't yet focusing on running. So it's easier to consume a large portion.
I find the inability to drink 17oz of liquid in 15 min or less intriguing though. Have you never slammed a drink of any kind? When I drink the Maurten, I usually consume the whole 17oz in 60 seconds or less.
It's a good thing to practice even on non-nutrition days. Just try drinking 17oz of water instead of Maurten on some of your runs to practice finding the right timing for you. I know for me, I don't drink anything within 2 hours of the last time I can use the restroom, and then drink the Maurten within 15 min to start. Drinking that close to the start of running minimizes the chance the liquid makes it to the bladder by race start. So see what you can figure out for your own personal timing.
Before I had my bariatric sleeve procedure 2.5 years ago, guzzling 17 oz would have been a piece of cake. I can't slam any kind of drink now. It's one of the things I've learned to live with. I drink constantly, just not a lot at one time. Hydration is one of the things they stress prior to surgery. They make it clear that it's difficult to "catch up" if you fall behind on hydration because you just can't put things in that quickly. I'm better now than right after surgery however, I'll probably have to make sure I am completely on empty to accomplish this. 17 oz is about the max I can put in(that's about the size of my stomach now) but if I tried to guzzle it, it would come right back out. I'll work on the 15 min timing... Maybe I can manage it with practice and better food timing.
I know for the race days, the restroom issue is somewhat mitigated by the sani-cans along the route. It's really only an issue on my training runs because of the lack of public restrooms/businesses along my run route. I'll give the no liquids 2 hours before a try and drinking as much as I can right before a run.
Well that would explain it for sure. I'd say test out different timings and dosing methodologies to find what works best for you. The beauty of starting now is you've still got 11 weeks to figure it out.
One thing for sure is I'm going to have to give up my afternoon snack when I get home. I've been having a piece of toast with peanut butter 30 min or so before my normal runs. Last night was a little different because I ran later in the evening.
Goal will be to not have the snack and try and get in 17 oz of fluid 15 min prior to leaving the house for a run. I really think the key is going to be, making sure my tummy is completely empty.
@DopeyBadger Billy, I was going to save this for my trainer but I'll probably forget by then. How long is stretching effective for? For example, if I finish stretching at 4pm but don't start my run until 5pm is the stretching doing any good? I'm just wondering how it'll work for the races? I'm sure that laying down in the corral's is probably frowned upon, and I'm not sure using my foam roller in the corrals would be any better. So, If I stretch at 4am for a 5:30am start, does it really do any good? What do you do for stretching when you have long waits in the corrals? Thanks!!