fashionista311
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2009
- Messages
- 654
Hi! This is my first post! I did the Princess half earlier this year - it was my first!! Unfortunately, I did not get to enjoy the excitement of finishing. I started feeling a little "out of it" around mile 11. After the race, I couldn't eat (very unusual for me!). In less than an hour, I had a horrible headache and vomitted the entire day. I have never been so sick. My husband nearly took me to the ER.
TRAINING: I live in NC, so the weather was never very hot during my training. I drank a powerade/water mix and would sometimes have a serving of sportsbeans if I was going to be doing a really long walk/run. Never had any trouble.
RACE DAY: I drank water at every stop (but not the powerade) and had one pack of sports beans (which I spread out over a few miles). My time was 3:23, so it was pretty hot by the time I finished.
Did I deplete of something?? What can I do to prevent this from happening again. I am going to do the Princess half in 2012, but I am terribly afraid of the same fate. Any ideas?? Thank you so much!!
Well if you are taking in food/gels (gu, cliff blocks, sport beans, whatevers) the sport drink on course really isn't necessary...if you google you can find exact formulas for your body weight, but the general rule of thumb is around 100 cals/per hour for workouts lasting longer than 90 mins. Now with the sport beans...remember you need an entire packet to give you those 100 cals. I used to use them myself, and then ran into problems with nutrition in my first full marathon because I wasn't eating enough. Nowadays, my personal tragedy is 3 shot blocks around mile 6..but I usually finish in around 2 hours, give or take a few mins. For a 3+ hour finish, I would refuel twice, maybe even a third time toward the end if you felt you needed it (about once an hr)
Also be careful with the sport drink on the course...basically large races dump an entire thing of water, then the powder, and then mix it up in a garbage bag. It's pretty easy for them to get the ratio wrong, and if the gatorade is too strong it can make you sick (especially if you have a sensitive stomach) , and if it's too weak you can be missing key ingredients.
But my guess is that you pushed the pace too hard for the weather conditions and you ended up with some heat sickness. Happens to the best of us.
A heart rate monitor is also a great tool for training/racing in the heat. Maintaining your usual pace is much more difficult in hot conditions than cool so it can be fickle...but your heart rate doesn't lie
Finally just because last year was warm, this year might be chilly...it's Florida at the end of February, the weather can really be anything!
Good luck...I bet you will rock it this time around!