T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
750.1 | vast quantities | CTCADM::ROTH | If you plant ice you'll harvest wind | Mon Jun 27 1988 13:19 | 27 |
| You'll find it important to really eat a lot, and drink a lot of
liquid.
What happens on a ride of that duration is that you run on carbohydrates
rather than stored muscle glycogen. If you try to ride pretty hard
(or even just cover that distance) you can get low on blood sugar,
yet not feel hungry.
The solution is to eat anyway - food that you're comfortable
with, with an emphasis on carbos, lots of fruit juice, stay away from
fats as you can't use them till it's too late. It's also important
to not change your eating patterns just for the event. I had bad
diahrrea on the 400k in the morning because I tried using a lot of
that Ultra Energy drink for the first time. It's better not to find
that out on the long ride.
Other than that - if you've gotten the miles in this season, some
singles, preferably some back to back days of substantial rides,
you should be all set.
Finally, it'll be normal to start feeling discomfort from being on the
bike for that long. I find that to be motivation to ride faster :-)
Good luck - I felt a sense of accomplishment the first time I rode that
far...
- Jim
|
750.2 | Food...more food1 | UMBIKE::KLASMAN | | Mon Jun 27 1988 13:58 | 36 |
| < Note 750.1 by CTCADM::ROTH "If you plant ice you'll harvest wind" >
-< vast quantities >-
> You'll find it important to really eat a lot, and drink a lot of
> liquid.
> The solution is to eat anyway - food that you're comfortable
> with, with an emphasis on carbos, lots of fruit juice, stay away from
> fats as you can't use them till it's too late. It's also important
> to not change your eating patterns just for the event. I had bad
> diahrrea on the 400k in the morning because I tried using a lot of
> that Ultra Energy drink for the first time. It's better not to find
> that out on the long ride.
I'll second Jim's advice, with another comment about food. I can't tolerate
fruit juice because of the acid, so I've had to find other alternatives. I
too tried an all liquid diet; Ultra-Energy once, a Joe Weider product several
other times. The U-E worked fine but is far too expensive ($4-5 per bike
bottle). The Joe Weider seemed to work well, but failed when I used it for
breakfast instead of my usual pancakes (we're talked incredible diahrrea!).
I've since found that the Joe Weider product works ok if I supplement it with
solid food, i.e., pancakes for breakfast, and continual munching on bagels
during the ride. I haven't had any problems since I've adopted this approach.
(BTW, the Joe Weider product is not made anymore; it had a carbo/protein ratio
of 10/1. I'll have to try something else, whatever I can find at the health
food stores with the highest carbo/protein ratio I can find).
The point to all of this is that high carbo intake is crucial, but there's
probably many (a few?) different ways to accomplish it. As Jim implied, don't
experiment the day of the double. Try whatever you come up with on a long
training ride.
BTW, which double are you doing, the CRW or the Prouty in Lebanon, NH? I'm
planning on doing the Prouty.
Kevin (another veteran of the BMB wars...well, at least 3 out of 4...)
|
750.3 | Good Planning | ASIC::CRITCHLOW | | Mon Jun 27 1988 14:09 | 14 |
| I have never done a double, but on the various singles that I have
done I found out that teh most crucial thing is to keep ahead of your
energy needs. Don't wait until you are hungry to eat. Force yourself to
stop when you feel good and eat then. There will be a LOT less pain this
way. My experience has been that metabolic pain is much more difficult
to overcome than muscular pain.
Keep track of your pace. Choose a good pace to follow and stick to it.
Don't ride 17 for the first 75 miles and then 8 for the rest. Pick the
best pace for you. Save all the energy you can for the end.
Good Luck!
JC
|
750.4 | Good Humor, perhaps? | DR::BLINN | Opus for VEEP in '88 | Wed Jun 29 1988 17:27 | 4 |
| Perhaps you need to get someone with an ice cream truck to
serve as a support vehicle...
Tom
|
750.5 | about 2� worth | BANZAI::FISHER | Keep 'em rollin' | Thu Jun 30 1988 08:26 | 4 |
| Water, food, sunscreen. Hold the IC till after the ride, then have
a double.
ed
|
750.6 | 7 days and counting | JETSAM::HANAUER | Mike... Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Fri Jul 01 1988 13:23 | 10 |
| Wow, thanks all for the great advice.
Feel free to keep it coming -- still have another week till DC day.
Kevin, am doing the CRW Double Century (of course). What is Prouty,
who runs it???
Tom and Ed: I find that I cannot control the Sequoia when
an IceCream stand is within view of the bike.
~Mike
|
750.7 | The Prouty dbl-C is a charity ride | UMBIKE::KLASMAN | | Fri Jul 01 1988 13:38 | 10 |
| < Note 750.6 by JETSAM::HANAUER "Mike... Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream" >
-< 7 days and counting >-
> Kevin, am doing the CRW Double Century (of course). What is Prouty,
> who runs it???
See note 753...my plea for sponsorship, that's apparently fallen upon deaf
ears...how sad.
Kevin
|
750.8 | possible advice | SQUEKE::CROSS | | Wed Jul 06 1988 10:21 | 10 |
| I just got into notes so be tolerant of my mistakes. I'd like to
offer advice to the person who started this note. On the night before
your double eat pasta it's the best food to eat for carbo loading,
as far as drinks go the best thing for your body is water. As said
before watch your pace carefully( i.e. don't go too fast but don't
slow down for other riders). I give this Info. from the experience
of riding from Pittsburge N.H. to tyngsborough MA. ( approx. 219
miles ) in 19 HRS. I was 16 just like to say that it was brutal
in fact when I got to Nashua( I've lived here all my life) I didn't
know where I was. ( hope this helps you through your double )
|
750.9 | Were you one of them? | BANZAI::FISHER | Keep 'em rollin' | Wed Jul 06 1988 10:54 | 6 |
| RE: .8 Were you one of the NHE2E crowd in '83?
(NH End-to-End = 232 miles).
The Support guy in the red van,
ed
|
750.10 | Nashua! Where's that? | AMUN::CRITZ | | Thu Jul 07 1988 09:31 | 8 |
| RE: 750.8
Mr./Ms. Cross (?)
Many people have been to Nashua and not know where they were.
8-)>
Scott (Yup, I live in Nashua)
|
750.11 | SUCCESS and THANKS | JETSAM::HANAUER | Mike... Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Mon Jul 11 1988 18:25 | 14 |
| On Saturday, July 9 I did it, 200 miles; Boston to Orleans and back.
Well, many thanks for all the advice. It was helpful: drank lots
for a few days and had much extra pasta last week. Did NOT use any
of those energy drinks some of you mentioned, especially in the
MS/heat ride note.
There were about 25 of us (including Ed Fisher). Most made it in
spite of the heat and some tough headwinds on route 6A approaching
the Cape Cod Canal on the return (about 150 miles into the day).
The stiffness in the knees is now starting to go away.
~Mike
|