You’ve
started your training for the Cycle for Shelter- you have the right riding
equipment for the ride but is your body nutritionally
equipped for the next few months of training and the ultimate event? Yes? No? Well pull up a chair – my name is
Pat Bebo, I am a registered and licensed dietitian/
nutritionist in MA and I will try to guide you along a path that will provide
you with adequate nutrition during training, ample fuel for the ride and a
short, hopefully painless recovery afterward.
Let’s get started today!
§
Resource: Hegmann,
Jenny, Nutrition for a Century or Double;
www.ultracycling.com, accessed
3/26/06.
§ Your daily training diet is an important component of your overall training regimen. A cyclist training for a century ride should derive 55-65 percent of their total calories from high quality carbohydrates. This will allow you to prevent chronic glycogen depletion, train better and then ride better the day of the event and continue eating your usual foods pre-event to limit any digestive upset that may occur from a change in diet.
§
Excellent
sources of carbohydrates include whole grains, fruits, vegetables and
legumes. Protein is important should not
be the focus of the diet approximately 15% of calories should come from high
quality protein in the form of lean meats, seafood, poultry and low-fat dairy
products. This amount of protein will
enable your muscles to adequately repair themselves during training. Finally fat would comprise no more than 30%
of your daily caloric intake mostly in the form of unsaturated fat from
vegetables oils and lowfat protein sources.
§
A
day’s menu should be comprised of breakfast, lunch, dinner and three snacks.
According to Hegmann’s
article there are three tasks you must complete during your months of training
for your ride.
More
information may be found in the Cyclist’s Food Guide by Nancy Clark, MS, RD and
Jenny Hegmann,
Over the
next several months I will answer your questions and give more information
about the food and fluid that will fuel your ride in July.
Happy
riding!
Pat Bebo
MS, RD, LDN