Big Ride Day
This
article (and the ones to follow) were originally written for
Singletrack magazine and the style is somewhat ?relaxed? and ?not
overly serious? so please enjoy reading them, glean the important
information and don?t be too shocked if I rabbit on about a load of
unecessary stuff!
Oh yes, this article was also published in ?Bicycling Australia?.

It goes without saying; there are certain pre-requisites to a
successful day in the saddle. You?ll either know what these are
instinctively, because you?re clever and organised, or like me you?ll
rush out of the back door leaving all manner of important gear on the
table behind you. You might even try to wing it and believe that you?ll
survive ?without tubes? for one day ? you?ll just ride carefully. Yeah
right! Look, we?ve all done it, so if you don?t empathise with me, you
must either be from a different galaxy or you?re exceptionally bright.
Aliens scare me, and so do exceptionally bright people now I come to
think of it.
Forgetting to pack my chain tool is probably the balls-up that
caused me most distress recently, but I did bring my energy food. Not
the ideal tool for the job in hand I admit, but I?d have never made it
back to base without the couple of energy bars I had in my back pocket!
This is what I?m good at ? advising people on how to train and eat
properly. Anyone that knows me understands that ?ongoing bike
maintenance? isn?t really my bag, so I?ll stick to the subjects that I
know and love. That?ll be safer for us all I think?
My brief from Chipps is to talk to the Singletrack readership about
fuelling for a big day out on the bike, what to take with you and how
much of it you should be eating? Being ?Nutritionally Prepared? is what
we call it in the trade.
Actually, the whole fuelling thing starts the day before you ride.
Just as you fill up the fuel tank of your car before a long journey,
the same applies to the human body ? only it?s slower. If it took as
long to fill your car up as it does to load your body with carbohydrate
we?d have a fantastic rail network in this country, because no one
would be arsed to drive anywhere! Carbohydrate is your body?s fuel. You
burn fat and a little bit of protein too, but the amount of
carbohydrate you have on board will ultimately determine whether you
have a good ride or not. This is because you have a finite supply of
carbohydrate and it is used as a catalyst for fat burning too, so when
it?s gone ?everything goes? if you know what I mean? Keen cyclists call
it ?bonking? ? a little word that could quite innocently be mistaken
for meaning something else far more pleasurable.
If you want to have a good ride on Saturday, you?ve got to fuel-up
on Friday. This means that you need to get hold of lots of high
carbohydrate foods and stuff your face all day. It?s great fun and
there?s no reason why you shouldn?t enjoy every minute of it. You need
to keep the fat low though, for two reasons. Firstly, fat slows down
the digestion and absorption of carbohydrate, so you won?t fuel-up as
quickly and secondly, you don?t need fat, you?ve got loads of it (even
if you?re really skinny).

So what kinds of things should you be buying in? Obviously, your
main meals should be pasta, rice or potato based. Pulses like beans,
lentils, peas and chickpeas are often forgotten. Try to go high on
these things and lower on the sauces and that?ll tip the meal more
towards carbohydrate and away from fat. In other words, loads of
spaghetti and a bit of bolognaise rather than the other way round.
Make a point of snacking too. Look at the packaging on the products
you throw into your trolley, because by law there needs to be a
nutritional panel on every product. Per 100g, you want to go as high in
carbohydrate and as low in fat as possible. You?re basically looking at
the contrast between the two. Dry stuff is usually the best ? things
like cinema-style popcorn and flavoured rice cakes. In the biscuit
department, they?re all high in fat, so avoid them like the plague,
however Jaffa Cakes are OK, but are they a biscuit or are they a cake?
Whatever ? they?re OK anyway. In the bakery department, one of my
favourites is the Chelsea Bun, Malt Loaf and Scotch Pancakes with
Raisins. Bananas are king obviously and the same goes for dried fruit.
What you MUST do though is drink lots of water. For every gram of
carbohydrate you want to store, you need 3 grams of water. Things like
pasta and rice take care of themselves, because they contain lots of
water, but your dry snacks won?t. They?ll make you thirsty anyway, but
this often isn?t enough, so you?re better to drink a bit too much. If
you?re not having a regular pee, you?re not having enough water, simple
as that.

If your big ride is really important to you, you can do a proper
carbo-loading thing. The most convincing research to date suggests that
24 hours before your ride, you take a little spin out on your bike to
warm up and then ride as hard as you possibly can for 3 minutes. As
hard as you can? In laypersons terms, with 10 seconds of your 3-minute
interval to go, you should have successfully satisfied the following
criteria:
1) Breathing - extremely heavy.
2) Legs ? extremely hurting.
3) Posture ? hanging over the bars.
4) Dribble ? on the front tyre.
5) Dignity ? barely intact.
You get the idea? On completion, immediately down an energy drink
containing one gram of carbohydrate per Kg of bodyweight and proceed to
eat lots of high carb things all day as we?ve already discussed. The
TORQ moto is ?eat today for tomorrow? so getting it right the day
before is by far the most important part of surviving a big ride.
So you?ve stuffed your face all day, roll into bed, sleep many hours
of deep restful kip and are woken gently by the playful twitterings of
the little birds outside your bedroom window. You pull back the
curtains, the sun splashes it?s magical sunny rays all over your smiley
face. ?It?s BIG RIDE DAY? you holler and the wheels are set in motion
for Nutritional Management Procedure B.
B is for ?Breakfast?.
It may not come as a huge surprise to you, but you?ll be in need of
high carbohydrate fodder again! This time though, you need to be a bit
more scientific. One doesn?t simply stuff ones face, one needs to
choose foods that have moderate to low Glycaemic Index (GI). These are
carbohydrates that take quite some time to get into your bloodstream,
provide a steady supply of carbohydrate and don?t evoke a large insulin
response. High GI foods will send your blood glucose sky high and then
drop you like a stone, which can leave you feeling lethargic, dazed and
confused! My favourite pre-BIG RIDE breakfast is beans on toast
(wholemeal bread). This is very high in carbohydrate, but will fuel you
for a long time. Museli is great, but try pouring fresh orange juice
over it instead of milk, it?s nicer than you?d think. Porridge is a
classic, but don?t cook it for too long. If you keep the oats a bit
husky they?ll fuel you for longer.
As you?re leaving the house, don?t forget your chain tool. Trust me,
it?ll ruin your BIG RIDE if you knacker your chain and have to hike for
miles to get to civilisation. You should seriously consider some energy
food too. Good energy products are formulated to be exceptionally low
in fat and high in carbohydrate, so tick all the boxes when it comes to
trail fuel. As a rule, you should be looking at consuming one gram of
carbohydrate per Kg of body weight per hour. It sounds a lot more
technical than it is. If you weigh 70kg, you need 70g of carbohydrate
per hour. Most commercially available 65g energy bars contain 40-45g of
carbohydrate and an energy drink mixed at 6% will give you 60 grams of
carbohydrate per litre. Take the time to do a few calculations before
you go and it won?t be long before it?s second nature.
This is all pretty darn serious isn?t it? Making calculations?
Where?s the romance? Ok, that?s as technical as it?s going to get, but
trust me, Mountain Biking is far more romantic when you?re shoes don?t
feel like they?re full of heavy metal, you retain some dignity in the
?on the bike posture? department? and you?re not huffing and puffing
out of every conceivable orifice. I?ve said it before and I?ll say it
again, you can take these ramblings as seriously as you want. If I tell
you what it takes (in fitness terms of course) to build a Ferrari, you
can always water it down if you?re satisfied with the performance of a
Subaru Impreza. Better to be either of these than some lard-eating
vintage traction engine

Or even better ? the TORQ-tuned Honda?
There?s one more thing to note. Make sure you get the fluid/food
balance right. You need your gram of carbs per kg bodyweight per hour ?
that?s a given. On cooler days, a combination of drinks and snacks
works fine. However, on hot and humid days where dehydration is an
issue, you should be getting the majority of this energy through drinks
rather than solids. This ensures that you get the fluid you need.
Research has shown that you get a 5% drop in performance for every 1%
of body weight you lose through dehydration.
If you?re not going to take ?energy food? per se and you want to
grab something suitable from the garage on the way to the meet-up
point, just go for low fat and high carbs and make sure you bring
plenty of water. Solids mixed with water work really well, because they
essentially mix in your stomach to make a sort of energy soup anyway.
Go for cereal bars or flapjacks that are as low in fat as possible.
Wine gums (in fact any kind of chewy fruity sweet) can be used to fuel
you if you maintain a regular intake. I don?t want to be encouraging
sweet eating, but they do the job nicely.
Finally, we?re onto the subject of recovery. You?ve had a great day,
you?ve felt the dogs b*!!*ks, but next day you don?t want to feel like
someone?s smashed your thighs with a rubber mallet and fed you with
?feel unbelievably sleepy even when you?re supposed to be concentrating
at this very important meeting at work? tablets. There are two schools
of thought here. There?s the ?Sod it, I?ve ridden my arse off all day
and spent all of yesterday loading up on carbs, so I?m going to neck a
beer and have a pizza? approach. I can?t knock it, because I?ve done it
too many times, but suffice to say, if you want to avoid a rubber
malleting and potential loss of important career, there is another way.
Research has shown that a 3:1 mix of carbohydrate and protein within
15 minutes of finishing exercise works wonders. Again, the carbohydrate
needs to be 1g per kg of body weight and the protein adjusted
accordingly. All good recovery drinks work to this formulation, but
ideally look for one with whey protein, because this is the quickest
acting and most effective. If you?re Vegan, there are some non-dairy
options out there too.
If you?d rather go down the non-energy product route, then your best
option would be to get something like a jacket potato with tuna wolfed
down as soon as you can. This should give you close to the 3:1
Carbohydrate:Protein ratio that?s desirable. It?s difficult to eat
something like this without putting mayo on the tuna or butter on the
potato though, and again the fat in these additions will dull the
effect. It?s also difficult to prepare a meal like this in such a short
space of time, but I?m sure it can be done, especially if you?ve got a
devoted partner? You know, the one who says ?Go out and ride your bike
or as long as you want darling? and ?Don?t come back until you?re ready
and if you?re passing the bike shop, here?s my credit card ? treat
yourself?.
So I?m hoping you now have a slightly deeper understanding of
nutritional preparation, fuelling and recovery strategies after a big
ride? Either that, or you?ve learnt that Matt Hart says ?It?s ok to
have beer and pizza?. Whatever you?ve gleaned from this, I hope it
works for you?
By the way, if you like the look of the pictures in this article, perhaps you could book in for one of our guided rides around the Long Mynd in Shropshire.
© Matt Hart. TORQ 2008

|