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Butcher's Dog! Regular
outdoor fitness tips from the canine on creatine. Cold wet
nose and glossy coat guaranteed.
What To Eat For
Breakfast!
Lard or carbs? Full fried or not
fried? At first it looks kind of obvious, fat provides nine
calories per gramme, whereas carbohydrate or protein provide
four calories per gramme. So you need loads of fat right?
Er, wrong. The problem with fat is that it takes ages to
digest and, in the process, slows your ability to digest
anything else you take in efficiently.
When sports experts talk about 'fat
burning', they mean the fat that's already stored in the
body - on average enough to run at five-minute mile pace for
almost 24 hours. But fat that's in the process of being
digested is a waste of space, so rule one - stay away from
the full-fried breakfast. That doesn't mean no fat, but
don't go for the full sausages, bacon, black pudding et al
experience unless you want to spend the rest of the day
digesting it. One peripheral point, fried eggs actually
contain less fat than scrambled.
Slow Burn Carbos With Toast Please
The best basis for a day out is a load of carbohydrate,
preferably slow burn, complex ones, so load up with a bucket
full of cereal or mesli and whole grain toast with jam.
Porridge is a really excellent way of getting slow burn
carbs in, though not to everyone's taste, particularly at
altitude, where appetite tends to be suppressed. Something
like jam on toast combines slow burn carbos from the bread
with faster burn, easy access stuff from the jam, aka sugar.
Finish off with a banana if you're in the mood.
It's not thaty simple, of course, when is
it ever? Different high carbohydrate foods have different
glycemic indexes, which means that they get banged into the
muscles faster or slower. Baked potatoes are high, quick
absorption, so good for immediate post-exercise snacks,
particularly with a protein filling, bananas are medium,
apples are low, so take longer to be absorbed.
On The Mountain The same rules
apply, but you might find it easier to start with an energy
bar
Drinkees Tea or coffee? Ideally
neither, although if you need you caffeine, you need it. But
be aware that both are diuretics, so you're likely to
aggravate overnight dehydration even more - not ideal.
Better option is some sort of herbal or fruit tea - lemon
and ginger i s nice - and lots of straight water. Fruit
juice is too concentrated to be absorbed quickly so mix it
at least 50/50 with water.
So there you go. Me, I'm a dog so I'll
stick to Boneo and Pedd' Chum ta very much, but for you lot,
cereal, toast, jam and loads of water maybe some mushrooms
and eggs are the way to go.
Woof!
The Butcher's Dog
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