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Feb 2010 Triathlon News | Jan
2010 Triathlon News | Archived
Triathlon News | Subscribe to News
TRIATHLON AND MULTISPORT
NEWS - February 2010
FINISHING THE SEASON OFF WELL
With the second half of the downunder season well
and truly in full swing, a light at the end of
the tunnel is visable. Less then 6 weeks till
Mooloolaba and Ironman Australia, with plenty
of races for all levels to do between. It's never
too late to work towards having that stand out
race. Doing the little things add up and will
separate you from the rest of your competition.
Things like keeping on top of your daily nutition,
body maintenance, core stretngth work or yoga
and deep water running will all go towards making
you a better and stronger more resilient athlete.
Train smart to race well
Nick Croft
nick@multisportconsultants.com
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NOOSA IRONMAN CAMP
February 16-21
Our Noosa Ironman Camp has attracted 16 athletes
of all levels. Travelling from as far away as
DARWIN and HONG KONG the campers will take in
a solid block of training over 6, 4 or 3 day packages.
With 5 clinics within the camp covering Nutrition,
Yoga, Body maintenance / injury prevention, and
Sports Psychology plus the training in and around
one the best environments in the triathlon world
the camp will provide a great platform for the
athletes attending the up coming events of Ironman
China and Ironman Australia or for those just
looking on taking on a great training challenge
and see what the Ironman training world is all
about.
Zipp Wheels will be holding a short clinic on
the Saturday morning and giving campers to chance
ask questions about race wheels and latest technology
with a opportunity to demo race wheels on a set
training ride.
The Noosa tri club are conducting a half Ironman
training event on the Sunday - the final day of
the camp which wil be a great time to trial race
nutrition / race pace / and new equipment and
clothes
CUSTOM CAMP BALLARAT
MSC held a custom camp on the weekend on January
30-31. A enthusiastic crew from the local region
joined in to make the 2 day camp a memorable one.
Some of the locals are gearing up for Ironman
Australia at the end of March with the remainder
looking at half Ironman and Olympic distance racing.
Thanks to Noosa tri organisrs USM, Le Cyclo Sportif
and Enervit for assisting with some content for
camp kits and great random draw prizes and to
Jess for all her input and hard work over the
weekend.
Camp Sponsors Finalised for 2010
Tineli Performance Wear have become the
presenting sponsor for the 2010 series of Noosa
Training Camps. Tineli will supply team clothing
for the MSC including the team bike kit, tri suit
and cmap staff clothing.
Silver sponsors for the camps are
AUSSIE Home Loans (Chapel Hill Briabane)
ZIPP and SRAM
LE CYCLO SPORTIF Noosa
ALLEZ SPORT Mooloolaba
Product Sponsor is ENERVIT Nutrition
Thanks also to product sponsors Cooroy Mountain
Spring Water and Q-Daily
As a special offer 'Aussie Tom Mewing' is offering
MSC members a free home loan health check.
Just email tom.mewing@aussie.com.au
your loan amount, loan rate or repayments and
property value. By simply sending him these details
he will send you a $100 voucher to the shop of
your choice and an full analysis of your loan
comparing it to thousands of loans for various
lenders.
If a loan application is lodged you will receive
a further $100 voucher and at settlement another
$100 voucher. $300 of gift vouchers plus a better
home loan. A win/win deal!
Health Tips - from Naturopath Margaret
Hepburn
CHANGE YOUR SALT. Instead of using ordinary supermarket
salt, buy unrefined sea salt from a health food
store and use a little to provide essential minerals
and to balance fluid in the body. Use a daily
taste test in hot, humid weather: add a pinch
of salt to a glass of water – if it tastes
very salty don’t drink it; if it tastes
barely salty – drink it. Avoid excessive
salt. To flavour food try fresh, chopped herbs,
herb salt (such as Dr Vogel’s Herbamare
or Kelpamare), or gomasio: sesame seeds ground
with sea salt.
REDUCE COFFEE AND TEA. Try coffee 50/50 with
substitutes like Ecco or Nature’s Cuppa.
Try Yannoh, a traditional Japanese coffee substitute.
If you can’t do without the taste of coffee,
have two or three cups of freshly percolated coffee
a week, as it does have some health benefits in
small quantities. Reduce black tea and use green
tea and herbal teas. Green tea is a very healthy
addition to any diet, but when having herbal teas,
do not use the same herb all the time as herbs
have medicinal action, e.g. excessive dandelion
can overstimulate the liver. Some herbs can cause
adverse reactions or interact with medication,
so if in doubt about safe herbs to use, seek professional
advice.
EAT A PROPER BREAKFAST. Good energy for the day
does not come from processed packet cereals! Have
a variety of whole grains, not just wheat, and
preferably with protein. Try cooked brown rice
with walnuts, sunflower seeds, coconut milk, cinnamon
and sultanas; buckwheat or rice with pumpkin seeds,
sesame seeds, tamari, parsley and chives; polenta
or quinoa with poached eggs and steamed spinach;
Super Porridge with oats, crushed almonds, brazils,
walnuts, a few chopped dates and dried apricots
soaked overnight in apple juice and eaten raw
or cooked; a protein shake with eggs or yoghurt,
banana, dates, a teaspoon each of brewers yeast
and molasses.
Eating only fruit until lunch is a good cleansing
breakfast if you have over-eaten the night before,
but if you regularly have a fruit breakfast, follow
it with protein within an hour, e.g. pawpaw, banana
and strawberries, followed by eggs, or yoghurt,
cottage cheese or quark, or soaked nuts such as
almonds, walnuts, macadamias and hazel nuts, or
seed and nut puree (almonds, sunflower and sesame
seeds soaked overnight, drained and blended with
fresh water). Protein for breakfast is good to
stimulate brain function for school or work during
the day. Have protein, such as fish, meat or chicken,
with salad for lunch, then a starchy meal at night
(e.g. grains and vegetables) as starches stimulate
serotonin, which makes us relaxed.
Determining Sweat Rate
The goal is to see exactly how much dehydration you incur
during your workout and in turn, determine your
hourly fluid replacement needed for rehydration.
1. Empty you bladder and record you weight (nude or swim suit)
2. Pre-exercise weight = ___________ lbs.(A)
3. Do your usual workout, and drink like you normally would.
4. Record the approximate volume of fluid consumed during
exercise.
How much you drank = ___________ fluid ounces (E)
*Note: Each mouthful of fluid is ~1 ounce.
5. Towel dry, empty your bladder and then record your weight
(nude or swim suit)
Post-exercise weight = ___________ lbs.(B)
6. Subtract your post-exercise weight from your pre-exercise
weight to get the number of pounds you lost
during exercise.
Weight lost = _____lbs.(A) - ______lbs(B) = ________lbs.(C)
7. To find out how many fluid ounces of water you have lost,
multiply pounds x 16
_____lbs(C) x 16 = ________ fluid ounces of water you lost
during exercise (D)
8. To determine hourly fluid replacement needs, add number
of fluid
ounces you lost during exercise (D)
to the number of fluid ounces you consumed during exercise
(E) and divide by total number of hours spent
training.
(_____fluid
ounces (D) + ___fluid ounces (E)) ÷ ___hours
=_____fluid ounces needed each hour
Conditions that will increase sweat rate include heat,
humidity, and elevated heart rate (high intensity
training). Athletes should measure sweat
rate across several workouts to determine their
fluid replacement needs in various environmental
conditions. On race day, based on the
forecast, the athlete than can go back to their
log and know exactly what fluid they need to
plan on ingesting to prevent performance declines
associated with dehydration. Deaths have occurred
when the air temperature was less than 75 degrees
F (24 degrees C) but the relative humidity was
above 95%. Humidity levels over 75% will contribute
to an increased risk of heat injury.
*Note that a factor of 1.2-1.6 can be multiplied to hourly
replacement needs when heat & humidity (>75%)
are extreme.
9. To find out what percentage of your weight you lost during
exercise,
_____lbs. (C) ÷ ______lbs. (A) X 100 = ________ % Body weight
lost
Table 7: Dehydration
& Heat Stress
| % Body Weight Loss |
Estimated % Performance Drop |
Normal Temperatures |
High Temperatures and/or Strenuous Exercise |
| 1-2% |
5-10% |
Impaired Judgement, Irritability, Headache, Muscular
Aches |
Sweating, Flushed Face |
| 3% |
15% |
Thirst Reflex Initiated, Sense of Fatigue, Tight
Sore Muscles, Increased effects of 1-2%
Symptoms |
Profuse Sweating, Noticeably (to others) Impaired
Judgement and Confusion |
| 4-6% |
25-35% |
Profound Thirst, Dizziness, Muscle Cramps, Weakness,
Fatigue |
Very Irritable, May Act Irrational, Pale, Severe
Headache Especially at Base of Skull |
| 7-8% |
40-45% |
Nausea, Vomiting, Severe Vertigo or Dizziness, Somewhat
Irrational, Severe Muscle Cramps, Staggering |
Cold, Clammy Skin even though Core Body Temperature
may be 104 o F or higher,
May Have Stopped Sweating |
| 9-10% |
50-55% |
Collapse, Very Irrational, Unconscious |
Skin Pale, Cold and Clammy, Stopped Sweating, Muscles
Tense & Contracted, Pupils Normal
or Dilated, Pulse Weak and Rapid, Low
Blood Pressure, Respiration Shallow |
| 8-10%+ |
45-55% |
Heat Stroke
*Skin temperature may be 102-104 o F and
the core temperature may be over 108
o F which, if prolonged, will
lead to kidney failure and death. |
Heat Stroke
Skin Red, Dry, & Hot, Sweating has Stopped, Severe
Headache, Extremely Weak, Numbness and
Tingling in Extremities, Muscles Tense
and Convulsive, Confusion, Dark Urine
(if any), Pupils Contracted, Pulse Strong
and Bounding, Rapid/Shallow/Labored
Respiration, Delirious, Unconscious,
Comatose |
Find more useful training tips at www.multisportconsultants.com/training-tips.php
Feb 2010 Triathlon News | Jan
2010 Triathlon News | Archived
Triathlon News | Subscribe to News
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