Left over 1500 calories from heavy training
TheRayOD2014
Posts: 26 Member
Because of very heavy back to back weekend long runs, I find I'm at 1500 calories short from the combined deficit of Saturday and Sunday. With today as a recovery day, what is your opinion on eating more than my regular 0 exercise calories added goal? Would you eat about 1/3 of that more back? half?
I understand when training for an ultra-marathon you can never eat enough of those calories back on the race of B2B weekend long runs. But how much extra would you consider appropriate to eat extra due to such a large deficit?
I understand when training for an ultra-marathon you can never eat enough of those calories back on the race of B2B weekend long runs. But how much extra would you consider appropriate to eat extra due to such a large deficit?
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Replies
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I find eating back all of my accurately estimated exercises (long distance cycling) is the most appropriate option for me.
Perhaps explain why you think zero, a third, or a half might be better options for you?3 -
I am guessing you don't necessarily find yourself overly 'hungry' on the days you're earning the extra calories, and feel a little unsure of eating them a day later?
When I'm super active - I don't feel hungry either. Sometimes though the next day seems like I cannot get 'full'. Eat the calories today. If you are not sure of their accuracy and/or you're not hungry enough to eat them all - then eat what seems right to you. But don't feel bad about eating more to compensate for weekend long runs.1 -
I never feel hungry on my long run/race days, so I just eat back the calories over the next 1-3 days. I eat back all my adjustments because I know -- from experience over time -- that my calorie burn estimates are accurate. I would only eat back a portion if I felt like they were over-estimates. No benefit in underfueling intense activity, IMO.5
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I find eating back all of my accurately estimated exercises (long distance cycling) is the most appropriate option for me.
Perhaps explain why you think zero, a third, or a half might be better options for you?
I don't necessarily think it is a better option but that just after so many days from burning those calories that I couldn't eat back all of that day it just seems like too much afterwards? Like after 2-3 days if I didn't eat those left over it is just not necessary or worth it?0 -
nanastaci2020 wrote: »I am guessing you don't necessarily find yourself overly 'hungry' on the days you're earning the extra calories, and feel a little unsure of eating them a day later?
When I'm super active - I don't feel hungry either. Sometimes though the next day seems like I cannot get 'full'. Eat the calories today. If you are not sure of their accuracy and/or you're not hungry enough to eat them all - then eat what seems right to you. But don't feel bad about eating more to compensate for weekend long runs.
precisely the problem. I'm fairly sure of the accuracy though because I use the Omni running net calories burned calculator and have found it to be accurate for the stats I use and tracking.0 -
janejellyroll wrote: »I never feel hungry on my long run/race days, so I just eat back the calories over the next 1-3 days. I eat back all my adjustments because I know -- from experience over time -- that my calorie burn estimates are accurate. I would only eat back a portion if I felt like they were over-estimates. No benefit in underfueling intense activity, IMO.
True, I'll make sure of this for this weekend and next week post race0 -
TheRayOD2014 wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »I never feel hungry on my long run/race days, so I just eat back the calories over the next 1-3 days. I eat back all my adjustments because I know -- from experience over time -- that my calorie burn estimates are accurate. I would only eat back a portion if I felt like they were over-estimates. No benefit in underfueling intense activity, IMO.
True, I'll make sure of this for this weekend and next week post race
If you're racing most weekends, why not just build the calories into your daily allotment (pre-race and post-race), rather than trying to consume all the extra calories in a couple of days?2 -
TheRayOD2014 wrote: »I find eating back all of my accurately estimated exercises (long distance cycling) is the most appropriate option for me.
Perhaps explain why you think zero, a third, or a half might be better options for you?
I don't necessarily think it is a better option but that just after so many days from burning those calories that I couldn't eat back all of that day it just seems like too much afterwards? Like after 2-3 days if I didn't eat those left over it is just not necessary or worth it?
It is the best choice for me as I'm maintaining weight so must account for all my exercise expenditure.
If you are seeking to lose weight then a different solution might be the most appropriate for you - which is why I asked for your personal context.
But I don't feel the need to "balance the books" daily though. A weekly view might help you too rather than trying to work out percentages to cut when you think your burns are accurate?
Yesterday my calorie allowance was over 4,300 but today it is more like 2,800.
I didn't need to force down food yesterday or overly restrict today as long as over time I balance it out.
IMHO your minimum on big exercise days should be enough to recover well so that you maximise the return from your training, that might be a bit more than you are comfortable with.....1 -
lynn_glenmont wrote: »TheRayOD2014 wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »I never feel hungry on my long run/race days, so I just eat back the calories over the next 1-3 days. I eat back all my adjustments because I know -- from experience over time -- that my calorie burn estimates are accurate. I would only eat back a portion if I felt like they were over-estimates. No benefit in underfueling intense activity, IMO.
True, I'll make sure of this for this weekend and next week post race
If you're racing most weekends, why not just build the calories into your daily allotment (pre-race and post-race), rather than trying to consume all the extra calories in a couple of days?
oh no, definitely not racing every weekend. Just this cycle with double long runs has made it tough0 -
TheRayOD2014 wrote: »I find eating back all of my accurately estimated exercises (long distance cycling) is the most appropriate option for me.
Perhaps explain why you think zero, a third, or a half might be better options for you?
I don't necessarily think it is a better option but that just after so many days from burning those calories that I couldn't eat back all of that day it just seems like too much afterwards? Like after 2-3 days if I didn't eat those left over it is just not necessary or worth it?
It is the best choice for me as I'm maintaining weight so must account for all my exercise expenditure.
If you are seeking to lose weight then a different solution might be the most appropriate for you - which is why I asked for your personal context.
But I don't feel the need to "balance the books" daily though. A weekly view might help you too rather than trying to work out percentages to cut when you think your burns are accurate?
Yesterday my calorie allowance was over 4,300 but today it is more like 2,800.
I didn't need to force down food yesterday or overly restrict today as long as over time I balance it out.
IMHO your minimum on big exercise days should be enough to recover well so that you maximise the return from your training, that might be a bit more than you are comfortable with.....
I like the idea of weekly then and would probably consider looking at my weekly log as starting on Saturdays instead of on Mondays, that way I could 'balance the books' over the week instead.
I've been forcing food down on those big days and got rather sick of it real fast. It made for alot of GI distress, heavier legs, and alot of food/water weight that was slowing me down in the following days training.
If that is more than i'm comfortable with, then I'll have to get a little uncomfortable which I'm fine with. Maybe after those longer efforts a stronger stout or some good grub with more fat and carb than normal on those days, and use the following time to refuel what I need to extra.
I'm not on a large deficit or anything, not trying to be. at 126 lbs I'm too light at 5 ft 9 to be trying to lose, rather I'm focusing on just getting enough and getting stronger physically. Though this week I did cut all lifting so that it doesn't interfere with any recover before next week.0 -
If you use the app, you can look at a weekly view and ensure that your average for the week is in line with where it should be.2
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TheRayOD2014 wrote: »lynn_glenmont wrote: »TheRayOD2014 wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »I never feel hungry on my long run/race days, so I just eat back the calories over the next 1-3 days. I eat back all my adjustments because I know -- from experience over time -- that my calorie burn estimates are accurate. I would only eat back a portion if I felt like they were over-estimates. No benefit in underfueling intense activity, IMO.
True, I'll make sure of this for this weekend and next week post race
If you're racing most weekends, why not just build the calories into your daily allotment (pre-race and post-race), rather than trying to consume all the extra calories in a couple of days?
oh no, definitely not racing every weekend. Just this cycle with double long runs has made it tough
Well, assuming you plan these races in advance, and you have records from past races to look back on, you must have a pretty good idea of what the calorie burn will be, so you could still allocate 1/7 of the calories to each day of the week you're racing (before, day of, and after). That way you wouldn't face this feeling that it's too much to eat back in a day or two.0 -
I usually let hunger be the guide. If I'm not hungry enough to eat all my calories on the day of a hard workout, usually I find that I am ravenous the next day or two. I don't force myself to eat a specific amount, but I eat enough to not be hungry.1
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lynn_glenmont wrote: »TheRayOD2014 wrote: »lynn_glenmont wrote: »TheRayOD2014 wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »I never feel hungry on my long run/race days, so I just eat back the calories over the next 1-3 days. I eat back all my adjustments because I know -- from experience over time -- that my calorie burn estimates are accurate. I would only eat back a portion if I felt like they were over-estimates. No benefit in underfueling intense activity, IMO.
True, I'll make sure of this for this weekend and next week post race
If you're racing most weekends, why not just build the calories into your daily allotment (pre-race and post-race), rather than trying to consume all the extra calories in a couple of days?
oh no, definitely not racing every weekend. Just this cycle with double long runs has made it tough
Well, assuming you plan these races in advance, and you have records from past races to look back on, you must have a pretty good idea of what the calorie burn will be, so you could still allocate 1/7 of the calories to each day of the week you're racing (before, day of, and after). That way you wouldn't face this feeling that it's too much to eat back in a day or two.
Never raced the 50km distance before, but its got nearly 10k elevation and about 31 miles. I don't allocate calories throughout the week when it comes to that distance but rather focus on my daily intake and carbohydrate intake being a higher percent, and following the 200 calories an hour rule.0
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