[pct-l] what does 2 pounds mean

Jim Bravo jimbravo at wildblue.net
Sat Dec 19 21:57:30 CST 2009


>From my trail ultra days I learned (the hard way!) that there are a WHOLE
LOT OF VARIABLES in trying to calculate calories burned per mile, hour, or
day...the greatest of which may be the "aerobic" factor. When a hiker is
climbing a hill or is heavily-loaded down on a hot day, and is in the
aerobic zone for an extended period of time, fat burning goes way up and the
body's use of glycogen (whether muscle, liver, blood-stream, or
tissue-breakdown derived...) goes way down. I found that on long days I
burned 60-70% fat and needed only a modest amount of calories (mostly
carbohydrate). You're going to go into calorie-deficit eventually...no way
around it if you're averaging high mileage, the body just achieves some sort
of whacked out level of homeostasis.

In short, I eventually gave up trying to figure it all out, and resorted to
a little-used method (IMHO), that is, "listening to my body". Easy to say,
hard to do if a person is trapped in thinking mode...As George Sheehan said,
"we are all an experiment of one", which is the equivalent of YMMV. As near
as I can tell, listening to the body is the only sure way to know how much,
and what type of, food to eat.

JB




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