Excellent job! Way to go! Remember one of the "principles" of Maffetone 
(one I wasn't very good at adhering to while building up my base -- now it 
just happens naturally) is to return home feeling like you could do it all 
again (but not). 

Look into resistant starch (think uber green banana). Here's a good place 
to start learning about 
them. 
http://www.marksdailyapple.com/search-results/?cx=004987908667488763946%3Akd-fp2c7jek&cof=FORID%3A11&ie=UTF-8&q=resistant+starch&siteurl=www.marksdailyapple.com%2F&ref=&ss=1564j355074j9#

My transition was before I learned about resistant starch. I took nuts. 
Macadamias. With salami.

What I found was that a lot of my "need" was less need to ingest and more 
my body needing to learn where to look for what it needs. So I let it go 
"hungry" and it figured it out. The transition took longer than I'd've 
liked though.

With abandon,
Patrick

On Saturday, May 28, 2016 at 12:41:27 AM UTC-6, René wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> I've been low carb high fat for about a year now, with some relapses. Lost 
> the 40 lbs between May and October last year, then plateaued, probably went 
> a bit off with and gained 10 lbs after the holidays which I've about just 
> lost back again in the last 8 weeks, albeit slowly and with some relapses.
>
> 7 weeks ago, I also started riding aerobically after discovering the 
> Maffetone method and signed up to do the 72 mile ride around Lake Tahoe 
> next Sunday.
>
> During this "training period" I noticed that since I was already quite fat 
> adapted, I had no trouble doing my bike rides on no food in the morning, 
> and that ensuring I didn't exceed my Maximum Aerobic Function HR of 124 
> (for my sweet age) I started managing to do the longer rides I previously 
> couldn't do without a lot of suffering and bonking. To stay in the aerobic 
> base building zone, I mostly chose flat rides and on the short climbs I 
> couldn't avoid, slowed to a crawl. Balance training I call it.
>
> Last Sunday, I did a 42 mile ride in just under 4 hours. This week I've 
> ridden twice to work and back, total of 36 miles each day, just split in 
> two rides. The afternoon rides home are with a very strong head/side wind, 
> where again, I have to slow down significantly and take it like 
> "meditation". Character building I call riding 18 miles with a constant 
> headwind.
>
> On all these rides I only drink water, nothing else. But when I get home I 
> feel like I can't keep riding. Once I rest a bit I feel fine, although my 
> legs and my butt "feel" it.
>
> I don't think I can do the 72 mile ride next Sunday on just water, so I'm 
> looking for some guidance and suggestions for how to fuel myself without 
> making it all sugary with gels and the traditional cycling fuels. When I 
> first did these long rides with Team in Training in 2005, I would finish so 
> bloated from all the gels I needed to take just to keep going, and also the 
> pace was too high for me. This time I'm riding by myself so I can control 
> my pace and my nutrition.
>
> I'm also hoping that during the day of the ride, I'll somehow find a way 
> to ride for 7 - 8 hours. Right now, it seems impossible as my longest ride 
> has been 4 hours, and most of my rides are around 2 hours. Suggestions are 
> also welcome.
>
> I know there is a lot of "mental" stuff needed to do these long rides, as 
> well as more aerobic training and losing the other 40+ lbs I'm still 
> carrying on me. I'm just hoping that persevering will make them truly 
> enjoyable, vs. fighting to just finish them.
>
> I welcome any other tips as well regarding managing the long hours on the 
> saddle. Frequency of stops to stretch out, rest the butt, hands, feet, 
> etc.? I know I can always get bailed out if necessary, but I'm going to try 
> to do the whole ride.
>
> Thanks for sharing your experience and feedback!
>
> I'm riding my Homer. Is anyone from this list going to do the ride as well?
>
> Best,
>
> René 
>

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