Protein requirements for climbing?
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Hey everyone, |
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Ha, I had the same thoughts regarding this. In some ways, per the trainingbeta podcasts there's been different perspectives regarding nutrients and caloric intake. It has, in some ways, made me just want to eat frozen pizza and mcdonalds (because its easier and tasty). |
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Well, if it makes you feel any better, a SINGLE chipotle chicken burrito pretty much satisfies most of my protein requirement: |
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For hard sending one should consume one blueberry with a glass of water, three times per day. The weight will shed right off, and your famished rage will fuel you to sending glory. One can supplement protein intake by adding the occasional housefly/cockroach to said blueberry if you see power waining. |
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I usually try to avoid threads that may turn into shitshows, but if you want a fairly quality protein supplement that is more affordable than most, I use truenutrition.com and their custom blend generator. My wife can't do whey due to it causing bloating and nausea, so we do a 60-40 rice-pea blend as it reportedly has a similar amino acid profile |
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I read an article recently advocating for 120g/day (regardless of body mass), in 6 evenly spaced meals providing 20g each. |
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I've been doing keto for 3 months now and my results have been pretty amazing. I weigh 148lbs and eat up to 80 grams of protein and 145 grams of fat per day. I only eat OMAD so hitting 80 grams of protein doesn't happen all that often, i'm probably closer to 50-60 grams a day. I find that I definitely don't need anymore protein than that, I recover quickly and feel stronger every week. |
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Jaren Watson wrote: Say your goal is 100g of protein per day. Why? Mbk, could you find the article, by any chance? |
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Ted Pinson wrote: It has to do with how much protein that you can actually absorb in one meal ( 25-35 grams). The rest of the protein some believe will convert into glucose. menshealth.com/nutrition/a1…; |
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Ted Pinson wrote: The body can only absorb so much of anything. This is a bit of a hyperbole, but It's like smearing ointment on a cut... Is globbing the whole bottle of ointment on the cut at once going to make the cut heal faster? No way! https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5828430/ |
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The folks that mentioned 20g of protein are right on. Here is a reputable source. |
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Cool, thanks for the replies guys. |
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The thing about only absorbing 20g per meal is bs, your body slows down its digestion to absorb more nutrition. |
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A strength athlete trying to bulk up would want to consume ~ 1 - 1.5g protein /lb body weight. A climber who wants to maintain (or shed) weight and have good performance and recovery should consume ~ .7g protein/ lb body weight. An average non-active person probably needs ~ .5g/lb. However, the equation isn't as simple as more protein = more recovery. Your body needs about 2g carbohydrate per gram protein to process and synthesize protein for recovery. Additionally, if you aren't eating enough total calories (which is usually more than you would expect), your performance and recovery will be sub-par no matter how much protein you eat. |
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You definitely should - the host (Neeley Quinn) is a professional nutritionist who does nutritional consulting for the site. Thanks for the insights! |
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Jaren Watson wrote: The scientific articles posted here don't say 20g per meal is all you can consume they say 20-40g for optimum intake per hour, it's not an absolute limit. legionathletics.com/how-muc…; I really like legion athletics, they back up everything they say with studies and i personally found what they say to be useful when i went on my 3 month diet, I lost a bunch of weight and maintained muscle well. i tracked all my macros and yeah, 8kg in 3 months no muscle loss just a general lack of energy by the end of it. |
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Climber owned: https://mikesmixture.com/ |
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Ted Pinson wrote: You definitely should - the host (Neeley Quinn) is a professional nutritionist who does nutritional consulting for the site. Thanks for the insights! Anyone can call themselves a, "professional nutritionist". It's a meaningless title. Is that really what they're calling themselves? |
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Long Ranger wrote: These were my thoughts upon reading this too, anyone can be a "nutritionist" it's not a term protected by law, dietitian on the other hand that actually requires qualifications. |
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that guy named seb wrote: Dietitian is about as meaningless. One of my good friend's girlfriend is a registered dietitian, and in discussion, she knew nothing of certain metabolic functions such as that fructose is metabolized in the liver and turned into triglycerides. So much of her educational dogma was boilerplate USDA BS. |
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Long Ranger wrote: She says on her site, "I am a Certified Integrative Clinical Nutrition Therapist specializing in Paleo and Primal nutrition [...] I received my nutrition certificate from Seven Bowls School of Nutrition, Nourishment and Healing". Does that mean she knows what she is talking about? My guess is that is probably more up to her individually and what she has put into learning about nutrition, physiology, and metabolic pathways. Fair?She definitely has some interesting guests on her podcast. |