Home Forums Chat Forum iDave Diet Joinee

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  • iDave Diet Joinee
  • trickydisco
    Free Member

    ? How much could I train my fat metabolism in a season

    Well i did it in less than 5 months which involved 1hr base rides at a time.

    Another guy on here Mulletus Maximus is now seeing the same coach and by all accounts has made big gains (also on idave)

    TheSouthernYeti
    Free Member

    I agree Dirty if you prefix “100% effort” with the word ‘perceived’.

    trickydisco
    Free Member

    ? How much could I train my fat metabolism in a season

    Well i did it in less than 5 months which involved 1hr base rides at a time.

    Another guy on here Mulletus Maximus is now seeing the same coach and by all accounts has made big gains (also on idave)

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    you forget yeti, a powermeter means you never have to perceive again….

    Solo
    Free Member

    +1 for entirely possible, and longer too in my case as my first road race demonstrated

    DGOAB.
    Oops, you have pionted out my mistake.
    I didn’t quantify a time period.
    You can go 100 percent for an hour ?….

    I wasn’t lecturing or disagreeing on the post-exercise fast carbs.
    I was asking – ( If this is actually the case, I do not know the process )

    As for moving slow and heavy Solo to increase power, i’d say in the gym (for translation to more power on the bike) its about being more dynamic ie jumping squats etc, and on the bike, its about standing starts and sprints. Can’t help with the running aspect as all i did was endurance running.

    In that case, why is Mr Hoy bothering with moving all that weight with his legs ?.

    Solo
    Free Member

    if you prefix “100% effort” with the word ‘perceived’.

    This ^^

    iDave
    Free Member

    you can certainly spend an hour at 100% of the effort that you can sustain for an hour.

    TheSouthernYeti
    Free Member

    Yay. Solo’s back again!!

    x x

    I was going to point out that you had kindly posted a picture of Mr Hoy, I very much doubt he’s doing explosive movements there!

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    with legs that size i bet his penis looks tiny.

    and that children is why you shouldn’t train too hard.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    His requirements are a little different than most of ours.

    dirtygirlonabike
    Free Member

    Ok, how are we definining 100% max then? My max hr (pre ramp test) is/was 202. I averaged 194 and 190 for longer periods than an hour which puts me in the hardest hr zone. Clearly i couldn’t ride at 202 for an hour, so the 194 average was as hard as i could go, hitting 202 for times and backing off.

    Solo, i should have said IMO/E. I’ve been there with the slower and heavier weights type stuff. Now shaken it up to be much more dynamic = much better riding power than before.

    mustard
    Free Member

    I was going to point out that you had kindly posted a picture of Mr Hoy

    I think you’ll find that that is a picture of Sir Hoy and he is training for a very different type of cycling than the rest of us and most other cyclists.

    TheSouthernYeti
    Free Member

    I’m still not sure what Molly is training for 😕

    iDave
    Free Member

    “Ok, how are we definining 100% max then”

    It doesn’t mean anything. No idea why it was mentioned TBH.

    Solo
    Free Member

    I was going to point out that you had kindly posted a picture of Mr Hoy, I very much doubt he’s doing explosive movements there!

    Agree.

    However, he is moving heavy and slow to build muscle for that frame buckling strength he needs to totally mash those pedals.

    Also, I would add that he doesn’t appear to tolerating excess BF in his quest of his goals.

    Personally, I think that pursuing a training regime which ignores possible performance gains from reduced weight and tolerating excess body fat, may not produce the easiest route to success.

    But that doesn’t mean you can’t try.

    trickydisco
    Free Member

    In that case, why is Mr Hoy bothering with moving all that weight with his legs ?.

    cus he’s a track cyclist that needs to generate a lot of power from a standing start maybe?

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    we’re all getting distracted avoiding the real issue, which is ignoring the OP and the original point of the thread and poking molly till he goes crazy or admits he probably shouldn’t drink coke as part of a training plan for getting on the podium at XC races

    TheSouthernYeti
    Free Member

    Phil – I don’t care about any of it anymore.

    Solo’s back!

    mustard
    Free Member

    I’m still not sure what Molly is training for

    doesn’t look like he is either tbh.

    Looks like you’ll be getting a race licence soon enough though! Once you’ve got that itch sportives won’t scratch it for long 😀

    TheSouthernYeti
    Free Member

    Mustard – tell me about it! I was in a pack for maybe 5k pushing for 25 or so miles per hour… flipping loved it! Not got that much desire to be on the mtb at the minute at all.

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    can i have your bikes then yeti? mrsconsequence needs a bouncybike :mrgreen:

    TheSouthernYeti
    Free Member

    Depends if you get that bondage stuff for your wedding Phil!

    Solo
    Free Member

    It doesn’t mean anything. No idea why it was mentioned TBH.

    Sorry, I thought someone was claiming to go 100 percent for a prolonged duration ( not a short sprint ).
    I may have misread.
    If so, apologies.

    His requirements are a little different than most of ours.

    The way I was reading the recent pages, was that you were not getting bogged down with reducing body fat, at the expense of increasing strength.

    I was thinking that moving heavy, slowly would increase strength.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    I define 100% as as hard as you can go for that period of time. So that when you finish the session you are knackered.

    Pretty hard to actually quantify though… I suppose what I was doing before was averaging the power achieved during a session and using that as my target plus a little bit each time.

    TheSouthernYeti
    Free Member

    Does anyone know anything about Garmin Training Effect?

    Mine is often at 5.0. Which is what it defines as ‘over-reaching’ and therefore a maximum.

    I think it’s a bit of a gimmick but a session at 5.0 is normally quite tiring.

    bobfromkansas
    Free Member

    This reminds me of conversations i used to have with an obese workmate, who had loads of ideas of how to lose the weight, but wouldn’t actually commit to any of them and she also thought she had a special sort of body that worked differently to everyone elses and so she needed to eat chips etc. she was not succesfull.

    mustard
    Free Member

    Not got that much desire to be on the mtb at the minute at all.

    Me too – decided the bouncy bike is going to be sold along with all the burly bits I’ve aquired over the years. I seem to be embracing the lycra at the minute so there’s no point in hanging onto all this stuff. By the time I come back to it, if i ever do, I’ll probably be after something newer and shinier anyway 🙄

    we’re all getting distracted

    and your point is caller? 🙂

    ChrisS
    Free Member

    Do you think you could be a bit more explicit in you understanding of what the iDiet is and how it will affect your health negatively?

    Sigh, forgot I was posting on STW, should have anticipated the smart arse response…

    So. The iDave diet has a bunch of rules about what to eat and what not to eat, the central theme appears to be to cut out things like dairy, fruit and simple/white carbs, replacing them with lean meat and veg. Apart from one day a week. I would imagine for a lot of people that represents a fairly dramatic change in eating habits. I can well believe that if followed rigorously it could have a correspondingly dramatic effect on someones weight, body fat % or whatever. My question was simply: is it an all or nothing effect (follow the diet to the letter or see little or no effect), or does following it partially result in a partial effect. What does the dose-response curve look like?

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    mustard, the point is there’s a real risk of molly never admitting he shouldn’t be drinking coke and in fact he should be drinking the juice from a can of chickpeas instead before and after riding

    anybody giving up mtb and wanting to get rid of their 17″ish (medium)bouncy bike to a good cause AKA mrsconsequence let me know 😆

    trickydisco
    Free Member

    My question was simply: is it an all or nothing effect (follow the diet to the letter or see little or no effect), or does following it partially result in a partial effect. What does the dose-response curve look like?

    it depends 🙂

    For me, i followed it fairly strictly for 2-3 months. I now find my body has adapted somehow and (annoyingly for most) I can eat anything and stay lean. Pre idave i was 75kg and i’m now around 68kg and keep getting leaner (which isn’t as good as it sounds as my GF has said my nice shoulders have gone after coming back from a majorca training camp)

    Solo
    Free Member

    Chris.
    iDave diet was general, non-taylored, dietary advise / a suggestion for people with significant, excess, body weight.

    IIRC, iDave released his suggestion just to help ” Biffers “ as some on here put it.

    Imo, iDave diet MAY also serve as the entry point to a more specific diet.
    To acheive a specific goal.
    Or to be taylored in another way to suit the individual.

    For me, it lead to looking at the dietary side of things more than the training and racing side of things.

    If you were to extrapolate this.
    Then you could be forgiven for thinking that lighter, via the iDave diet would result in faster….

    is it an all or nothing effect (follow the diet to the letter or see little or no effect), or does following it partially result in a partial effect. What does the dose-response curve look like?

    Try that and let us know how you get on.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    but wouldn’t actually commit to any of them and she also thought she had a special sort of body that worked differently to everyone elses

    Well my body type is in the minority amongst mtb racers it seems. And I do not eat chips and I am not fat.

    iDave
    Free Member

    I follow it pretty much as set out, I train hard on it, race on it, don’t have the cheat days, use some simple carbs during and after ‘some’ training sessions and events, but not all. I feel healthy and have energy, recover well, and occasionally have a loaf of toast.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Well then I dunno what to do.

    IanMunro
    Free Member

    Mine is often at 5.0. Which is what it defines as ‘over-reaching’ and therefore a maximum.

    I think it’s a bit of a gimmick but a session at 5.0 is normally quite tiring.

    Mine’s normally at 11.
    /Wanders off to look at the Garmin Connect website to find out what the real answer is.
    Ah, looks like it needs HR.
    The most recent one I’ve got with a HR is 8.8, which makes me beyond awesomeness from Garmin’s perspective 🙂
    The one previous was also 8.8, then I’ve got a 4.8, 8.8, 8.8, 8.8, 8.8,4.8 But I do give 110% which probably explains it 🙂

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    explain how your body is in the minority… iConfused as i thought i remembered you saying you had powerful big muscly legs/bum which meant you were naturally suited for stuff as you already had that power?

    TheSouthernYeti
    Free Member

    I now find my body has adapted somehow and (annoyingly for most) I can eat anything and stay lean.

    I think there’s something to this. But it means going back on some of the stuff I’ve been typing.

    Essentially if I’m training exercising like crazy I can eat a tube of mini-eggs on top of everything else with no negative effects.

    Ian – have you got the Spinal(Power)Tap edition? 5 is definitely the limit.

    Solo
    Free Member

    I follow it pretty much as set out, I train hard on it, race on it, don’t have the cheat days, use some simple carbs during and after ‘some’ training sessions and events, but not all. I feel healthy and have energy, recover well, and occasionally have a loaf of toast.

    Thats as may be, but you are approximately at the body weight you desire ?.

    I’m not too different to this, after now arriving at a weight that seems easy to maintain.
    I’m around 79Kg for 6′ 1″ and it looks Ok, and I can play as hard as I think is reasonable to ask of my body.
    I do not mess about with fast / simple carbs around exercise.
    Quite happy to go for a ride, first thing, on water and air.

    I have days when I indulge, by way of alcohol.
    But other than this, I’m happy to stay on my new food choices indefinately.
    Which was my goal in the first place.
    I hope all would agree that I’ve been consistent in wanting to learn and achieve body weight control through diet.
    To gain fitness through exercise.

    TheSouthernYeti
    Free Member

    I hope all would agree that I’ve been consistent in wanting to learn and achieve body weight control through diet.

    100%.

    phil.w
    Free Member

    I’d like to confess that I had two cans of coke on Friday. 😳

Viewing 40 posts - 281 through 320 (of 1,140 total)

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