Welcome to the GAIN Blog

The blog is updated Monday-Friday. Tune in for posts and discussion about health, fitness, nutrition, training experiments and reflection. We share articles, videos and more. We post the link to our Instagram story every day, make sure to follow along there to never miss a post.

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Most Important Human Skill?

I heard a coach talking about the importance of walking on a podcast. They had a perspective that really stuck with me.

They were making the case that walking is the ultimate human skill, what are we with out it?

In his book Exercised, Daniel Lieberman examines how natural selection gave us “ingenious features” that allow us walk efficiently and not topple over.  Specifically the shape of our pelvis, the curvature of our spine, our big heel bones, the arches in our feet, forward pointing big toes, along with stable ankles, and the way our hip and knee angle works. We never have to consider those things, but it what makes it possible for us to walk so smoothly.

Back to the podcast. The coach, in reference when comparing walking to the importance of strength and endurance training, said, “well, you still need to walk to the squat rack, walk to the bench press, walking to the swimming pool.”

Warm weather and long days are here. Embrace walking and get outside for some added daily movement.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Squat Skills and Running

Mastering a squat is one the best things you can do to improve your running ability. Consider learning to squat as a new skill that will have immediate transferability over to you on the road, trail or track. Besides, if you only run, you need to build in opportunities to take your hips, knees and ankles through full range of motion. Running alone won’t complete that task, but squatting will.

When running in a good position your trunk is braced and you’re stabilizing your spine, you get movement from certain areas and ideally not compensating through others, just like squatting.

You need to be able to do that over the entire duration of your run. Mile after mile no matter the distance or intensity. When you can no longer maintain the proper positions, you risk injury or develop compensatory patterns, that may lead to injury in the future. If that isn’t good enough reason for you, you will also lose power and speed. Resulting in slower times and harder runs.

Here’s where the ability to properly squat comes in. Doing box squats or goblet squats or even bodyweight squats will allow you to spot any mechanical breakdowns that may happen in your running technique. If you always turn your feet out on the last few reps of goblet squats, you can bet that you turn your feet out when running. Missing hip extension? We can see that at the top of your squat too.

As mentioned earlier, while running, you need proper spinal bracing. If you arch your back as you lower yourself to squat, you may be run in an over extended position. That also shows that you don’t know how to properly keep yourself in a strong, braced core position. Proper squatting, with guidance from a knowledgeable coach, requires you to brace your core to move your extremities, just like running.

We can spot potential breakdowns but we can also practice good positions. Let’s say your workout consists of 4 sets of 8 goblet box squats, you get 32 chances to practice proper alignment and form, that will have carryover to your run.

After you build up the basic movement knowledge to properly squat, whichever variation is best for you, we can challenge it in several different ways. This makes you aware of positions and helps maintain technique over a certain intensity or duration. It’s skill practice to make you a better runner.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Get Some Shut Eye

In the book Built to Move, Kelly and Juliet Starrett outline these 10 tips to get the best rest and recovery. You might know some of these, but hopefully you can learn a thing or two to help you get a refreshing night’s rest.

Go to sleep and wake up at the same time, even weekends.

We keep babies on toddlers on strict sleep schedules, why don’t we do that as adults?

Move more throughout the day.

More movement throughout the day is going to help you hit the hay. TL;DR: walk more.

Careful with caffeine

Caffeine takes time for our system to process. Even if you’re a high caffeine metabolizer like me (I got my DNA tested), it can still affect your sleep, wait for it…. Even if you fall asleep without issue - it’s likely disrupting the restfulness and quality of your sleep. Try out a couple different cut off times and see what works best for you.

No phones in the bed.

IN 2015 right after GAIN opened I bought an analog alarm clock. I was waking up and immediately checking my email. Not exactly an easy morning wake up. These days I still leave my phone on the kitchen counter after 8pm.

Cut the alcohol

Anyone who has worn a Garmin or a WHOOP strap for a consistent period of time will tell you that alcohol negatively impacts their sleep. Not to mention they likely hate hangovers and hate how much junk they eat while drinking…. It’s something too many people rally behind for not a lot of good reasons. Audit your consumption.

Cool down

A cool room is the best place to sleep. Try turning the thermostat down a bit before bed and see if it helps you unwind.

Night time wind down

I’m a sucker for a morning routine, but I haven’t created my perfect bed time routine yet. Having a systematic habit in place might be the key to getting in bed at consistent times throughout the week. I do my soft tissue work before I go to bed to promote a parasympathetic response and trigger my body to rest and digest. The Starretts recommend setting an alarm 60 minutes before bed to remind you to start your routine.

Dark and quiet

Blackout shades are amazing. Especially if you’re early to bed people like us in the coming summer months.

Overestimate the time you need in bed.

This one is hard to wrap your head around. They’re saying if you want 8 hours, you better plan to be in bed for 9 hours. It’ll take you a while to fall asleep, and if you wake up for the bathroom, or toss and turn, all those minutes don’t count toward you sleep total.

Mimic you bedtime when you travel.

Self explanatory. Stay consistent.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Strong Enough?

We ask this question a lot. To clients, while writing programs and as a discussion amongst us coaches.

We are a strength and conditioning gym after all. We're all here to get stronger, right? A some point, does the risk of more strength outweigh the reward?

If your deadlift is strong, can you showcase that perfect form after doing a heavy sled march? What about after 2000m on the AirBike? How are your goblet squats after running 400 meters?

Displaying your strength while you're huffing and puffing and your heart is pounding is impressive. It's the next step we can take when you're "strong enough." The best news about this: this builds strength too.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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The Rest of the Day

One hour is not enough. You have to optimize your in gym performance while you’re away from the gym.

Are you fueling your body for what you want to do?

Drinking enough water? Taking some electrolytes?

Are you recovering? How many hours of sleep do you get?

Feeling stressed out? How are you dealing with that stress?

Getting enough daily movement through walking? Have a mobility practice?

All these things factor in to how you body feels and performs. And they’re all things that happen away from the gym, the other 23 hours. If you want to upgrade your gym performance, the best place to start is what you’re doing when you’re not even at the gym.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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How I Finally Hit a Snatch PR

If you’re following along on Instagram you know I hit a big snatch personal record last week. The snatch is 50 percent of the Olympic sport weightlifting. It’s highly technical and an incredible display of athleticism, power, timing and coordination. It’s hard to learn, difficult to practice and takes many years to gain an understanding of the complex movement.

There are a few factors that helped me hit this big 25 pound PR that took at least 6 years for me to break. Hopefully you can learn a thing or two about training from them.

  1. No heavy attempts for a while.

    In the spring or summer 2021 I hit a 185 snatch. That was the most recent time I had snatched that weight, which had been my top lift since 2017. In the fall of 2021, I followed a once or twice per week snatch plan for a couple months. I drilled the technical skills, got a lot of reps in, and limited the percentages to keep every single rep as proficient as I could. I planned on this leading into a big PR attempt in January but instead I got sick, felt unmotivated and shifted my training for other things, like the Hyrox.

  2. Lots of light snatches.

    Even though it had been a while since I was snatching was a staple in my program, I would often use lighter weight power snatches in conditioning based workouts at 95 or 135 pounds, usually under fatigue, which despite my previous views on it, can be an excellent way to grease the groove and become more efficient.

  3. Big squatting.

    For the past two years I’ve been trying to build my squatting strength. It’s a challenging movement for me and it’s expensive for my body. Even though I haven’t hit a PR since December 2021, my base level strength is at an all time high. When I would miss olympic lifts in the past, it was because I would get stuck standing up the weight. This year, that’s been no problem.

  4. DB Snatches.

    I’ve been snatching dumbbells a lot this year. I can think of at least 4 workouts where I’ve snatched the 100 pound dumbbell. Each time it got a little easier, and that last time, I was running hills and snatching, and I thought, I better test my snatch soon, this is feeling better than ever and I wonder if it’s going to carry over to the barbell. That was in October.

  5. Physical therapy.

    I’ve been working diligently to fix some imbalances and getting help figuring out precisely what my body needed got me on track and helped me make sure I wasn’t slacking on my daily mobility.

  6. Body weight.

    I’ve put on some muscle mass over the past two years and I weigh about 220 pounds right now compared to 195 pounds back when I set the original PR. As the saying goes, mass moves mass.

  7. No pressure.

    Since there wasn’t a big lead up to this I had no expectations. I had a PR attempt on my mind for months, and I wasn’t even thinking about it last Friday. I started to warm up and thought, today’s the day.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Addition Not Subtraction

Gyms are so good at helping people make changes in their life because it’s a new thing to add in.

You need to commute to the gym, be there for an hour and commute back to home or work or wherever. You can’t fake it. You have to carve out that time and actually show up for it to work.

Health and fitness often focuses on elimination. Take diets for example. Cut this thing out, stop doing this, no more of this type of food. The restriction makes compliance difficult. Compare that to when you need to add something to your diet instead. Take these vitamins, eat this many vegetables or drink this amount of water seems to click with people better.

If you’re having trouble getting to the gym, remember, once you add this habit in, other good habits are going to fall in place. You’ll subtract bad habits through the addition of your new habit.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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SOLEC

It’s rare someone comes in and doesn’t say that need to work on balance. Balance is a tricky thing to train, because you need to challenge your balance in order to train it. I learned this acronym last week, and it’s something you should know, and it’s a great balance test you can try today.

SOLEC stands for Standing on One Leg Eyes Closed.

That’s the test. Stand on one leg with your eyes closed, see how long you can last.

Your eyes play a big role in balancing and when you take that away it’s much more difficult.

Try the test with your eyes open and compared to your eyes closed score.

There are a lot of different ranges for a good target time here. At least a few seconds eyes closed is the bare minimum and getting 15 seconds with eyes closed is the gold standard.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Brain Dump

A few years ago Monday morning was hitting me hard. It was a hard shock back into the gym after the weekend. I read somewhere about doing a brain dump to prevent yourself from feeling overwhelmed, and I use this strategy every week now.

I break out my notebook and scribble down anything that’s happening the upcoming week. When I’m coaching, meetings, phone calls and appointments.  I make note of when I’ll try to workout each day and then come up with a rough idea of what the intent of the workouts should or what I need to work on. Sometimes I’ll set some goals for the week too.

After spending 5 minutes doing this, I feel more prepared and more energized to take on the coming week. If you feel jet lagged on Monday morning, give the brain dump a shot.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Built to Move

Kelly and Juliet Starrett’s new book Built to Move comes out next week. Kelly is a physical therapist and in my opinion, one of the best thinkers around how the human body moves and works. I discovered his his model for understanding movement and the shapes the human body makes way back in 2011. I was fresh out of college and he was able to connect the book knowledge I learned in school and show me how it applies to coaching in real life.

Kelly and Juliet are reaching more and more people by talking about what it is to be a human and how you can show up as your best self in life. In this podcast, they discuss the movement vital signs from their new book and how to prioritize your health without adding more things to do. They discuss many lessons from their work with professional athletes, and how they use those experiences to trickle down knowledge to the regular, non professional person.

If you want to live a healthy and capable life, check it out.

Mind Pump: the Essential Habits You Need to Move Freely & Live Fully With Kelly & Juliet Starrett

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Watch Your Head

There's a movement fault that we're always correcting at the gym. Both novice and advanced lifters do it, and I catch myself doing it still, after many years of lifting. If you become aware of this, it will improve your movement quality.

Don't look at your feet.

Too often, during kettlebell swings, deadlifts, ring rows, step ups and even squats. People place their focus on the ground between their feet. Everything is connected, so this can effect other parts of your body downstream. Put your head so eyes are looking out straight ahead. This will upgrade the quality of whatever exercise you're doing.

Don’t look too high up either. Instead, find a spot that is comfortable, and has no effect on the position of your spine. Too much movement in either direction is not good.

Whenever your training be sure to audit on where you're looking, and what your head is doing.

Justin Miner

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Basic Squat Checklist

We could all use more practice of the fundamentals. Check out this run down of common teaching points we use at GAIN to upgrade peoples’ squat.

Get Organized!

Screw your feet “into” the ground by turning you heels towards one another. You can also imagine spinning your knee caps away from each other. When you do this, we’re trying to rotate the hips into the best position for range of motion and for force production.


Foot Pressure

After you get your hips organized, you might feel the weight on the outside of your feet. That means you’ve gone too far. Try to maintain a balanced foot - weight right in the middle of your heel and ball of your foot. At the gym, we say find your “mid foot.” This is initially difficult to do, but after a few reps it evens out.

Back THEN down

When learning to squat, it’s helpful to imagine the lowering portion as two pieces. Start by pushing your butt to a wall behind you. Once you start moving, let your sternum fall towards the floor. Once that happens, start bending your knees. This way, you’ve got the right trajectory to squat using your hips and putting less pressure on your lower back and knees. It’ll feel clunky at first, but as you learn the pattern, the two step movement will become fluid.

On the Bottom

Maintain that foot pressure! No knees caving in, instead push them away from each other, like they’re magnets. To get up, start pushing that middle of the foot into the floor like you’re trying to break through it. Careful not to let your heels lift from the floor, if they do, lean forward more. If the opposite thing happens and all your weight is in your heels, you may feel like you’re going to fall over backwards. Keep your toes on the ground too.

Back on the Top

Maintain that knees out pressure as you come up. Once you get to the top, be sure you squeeze your butt to finish the movement, open up the hips and set the next rep up for success.

Breathing

For squats we want to breath in going down, exhale as we’re coming up. We’ve talked before about a slight breath hold for added pressure and stability, but this is a basics primer. For the purpose of bodyweight squats, we want to inhale down, sharp exhale coming up. That’ll keep you in a good, smooth rhythm.

I hope one out of the many cues I just gave makes something click for you. We can always improve our fundamentals.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Counting

A sneaky high level strength and conditioning skill is counting your reps.

There are a lot of things to think of all at once. Screwing your feet to the floor, squeezing your butt, the weird exercise names, keeping your core engaged and on top of all that, you need to remember to breathe. At first glance, counting seems like just another annoying thing to occupy your mind. It isn't. In fact, not only will it make sure you get the proper dosage of reps, it'll actually help you do all those other things, too.

Counting forces you to be engaged. Ticking off each rep, 1…2…3… gives you an opportunity to check in on your form, and make sure you're doing all the aforementioned things like breathing and squeezing your butt. Each time you count, check in with yourself to breathe, or squeeze or get your elbows up, or to make any adjustment or reinforcements you need.

Like I mentioned, counting is high level. But don't just count, use counting as an opportunity to clean up your movement and get more engaged on with what you're doing

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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You'll Never Regret It

I was just playing the with baby on the floor. I did 100 push ups over the course of a few minutes. It was entertaining for me and him. I try to do stuff like that, sneak in more movement, whenever I can.

Even though it’s hard to get started, I always feel better and more accomplished after.

Movement of any kind, be it mobility work, push ups and squats, or a quick yoga flow, always rewards your body.

No matter how hard it is to start, you’ll never regret moving.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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How Does Our 3-Session Trial Work?

Potential members at GAIN start with a 3-session trial. This serves as an opportunity to meet the coaches and see how we do things at GAIN. Our individualized, feels-like-a-group, but isn’t a group vibe is different, and unlike any other gym you’ve been to.

On the first session, you’ll work closely with a coach doing our Intro Workout. This gives us an opportunity to go over some finer details like bracing and breathing and seeing how much range of motion and stability your body has. We talk about injuries, training history and what you want to get out of your gym time.

Regardless of your fitness level and experience, we want you leaving the gym after that first session feeling as though you could have done more. Our saying is, we can write hard workouts, but don’t need to prove that one day one. We want you to build a new habit you can stick with, easing in is key.

You’ll learn a whole bunch of new movements and lingo, if you’re a newbie to the gym it can be a bit overwhelming. Just know that we’re aware of this, and try to take it slow and not overload you with gym jargon. Day one primarily focuses on learning and breaking down the squat pattern, body weight upper body movements like the push up and ring row, and some of our core training drills.

By the second workout, we’re ready to introduce some more movements. This workout focuses on pressing and pulling with the upper body, along with some single leg movements. You’ll do some conditioning (cardio) at the end and get introduced to some of our favorite cool-down mobility drills.

On the last workout of the trial focuses on on the hinge pattern. This can be a tricky one, but is important for everyone to learn. We revisit some movements from the previous two workouts if needed. This will feel like a bigger workout for most, because we usually give you more to do on the third day as your body is starting to adapt to some new movements.

All in all, the 3-Session Trial is a crash course in all things GAIN. Learn our favorite exercises, get your movement broken down by an experienced coach and learn how to move better, feel more connected and get a plan that unique to what you need and want to accomplish. GET INVOLVED.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Use It or Lose It

I have a question for you today.

How many times will you get up and down from the floor?

Take a ballpark guess and try to keep track. Or, if it’s been a while, try to remember the last time you did it.

There is no more true example of if you don’t use it you lose it.

While it might seem silly, your independence literally depends on being able to get yourself up off the floor without assistance.

Don’t realize this too late.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Moving Better

We rearranged a bookshelf in our house the other day. I have notebooks from the past 10 years saved up. These notebooks came out of the basement and on to this bookshelf. The pages are filled with to-do lists, budgeting math, quotes, workout ideas, rough drafts of programs and scattered throughout are blog ideas.

I’m not sure what year I wrote this down, but a loose sheet of paper fell out of one of the notebooks as I took it out of the box, and scribbled on it was the following line.

If how strong you are trumps the ability at which you move, is the strength worth anything?

All this strength and conditioning comes down to that, how well can you move? How well can you control your body?

Moving better is an ever-changing target. It’s a destination you’re never going to reach, because you can always refine your technique and execute better.

This frustrates people. For me, it keeps me in the game. Knowing I can’t reach perfection, but that I can strive for it, is a good reason to get in the gym and move with intent every day.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Those Years I Couldn't Do Push Ups

There were several years that push ups hurt my right shoulder. I avoided them all together for a while, but once GAIN opened in early 2015 there was no more hiding, I found myself demonstrating push ups daily.  I would wince through the pain and only do a few. Then I noticed something weird. When I demonstrated hands elevated push ups, hands on a barbell inside of a squat rack, I never had that all-too-familiar twinge in the front of my shoulder. On top of that, my mechanics felt smoother, my shoulder blades were engaged better and having the hands elevated allowed for me to get more practice in without it taxing my body.

I started doing push ups on our kitchen counter while watching TV and was always sneaking some reps in. Over time, my push up technique changed drastically. I needed to develop motor control and build strength, and doing a normal push up was too aggressive and it took years to figure out. After practicing for a while, never really trying any, I got brave and would occasionally sneak some reps of real push ups in.

They felt better. To the point that I would send Alex and Taylor videos of me doing push ups asking if I was cheating the reps. They felt too easy to be good ones I said. Turns out getting a couple years of solid practice was just what my body needed.

I’m much better at push ups now, and do them all the time. When you’re working in the gym, and you’ve got your hands elevated on the bar, it can feel like you’re never going to get a rep on the floor. Keep practicing, this stuff takes time. If you already own some great push ups, you can take on this mindset too, your technique can always get better.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Focus

"Focus starts with elimination, improves with concentration, and compounds with continuation."

James Clear

I saw this quote the other day and it has stuck with me for a couple days. A nice reminder as we head into a new week. If you haven’t yet, check out Atomic Habits by James Clear.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Fueling for Ultra Endurance

Register Dietitian, Briana asked me to write a guest post for her blog on New England Nutrition & Exercise.. You can check it out on her site here or keep reading.

My name is Justin Miner and I’m a strength and conditioning coach. I’ve been coaching since 2011, and founded my gym, GAIN Strength and Conditioning in Portsmouth, NH in 2014. As a college athlete, I always hated running. But in 2016 I was in a training slump. I wanted to get outside and out of the gym more, so I started running. Running on the road wasn’t for me and I quickly found that trails gave me everything I was looking for. Solitude, nature, a new challenge, and time I could spend developing fitness while not confined in the walls of my gym. I could take my dog Clementine too, which was a huge bonus.

In 2017 I needed a challenge way outside of my comfort zone. I wanted to take on something scary, and the scariest thing I could think of was an Ultramarathon. An ultra is anything that’s longer than a marathon. The most common distance is 50k, or 31 miles. Since my first 50k in 2017 I’ve run 16 50k’s, 2 50-milers and done a backyard ultra. Amongst those stats I’ve taken on all the popular ultra distance routes in the White Mountains like the Pemi Loop and Hut Traverse, plus a dozen other routes that are 20-25 miles in distance with over 8000 feet of elevation gain like the Presidential Traverse and the Kilkenny Traverse; all-day adventures that require careful planning and self-sufficiency.


Relying on yourself makes packing a difficult job. Taking the right foods and the right amounts can be the difference between a fun day out and a pure suffer fest.  During a regular ultra race, you have options at the aid station, and if the thing you’re carrying with you isn’t appealing, no big deal. However, out in the mountains you don’t always have options (but you can buy an ice cream at the top of Mount Washington, just saying.) Because of my experiences in the mountains, and in actual races, I’ve tinkered a lot with nutrition and fueling. I’ve found things that work for me and don’t work for me. Hopefully you can learn from my experiences whether you want to try to race fast or enjoy long endurance pursuits. 

Not Enough Water 

This one is so obvious I was hesitant to start the list with it. When I was starting out, and still sometimes today calculating how much water I need can be tricky. At first, I would always carry too much. I’d get back to the trailhead realizing I lugged an extra liter around that I didn’t touch. After doing that a couple times I swung too hard the other way and would take off with far less than I needed. Leaving myself thirsty and dehydrated and considering slurping out of a muddy puddle on a rock. 

I learned it’s always better to have more than you need, rather than less. Some things are impossible to predict, like will the stream have flowing water I can filter? Will I come across a place where I can fill up or buy water? How hot is it going to be? How long between aid stations? How long am I going to be out? Am I flying solo? Or with a friend or my dog? All these factors must be considered when choosing how much water to haul along. Lean more toward the heavy side, but don’t take so much that you have a sloshy pack to lug around all day.

No Gels

As I started getting into the ultra scene I noticed gastrointestinal issues were common. Every YouTube documentary I watched about ultra running seemed to feature at least one scene of someone pulling over into the woods to throw up. Which leads to them not eating or drinking for hours and hours on end. Knowing I wanted to avoid this I looked at the commonalities amongst the people this was happening to. The common denominator seemed to be runner fuel, or gels.

Consuming only sugar as the main fuel source seemed to do more harm than good. I decided to lean more on regular food and shy away from these stomach churning slime packs.

Normal Food 

Since I was avoiding runner fuel, I needed to practice with a lot of different foods to see what I could eat while running. Growing up an athlete and being a total gym rat, pre and post workout nutrition was nothing new to me, but consuming food while exercising was a new concept. I tried all kinds of bars, pouches, candy, sandwiches and dried fruit. Cliff bars, dried mango and good old fashioned peanut butter and jelly sandwiches are my go to. I usually pack some candy too. Sometimes you just need something palatable, and some Swedish Fish or Sour Patch Kids are always easy and enjoyable to eat. And if it’s not too hot a Snickers really hits the spot. I try to save this for when I really need it, later in the day. Mostly as an attempt to avoid the GI issues from consuming just sugar all day.


Electrolytes

A lot of runners are familiar with electrolytes, much more so than the general public. Where I, and a lot of runners, miss the point is taking electrolytes during the run is kind of late. Now, especially when it’s really hot, I try to load up on electrolytes in my water for a few days before an event. This helps me get hydrated and stay hydrated instead of trying to play catch up while sweating all the good stuff out. I monitor my hydration the most simple way there is, monitor my pee color. 

No More Fasting 

Although its popularity has skyrocketed recently, I started intermittent fasting in 2012. Training for ultras, or anything really, is incredibly demanding on the body. I couldn’t maintain my muscle mass, and prevent unwanted weight loss without getting in extra calories every morning with breakfast.

For a while, if I was running before noon, I would skip breakfast too. While I thought I felt okay, once I started eating some oatmeal a couple hours beforehand, my performance and mood improved drastically. Now when planning a daily training run or an epic adventure, I consider what I’m eating at what time of the day in relation to the event. This way I’m best fueled and setting up for the best performance.

Experiment 

You’ve got to play around. I have developed a good system for myself through trial and error. I’ve underfed a lot of runs, ran fasted, without fuel, drank grimly pond water and so much more. All those experiences allowed me to figure out what works though, and that’s what you’ve got to do too. Maybe gels work great for you, you’ll never know until you test it out. 


Avoid experimenting during a race. I would make sure to practice fueling, trying different foods on my regular old training runs, where I probably didn’t need to fuel, but did just so I could see what works and what doesn’t. Too many people don’t fuel while training, and get to race day and try something totally new. Test it out and leave no doubt on race day. Of course, you can have the perfect plan and it could still all fall apart, but more data is better. 


Half the battle with long endurance events like ultras is fueling. It’s incredibly demeaning on the body, and not a task that should be taken lightly. Learning how to fuel yourself will improve your performance, but also will increase your enjoyment of the activity. Being properly fueled with a good plan makes the day go by much faster. When you demand so much from your body, it’s hard to predict how the day will play out. 


I hope you were able to find these tips useful, and if you want to train for an ultramarathon this summer and need a coach, you can contact me here: justin@gainsc.com

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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