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-   -   Ingame food & water: what do you eat/drink? (https://airsoftcanada.com/showthread.php?t=123462)

SuperCriollo July 23rd, 2012 11:39

I like to drink lots of water before leaving to a game. If your pee looks yellow, you are not completely hydrated :P

Grizzly0679 July 23rd, 2012 12:28

Quote:

Originally Posted by lurkingknight (Post 1682124)
My hydration prep begins the night before the game.. I will buy a 6 pack of gatorade, refrigerate 2-3 and freeze the rest.

Yeah that's actually key. you can help with staying hydrated by first being hydrated. Good suggestion.

Quote:

Also if you feel nauseous it's a super bad sign.
A couple games ago I had a blast. 6 hours in the sun, just a poptart and a granola bar in my stomach and a canteen of water for the whole day. By dinner time I was so fucked up I couldn't even eat despite being ravenous. Thank god for beer...a little liquid bread helps. Actually serious about that. I've seen it done after triathlons. Mind you that was like 1989 - haha.

Quote:

In the most extreme cases of lots of sweating/loss of electrolytes, gatorade will not replenish all of them. Basic sports drinks only have salt, poweraide has a bit of potassium.

You also need magnesium and calcium... in extreme cases, I have supplement tablets for the rest
interesting, I didn't know all that. Have any suggestions that encompass all those nutrients in one drink?

Curo July 23rd, 2012 12:31

Vitamin Water is also not a bad idea aswell.

R.I.T.Z July 23rd, 2012 12:36

6 hour day of skirmishes
2L bottle of fruit juice
6 powerades
6 pepperettes
2 sandwhiches
bag of trail mix
5 granola bars
3 bottles of water.


night before good meal, and lots to drink
morning of good breakfast

Grizzly0679 July 23rd, 2012 12:38

@ Cobalt Caliber: good on calories and carbs but has no sodium and as far as I know sodium is needed for the creation of electrolytes.

mmmken July 23rd, 2012 13:32

Has anyone had experience bringing canned Chef Boyardee and eating it cold?

They're so much cheaper than MRE/IMP's ($1 versus up to $10 for Mountain House stuff), and taste basically the same. They're easy to carry, and many are not pop-top's so no tool is required. The only two negatives I can think of are: cold meal (but then again, in the middle of summer this isn't so much a problem), and harder to dispose (but then again, you'd need to dispose of a MRE/IMP package just the same).

So why aren't people doing taking this route? Enlighten me?

BennyBoy July 23rd, 2012 13:34

more stuff crammed into a granola/energy bar and much smaller :)

lurkingknight July 23rd, 2012 13:37

Quote:

Originally Posted by Grizzly0679 (Post 1682152)
interesting, I didn't know all that. Have any suggestions that encompass all those nutrients in one drink?

you could potentially make your own super electrolyte drink.. I think there are recipes online for some.

mmmken July 23rd, 2012 13:43

Quote:

Originally Posted by BennyBoy (Post 1682173)
more stuff crammed into a granola/energy bar and much smaller :)

Really?

I don't feel like I ate anything when I eat a granola/energy bar, but with the canned shit - it actually satisfies me as a complete meal.

.. and for reference - I'm not talking about ingame food for a skirmish or anything - but a full 24 hour non-stop milsim like Operation Rhino. I'm not convinced that a few energy bars would keep me up the entire 24 hours?

The Keiichione July 23rd, 2012 13:53

Water,
1 to 2.5 L of water on me
3 L or more at the respawn

Food :
For skirmish : Granola bars and/or Jerky and/or anything that can be eaten fast and on the move.
For big OP's : 1 or 2 IMP/MRE + Granola bars and/or Jerky and/or anything that can be eaten fast and while on the move.

z0ng July 23rd, 2012 14:14

Quote:

Originally Posted by mmmken (Post 1682172)
Has anyone had experience bringing canned Chef Boyardee and eating it cold?

They're so much cheaper than MRE/IMP's ($1 versus up to $10 for Mountain House stuff), and taste basically the same. They're easy to carry, and many are not pop-top's so no tool is required. The only two negatives I can think of are: cold meal (but then again, in the middle of summer this isn't so much a problem), and harder to dispose (but then again, you'd need to dispose of a MRE/IMP package just the same).

So why aren't people doing taking this route? Enlighten me?

Wouldn't be anything new, lots of people eat them cold. I prefer to heat the things up as I find they are more enjoyable to eat but everything in the can is pre-cooked so you don't need to heat it. Just keep some garbage bags in your base and toss them into one when done eating.

Scotcho1.0 July 23rd, 2012 14:23

Look for bars made by Brenden braizer, its called Vega sport bars I belive. Not the tastiest but they have absolutely everythingnyou need to keep going. They were created for ultra 50k triathletes, and work damn good

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Rusty Lugnuts July 23rd, 2012 15:40

I down those Boost meal replacement drinks that you can get at the drug store and water.

m1lk0r July 23rd, 2012 17:26

I personally stay away from Gatorade, due to the sugar levels in the drink (sugar will make you only more thirsty/dehydrated).

I stick with a protein bar (builders from costco) which is damn good, has all the nutrients and supplements that your body needs (especially salt content). As for liquids, water is the best.

Hydrate and dehydrate. Rinse and repeat.

Scotcho1.0 July 23rd, 2012 19:14

That's a good call, Gatorade is good when you are dehydrated...but the sugars can mean a crash. Generally I'll drink water through playing a sport and save the gator for the ride home..

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