11 answers

All Call: What Should I Feed Runners Ages 7 and 5? - Fillmore,CA

My two girls (and husband) are starting track next week. Practice is four days a week for one hour at 6pm with meets on Sats. I know I will need to feed them well before practice and then again after as I have a feeling they are gonna be STARVING! But what should I feed them to fill them, give them energy, but not cramps and upset tummy? I'm planning my shopping today so advice and ideas would make my day!!!
Also, they are lean girls, my husband was the same as a kid and he ran too; he told me he would sometimes become anemic because of it. I would really like to avoid that!!! Advise!!!!!!

****I'm getting lots of good suggestions....and I'm taking from it that I SHOULDN'T feed them a meal even an hour before practice. Waiting until 7-7:30 for dinner will be tough. Should I feed them a full meal at say 3pm after school. Then snacks an hour before practice then another small meal/large snack after with Daddy? This is all new for me and I really appreciate the experienced advice.*****************

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I ran track when I was younger. My parents made me eat lots of carbs the night before a meet. So there were many spaghetti nights. Also the morning of the races it would be waffles.

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Hi- haven't read through the responses but have a snack idea. I would feed them a hearty snack after school to give them energy for practice and then a nice dinner afterwards. Protein is the best power food for workouts. A great choice is bananas and peanut butter. Bananas have sustainability. You don't have to give them just a bananas slathered in peanut butter. You can make a creative wrap using a whole wheat flat bread (I use the brand Flat Out) I smear it with peanut butter, put slices of a banana all over and roll up. Eat like that or cut into pretty slices. you can also drizzle a little honey over it or add in some granola to jazz it up if they want it a little more sweet or have some crunch. A healthy fruit smoothie with non-fat yogurt is great but add a touch of protein powder to the drink. Pour in a fancy cup, let them eat it with a spoon and maybe even sprinkle some granola on top to add some fun crunch.

2 moms found this helpful

Its not so much that they need a large meal, they need what will be used as energy. Usually a day before a meet carbs, lean proteins & a balanced diet during the week. I would also ask your pediatrician about their diet and ways to avoid enemia. Perhaps a multivitamin would be appropriate aswell.

1 mom found this helpful

I'm an adult runner, but a lot of things I have eat are great things for helping with recovery, keeping full, and are healthy. Keep a lot of healthy snacks around, they will need a lot of those as well.

Avocados, berries, any kind of fruit, dark green leafy vegetables and salads (the dark greens have a lot of carbs, which are important for runners, an extra source instead of just grains), fish, nuts, yogurt, and whole grains - bread, pasta, oatmeal, quinoa. Granola bars and trail mix can be great as well, but read the ingredients carefully, you don't want a huge amount of sugar or extra unpronounceable stuff, and not too much of those. These are all healthy things with specific nutrients that runners or people really working out need extra of.

Pretty much anything simple and natural (as in it comes straight off the tree or plant) is great. A lot of the things I listed above work great as snacks you can carry around, or things you can easily add to a meal. Also, make sure they get enough iron, a little red meat each week will work, and veggies (broccoli and spinach), etc.

1 mom found this helpful

Hard boiled eggs, bananas, trail mix, Cliff Bars, oatmeal.

1 mom found this helpful

*Right, it is not about how "big" their meal/snacks are. Merely that they have fuel in their body. But don't feed them a heavy/big meal right before then. The body needs about 1 hour to digest.
After practice just let them have a banana/liquids. Just to momentarily hold them over to dinner time. For the car ride back home.

Bananas
Nuts (if they are not allergic)
Of course have liquids handy. Not juice.
Fruits
Boiled eggs

I was a runner. Cross country and track.

Just don't feed them anything that is heavy... but will provide energy and not sit in their stomachs. Thus, fruits and nuts.
Bananas are good for the potassium/muscles.

Feed them about 1 hour before, practice.
If feeding them too close to their practice time, they will get side-aches.
Don't think about feeding them ALL at one time ALL at 1-hour before practice. Feed, them, even in 2 hours beforehand, 3 h ours before hand etc. Staggering it. Not all at one time.
For example: my daughter takes Karate in the evenings. From the time she comes home from school, I feed her a 'lunch.' She eats that. Then 1 hour later, she gets hungry again. She eats fruit, or a cheese sandwich. Then 1 hour after that, she eats a fruit/drinks milk. So... by the time of her Karate class (which is 1.5 hours long at night), she is by then, 'full' of energy foods. In her system. Not it being eaten/in her system ALL at only 1 hour prior to her class. It is staggered, eating. Up until then. Thereby, the body properly loads up, on energy foods, and processes it, in a more gradual way. Not all at one time. Athletes, do this too.

Keep, a little cooler/ice-chest in your car/trunk.
For AFTER, their practice, have these same foods in it.
So thus, it won't spoil their dinner appetite, but it will be enough to hold them over on the ride home.

1 mom found this helpful

Granola, nuts, make sure to give them protein. It is filling but not too heavy for their tummy's.

1 mom found this helpful

Before running: banana bread, bananas, oranges, cheese, oatmeal bars, nuts, gatorade, bowl of cereal a good hour before.

Afterwards a healthy, balanced meal with fresh vegetables, complex carb protein. Make sure to eat red meat a few times a week for healthy iron/hemoglobin levels, since your husband already knows he can be anemic.

1 mom found this helpful

A busy family schedule is all too common. Thank you for knowing food is so important. I have specific recommendations for young athletes, however I am not allowed to post it here. I will send you a private mail with my suggestions.
In the mean time, a quality whey protein after a work out will ensure optimal success. (I will send you info on protein bars and shakes that are the best).
A high quality energy drink, natural with electrolytes and B vitamins is also crucial. NO PRESERVATIVES. NO COLOUR, the body is "susceptible" during and after a workout, keep it real. I'll send that email now.

B.
Family Success Coach

1 mom found this helpful

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