This is the Tridot podcast.
Speaker ATri Dot uses your training data and genetic profile combined with predictive analytics and artificial intelligence to optimize your training, giving you better results in less time with fewer injuries.
Speaker AOur podcast is here to educate, inspire and entertain.
Speaker AWe'll talk all things triathlon with expert coaches and special guests.
Speaker AJoin the conversation and and let's improve together.
Speaker ATogether.
Speaker BHey everyone.
Speaker BWelcome to the Tried Up Podcast.
Speaker BIf you've ever taken an ice bath, gone for a cold plunge, or done a little cryotherapy session, or if you've ever thought about it but have never actually done it, today's episode is all about the therapeutic benefits of cold immersion.
Speaker BSuper excited to learn about this.
Speaker BI have never done any of these myself as a recovery methodology.
Speaker BSo excited to see what I can learn today.
Speaker BShould doing this as a triathlete or am I fine to lead this out of my weekly routine?
Speaker BWe're going to find out from our two experts.
Speaker BFirst up, we have Dr.
Speaker BBJ Leaper.
Speaker BBJ is a triathlon coach and a doctor of physical therapy from the University of Iowa College of Medicine.
Speaker BWe also have coach Ken Puri.
Speaker BHe's a triathlon coach with Victory Multi Sport out of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Speaker BAnd the rumor is that he dabbles in taking the occasional ice bath.
Speaker BSo excited to talk with these two guys.
Speaker BDr.
Speaker BB.J.
Speaker Bleeper.
Speaker BCoach Ken how are we doing today?
Speaker CDoing well.
Speaker CThanks for having us.
Speaker DYeah, excited to be here.
Speaker BWell, I am Andrew, the average triathlete, voice of the people and captain of the middle of the pack.
Speaker BAs always.
Speaker BWe'll start off with a fun warmup question.
Speaker BThen we'll get in to our cold, shivery main set conversation and then wind things down with Vanessa taking over for the coach.
Speaker BCooldown.
Speaker BTip of the week.
Speaker BLots of good stuff.
Speaker BLet's get to it.
Speaker ATime to warm up.
Speaker ALet's get moving.
Speaker BFor today's warm up question, I have what I think is a very fun triathlon.
Speaker BWould you rather question and Dr.
Speaker BBJ Leeper coach Ken what I want to know today is for your next race, if you had to wear a weighted vest for one of the three disciplines, the swim leg, the bike leg, or the run leg, in which leg of the race are you wearing the weighted vest?
Speaker BCoach Ken Wow.
Speaker DI feel like the obvious answer here is the run, but really?
Speaker DCause and so I think that rucking has become such a thing.
Speaker DI've got so many friends that are in that they do rucking events.
Speaker DI've participated in a few.
Speaker DI think that's probably the go to Answer.
Speaker DBut, you know, maybe this goes hand in hand with the topic we're going to cover today.
Speaker DLike, the part of me that likes to torture myself almost feels like maybe I'll pick the swim.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd it's so funny when I, whenever I ask one of these, you know, for a ton of time I'll come up with a new triathlon.
Speaker BWould you rather.
Speaker BAnd in my mind there's an obvious answer and it's the answer that I lean towards.
Speaker BAnd so I almost talk myself out of asking these because I'm like, oh, well, everybody's just going to say this, but then everybody says different things and it's so, it's so interesting.
Speaker BSo you've already answered in a way that I did not expect.
Speaker BSo I appreciate that.
Speaker BMy answer here is not the run, mainly because I am a injury prone athlete, particularly if I do too much volume or too much intensity on the run.
Speaker ETry.
Speaker BThat helps keep me keep all of that in check.
Speaker BIt knows that by my physiogenomics, it keeps me nice and healthy.
Speaker BThank you, Tridot.
Speaker BBut if I run with a weighted added weight, I just feel like that's just an easy way just to blow some part of my body out of proportion.
Speaker BAnd so I am not touching weight on the run.
Speaker BUm, I am not a great swimmer.
Speaker BI, I feel like I probably already have problems with my legs sinking on the swim enough as it is.
Speaker BSo why do I want to add weight to that equation and, and struggle with sinking any more than I already do?
Speaker BUm, so I, I'm going to do it on the bike.
Speaker BI, I know it's the longest portion of the race, and so I'm affecting myself for the longest portion of the race.
Speaker BBut I feel like that's where my body would, would be less likely to have a major issue because I have weight.
Speaker BIt would just slow me down a little bit.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BProbably be a little less arrow, uh, everything.
Speaker BBut that's my answer.
Speaker BDr.
Speaker BLeaper, what is this for you?
Speaker CWell, I mean, I was thinking more like you, Andrew.
Speaker CI was like, is why is this even a question?
Speaker CBecause it seems so obvious.
Speaker CBut then I started to think about it a little bit more.
Speaker CI'm like, well, maybe I'm not thinking of it.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd so I even started to contemplate, well, maybe in the swim because I'm a bad swimmer and have poor body position where my legs always drop.
Speaker CI'm like, well, maybe if I put it on my torso, it would help my torso in streamlining and lift my legs.
Speaker CBut then I'm like, there's no way that's a good idea.
Speaker CSo I was thinking more the obvious.
Speaker CLike you.
Speaker CIt, it would have to probably be on the bike because I wouldn't want the impact on the run.
Speaker CBut, but maybe it helped me on the sense on the bike.
Speaker CSo.
Speaker CYeah, that was my, my knee jerk response too.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BNo, yeah.
Speaker BAnd maybe bj, Like I, I used to like, really struggle with pull ups.
Speaker BI wasn't great at pull ups and a buddy of mine in the gym made me start doing pull ups with a little bit of weight dangling from a belt.
Speaker BNot, not, not a lot, but just a little bit.
Speaker BAnd it was hard.
Speaker BBut more importantly, from then on, whenever I would go to do just body weight pull ups, it was way easier than it used to be.
Speaker BAnd all of a sudden I can do pull ups now.
Speaker BThis is years ago, but anyway, I wonder if it'd be like that, like if, if we wore a weighted vest in the swim as guys who have poor body positioning in the swim, when we took the weight off and tried to swim normally again, will we.
Speaker BWould we be better swimmers because we.
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BKen.
Speaker BKen is a, a try out pool school coach, so he can probably tell us that that's a good idea or a bad idea.
Speaker BKen.
Speaker BI'm guessing it's a bad idea, right?
Speaker DI'm gonna go with, yeah, bad idea.
Speaker CBut first, Andrew, tell us how it worked out.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah, I'll get right on that.
Speaker BBj.
Speaker BRight on that.
Speaker BStraight to the pool after this recording.
Speaker BHey everybody, we're gonna throw this question out to you, our audience.
Speaker BMake sure you're on the Try Dot community hub.
Speaker BIf you're a Try Dot user, that's, that's a place where we pose this question every single week.
Speaker BOtherwise it is on Instagram and the Facebook.
Speaker BI am tryout Facebook group.
Speaker BSo really excited to see how you guys answer this question.
Speaker BIs there anybody out there who would want to wear the weighted vest for the swim and be weightless for the bike and the run?
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BCan't wait to see what you guys have to say.
Speaker BFind the question, let us know.
Speaker AOn to the main set.
Speaker AGoing in three, two, one.
Speaker BAll right, onto the main set.
Speaker BAnd guys, I'm going to start the main set today in an unconventional way.
Speaker BThis isn't in our notes.
Speaker BYou guys didn't know this was coming, but I'm making a quick triathlon announcement of sorts.
Speaker BFor some people.
Speaker BThis will be like a big deal for some people to Be like, why did he even say this on the podcast?
Speaker BI want to hear about being cold in my recovery.
Speaker BBut me, Andrew Harley, host of the podcast, and Sarah Burney, the editor for our podcast, are officially coming out of pseudo retirement to race a triathlon.
Speaker BThe both of us have been inactive for just a little bit.
Speaker BYou know me, ever since I had my baby the last, she's now just over two.
Speaker BI haven't really raced in that time period.
Speaker BSarah hasn't raced in over a year now.
Speaker BAnd both of us are signing up officially for 70.3 Ruidoso, New Mexico.
Speaker BSarah's in New Mexico, that's her home state.
Speaker BSo for her it was like, oh my gosh, I have to go do this.
Speaker BFor me, it's not too far away.
Speaker BSo we're going to have a blast as a podcast team going out there, taking on that course, giving us a reason to really get back to being consistent in our training.
Speaker BSo you heard it here first.
Speaker BSarah and I are committing to Racing Ironman 70.3 Ruidosa, New Mexico.
Speaker BIf that is also on your radar, we'll see you there.
Speaker BCan't wait.
Speaker BIt's going to be fun.
Speaker BMaybe I'll take a few ice baths between now and then as I get my training going again.
Speaker BWe're about to find out.
Speaker BSo, Dr.
Speaker BB.J.
Speaker Bleaper, let's throw this question over to you.
Speaker BI see all over Instagram, right?
Speaker BAll over Instagram, all over social media.
Speaker BI'm sure for our athletes on TikTok, there's reels and reels and reels and YouTube shorts and videos of people dunking ice on their heads, jumping into ice baths, soaking in ice, doing chirotherapy sessions.
Speaker BAnd it just seems like out of nowhere that this blew up to be such a trendy way to recover.
Speaker BWhy is cold exposure becoming such a big thing now?
Speaker CYeah, I mean it's, it's really interesting, right?
Speaker CAnd that's why we're devoting a whole podcast to it.
Speaker CBecause I think it's become such a thing lately that you can't not see it or have a conversation around it.
Speaker CI think I read somewhere like on Amazon like a couple years ago or just a couple years following the pandemic, like ice bath sales increased like 10,000%.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker COver just short two year span.
Speaker CSo obviously it didn't used to be a thing.
Speaker CBut then all of a sudden it's a thing.
Speaker CI even read a book.
Speaker CIt's almost been a decade ago now.
Speaker CI think the book was written by Scott Carney.
Speaker CIt was called what Doesn't Kill Us.
Speaker CAnd it was basically Scott Carney's following of Wim Hof, kind of the iceman guru from the Dutchman, who is just on these crazy quests of physical environmental feats of training.
Speaker CAnd even then it was kind of this fad of like, hey, look at what this guy's doing.
Speaker CBut I think the real answer to the question, at least my philosophy is that we're kind of now in this golden age of comfort.
Speaker CSo it sounds paradoxical, but because we're in this age of technology and comforts at our, you know, every corner, suffering has almost now become this luxury good.
Speaker CLike people are manufacturing ways to kind of create that suffer and specifically with cold exposure to manufacture that because we just don't get it through our normal everyday lives anymore.
Speaker CYou think about it like we all live in our perfect homeostatic environments of, you know, perfectly temperate environment.
Speaker CIn our home, we sleep in our cooled bed and it's, it's all perfect temperature.
Speaker CWe get up, we head to work in our car where we've got a heated seat, heated steering wheels.
Speaker BBj I'll tell you, I've got.
Speaker BAnd I invested in this when we had our baby, when we had our baby two years ago.
Speaker BI have like the nest.
Speaker BNot nest, the Honeywell's version of a nest.
Speaker BIt's Honeywell's like smart thermostat.
Speaker BAnd I have one in the second floor of our house and one in the first floor of our house.
Speaker BAnd I have sensors in each bedroom in our house.
Speaker BAnd so yes, I have in all of our bedrooms, the temperature all 24 hours of the day is within the exact one degree that I want it to be at that time of day without me touching a thing.
Speaker BIt's beautiful.
Speaker BBut yeah, it's not cold ever.
Speaker CAnd I was even thinking about this, watching my kids sporting events like my kids played baseball.
Speaker CAnd you see parents even being outside in Montana, where I live, obviously spring sports, you're always out in the elements, but you see everybody huddled in these little pods that are.
Speaker CAnd no one is getting exposed to the elements like we used to back in the day of, you know, chop wood, carry water.
Speaker CBut yeah, it's fascinating.
Speaker CSo I think we all recognize that there's benefits to challenging our systems.
Speaker CBut, you know, no environmental extreme induces as many changes really in human physiology as the cold does.
Speaker CBut interesting, a lot of us don't get that exposure like we used to.
Speaker DI think that's a big part of it, is that challenge that we put ourselves through.
Speaker DI think that it's taking off now even more so for a few different reasons.
Speaker DI think my first exposure to the idea of cold exposure was probably 10 to 15 years ago, reading about Wim Hof and some of the other pioneers in the space.
Speaker DAnd then you couple that with the rise in podcast popularity and you would hear whim going on to these different podcasts talking about this.
Speaker DYou would hear podcasters like Joe Rogan or Ben Greenfield, Andrew Huberman promoting this idea.
Speaker DAnd I think that over the course of that time, from when I started hearing these things up to now, the science has really caught up with a lot of that, those antidotal stories that we were hearing on these podcasts.
Speaker DSo we actually see in the numbers where there might be true physiological benefits to some of these things.
Speaker DAnd so I think now has been like the perfect culmination of all of this where it's much more mainstream, people are hearing a lot about it.
Speaker DAnd to, to BJ's point, people really are looking for other ways to challenge themselves and take themselves outside of this comfort zone.
Speaker DSo I think those all are contributing to this insane rise in popularity of cold exposure, of these different spots popping up where you could go and you can jump into an ice bath, you don't have to have one at home anymore.
Speaker DAlmost every major metropolitan or you can now.
Speaker BAnd they're not that expensive, right?
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BWhat was so interesting to me here is I have strictly viewed this as like a recovery methodology, right?
Speaker BLike I, I have never considered just the appeal or the purpose of just stretching yourself and challenging your system and putting yourself in an uncomfortable environment and the performance benefits that might have.
Speaker BI've just viewed it as, oh, this person's on Instagram in an ice bath cuz they just got out of a training session and wanted to recover.
Speaker BI, I've never considered that side of it.
Speaker BAnd that's the side you both are leading with actually is, is that shock to your system bringing your, your body out of, out of a place of comfort for a certain reason that isn't even recovery.
Speaker BSo that's super interesting to me just to kind of calibrate this conversation a little bit differently than what I initially went in assuming it would be about.
Speaker BSo there are, we've already kind of, I think, alluded to some of the different form factors of this right between ice baths and Cryro and, but, but just what, what all is out there on the market?
Speaker BWhat are the common ways of doing this?
Speaker BAnd bj, importantly, is there kind of a different Reason to dabble with different formats is the form factor of our cold exposure change what it does to our body.
Speaker CYeah, and I think you hit on it, Andrew.
Speaker CI, I consider, you know, as we're talking about cold water immersion, but just in general, deliberate cold exposure, I consider it just kind of a pillar of health.
Speaker CLike we consider diet, exercise, I mean, truly environmental training and just exposure to the elements.
Speaker CThat's a system that's just part of our normal physiology that needs exercise.
Speaker CAnd to the point we said earlier about modern comforts, if we're not stretching that system or challenging that system.
Speaker CYou know, I think back to even my grandparents, like, I grew up in Iowa and both my grandparents, both sides of my family were, were farmers in Iowa.
Speaker CAnd if I would have ever told them, and two of my grandparents lived to be well over 100, but if I would have ever told them about the things we're talking about today where you're manufacturing this need to get into ice water to expose yourself to the elements.
Speaker CThey would have thought it was crazy.
Speaker CThat's, I mean, you're going to get cold when you get up at 4am to go out and do your chores.
Speaker CYou know what I mean?
Speaker CLike, why would, why would anyone want to contrive a scenario for that?
Speaker CYou just do that naturally throughout your, throughout your day.
Speaker CBut because we don't get that now, I think we're talking about it as one of those pillars of, of health.
Speaker CAnd I think to your point of, to the question of, you know, what are the different forms and do they matter?
Speaker CI think the biggest thing when we're talking about cold exposure is, you know, what is going to, what's going to generate the stimulus in the best way.
Speaker CAnd I think we'll get into more of the science behind it.
Speaker CBut I think there is a lot of good research that, that cold exposure.
Speaker CAnd a lot of times in the science world, you hear it referred to as deliberate cold exposure.
Speaker CBecause scientists aren't going out and researching people that just happen to be outside for hours and they come back and do tests on them.
Speaker CYou know, these, these human subject studies, they're, they're going into it knowing, like, okay, I'm exposing myself to the elements.
Speaker CAnd so there is a mental aspect of that that they're studying.
Speaker CBut with deliberate cold exposure, I think there's a lot of ways to do it.
Speaker CIt's just a matter of economically, what's the easiest way to do it, what's accessible.
Speaker CBut now, like you guys mentioned, now there's more and more systems out there because people have realized that this luxury good of cold exposure is lucrative.
Speaker CPeople are paying for it.
Speaker CSo I think the main forms though, that we see now out in the market are obviously the cold water emerg immersion systems, the ice baths, the cold plunge tanks.
Speaker CBut in that same bucket of cold water immersion, there's cold lake plunges, river plunges, all of that kind of fits in that, that bucket where it's more of a total body cryotherapy where you're all the way up to your neck in the water, so it's covering every area of your body.
Speaker CSo it's easy to get the stimulus in that way.
Speaker CBut there's other forms of it and we'll get into.
Speaker CBut cold showers is another form.
Speaker CYou hear a lot about cryotherapy chambers or tanks using the liquid nitrogen to generate the stimulus.
Speaker CThere's not as much research on those specifically.
Speaker CProbably most of the research is in cold water emergencies.
Speaker BInteresting.
Speaker CSo that's kind of the direction of where the science comes in, at least the topics of conversation around the studies of the science.
Speaker CAnd what happens with that type of, of form of cold exposure.
Speaker BYeah, I don't know, man.
Speaker BThose, those kind of freak me out.
Speaker BLike those chirotherapy chambers.
Speaker BYou know, I have friends that do that or, you know, dabbled with it when it first kind of became a thing where, you know, you'd have, at a strip mall in Texas, you'd have a nail salon and then you'd have a hair salon and then you'd have a cryotherapy place like all side by side by side.
Speaker BAnd it was just kind of just part of the health and wellness routine for a lot of people.
Speaker BAnd I looked at it and was like, man, I don't want anything artificially getting me that cold for that short amount of time.
Speaker BAnd we'll talk about it here in a little bit.
Speaker BBut jumping in an ice bath or taking a cold shower seems a lot more approachable to me, to pull me out of the comfort zone.
Speaker BBut we'll talk about those.
Speaker BAnd Ken, I know just following you on social media as friends, I've seen that you dabble in some of this stuff.
Speaker BAnd so I invited you on the show just to kind of talk to us about what you do personally as a triathlon coach, as you're talking with your athletes about this kind of stuff.
Speaker BWhat do you encourage your athletes to do?
Speaker BSo, so just personalize this for us.
Speaker BLike what do you actually do in your routine when it comes to cold exposure?
Speaker DYeah, it's it's funny, I actually have been talking with athletes about cold exposure for, for years now and have had several that have been doing it.
Speaker DPersonally, this was probably 20, 24 is when I first started getting into it.
Speaker DSo they'll all still give me a hard time and say, oh, you're finally on board here.
Speaker DBut the benefits that I've noticed have, have been, have been really great.
Speaker DSo in my mind I was, to BJ's point, looking for more of the, the mental challenge, the make yourself uncomfortable, learn to do uncomfortable things and tolerate uncomfortable things.
Speaker DAnd so that's, that's where it really started for me.
Speaker DAnd my, my ice bath routine now is different because we're at a different season.
Speaker DI, my, I bought an inflatable ice bath that I could put up in the basement or could put up outside, but I did not buy a chiller to go with it.
Speaker DSo in the summer or in the spring I can't really use it.
Speaker DBut starting late last fall, I decided I'm going to put it up on the patio.
Speaker DAnd so when I first started using it, the water was probably somewhere around 48 degrees.
Speaker DThat was the temperature that it was coming out of the tap.
Speaker DAnd so would hop in.
Speaker DI could do longer periods of prolonged cold exposure at that point.
Speaker DAnd a lot of times athletes that I'm coaching or working with, they're, they're not ready to jump into freezing cold water.
Speaker DSo somewhere in the mid-40s works really well for them.
Speaker DAnd we'll do longer ice baths, maybe somewhere between six and ten minutes at that point.
Speaker DAnd when we're doing that, I think it's really helping to promote muscle recovery.
Speaker DAnd I don't want to get into all the science because I know BJ is going to dive into the sciency pieces.
Speaker BMy very next question.
Speaker BYes, he is.
Speaker DYeah, absolutely.
Speaker DBut I've noticed, you know, just anecdotally I've noticed I feel less inflamed.
Speaker DI feel, feel like my muscles are recovering faster when I'm doing those prolonged cold exposures.
Speaker DNow as the winter would go on, that ice bath would get colder and colder and colder and so to the point where it would freeze over top and would have to break into it to get in.
Speaker DAnd the water temperature at that point was 33 degrees.
Speaker DThat is a lot colder.
Speaker DAnd I think that there's a very different reason you're getting in there.
Speaker DSo again, when I was going in the warmer water that was very much helping with muscle recovery, making sure that I was being able to, to get Myself adapted to going into colder water.
Speaker DAnd then by the time the water got to 33, 34 degrees, somewhere in that ballpark, I was taking much shorter ice baths.
Speaker DTwo minutes, three minutes.
Speaker DI was really focused on the mental aspect then I really don't want to get into here.
Speaker DAnd so I was going much shorter periods of time and I was doing it daily, whereas when I was doing the longer ice baths, it might be every other day, every three days.
Speaker DAnd now that we are moving out of the winter into spring again, the water is way too warm.
Speaker DAnd so now for doing ice baths, I'm going to one of the local spas or gyms or different, different studios that offer that.
Speaker DI'm going back to the water that's closer to 45 degrees for the longer periods of time.
Speaker BNow, I am curious, Ken, with, with that being your primary methodology of cold exposure is do you find there to be a big difference between owning that product, that inflatable tub, or going to a facility near you that offers it versus just throwing ice in the bathtub and trying to, to create a certain temperature for yourself?
Speaker BI'm asking that totally out of naivety.
Speaker BMaybe that would be too cold or not cold enough.
Speaker DI've noticed with the, with the longer exposures in the warmer water, which is what I get when I go to, to some of the different studios around here, I don't see quite the same impact on my hrv.
Speaker DI know it's still stimulating.
Speaker DYou know, first giving me that kick of the sympathetic nervous system, right.
Speaker DAnd then allowing the parasympathetic to, to jump back out and potentially see higher HRV recovery.
Speaker DBut during the winter, when I'm in the really cold water, that's where I see the biggest impacts to my HRV in general too.
Speaker DAnd I'm using, I'm using whoop.
Speaker DAnd I have another device that I use to measure my hrv.
Speaker DBut I've again, anecdotally and you know, M plus one experiment, I see, I see that impact.
Speaker DIt's greater when I'm doing the shorter ice baths on a daily basis in the colder water, but I still do see it on the longer days as well.
Speaker BVery, very interesting.
Speaker BNow bj Ken is getting into a little bit of what's happening in his body right, as he's getting into these kinds of temperatures.
Speaker BNow that science has started to study this, which can also reference the science is starting to catch up to the anecdotal stories from ice exposure.
Speaker BWhat does the science say this cold exposure actually does for our bodies both From a recovery aspect and a fitness and challenge mental aspect.
Speaker CYeah, there's.
Speaker CI mean, there's a lot of science there and it's interesting, but I'd probably be remiss if I didn't mention kind of medical disclaimer, cold water immersion isn't for everybody.
Speaker CSo all these techniques and protocols we're talking about here, you obviously want to be safe and make sure that if you have any cardiovascular history, high blood pressure, arrhythmias, poor circulation, any heart problems, anything like that, you know, make sure you consult with your physician, even if you don't have any of those histories, but you're maybe concerned, you know, consult with your physician before ever attempting any of these things we're talking about.
Speaker BThank you for saying that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CBut all that said, there's a lot of physiological benefits and there is science to confirm this.
Speaker COne thing I always tell people when I talk about my own personal history with cold water exposure.
Speaker CI remember in 2012, I was training for Escape from Alcatraz, and I remember thinking I knew how cold that water was typically going to be.
Speaker CI think at the time of year they were holding it then on average it was going to be low 50s.
Speaker CAnd I was thinking, that's colder than any water I've ever open water, I've ever practiced.
Speaker CI took it upon myself to start taking cold showers in the morning.
Speaker CI'd heard somebody had done that and had good success in adapting to the cold prior to swimming Alcatraz.
Speaker CAnd I thought, okay, I'll do that.
Speaker CAnd it was funny because one of the first things I noticed, outside of just being torturous and developing that grit factor, was afterwards, you know, it sucked when you're doing it.
Speaker CBut afterwards I just felt really good.
Speaker CAnd it just.
Speaker CThe prolonged effect of that would last for hours throughout the day.
Speaker CAnd at the time I didn't know really much science behind it.
Speaker CBut now studying it a little bit more and looking at the literature that's out there, it's probably one of the strongest points of evidence we have for the physiological benefit to cold water exposure in that the mental effects, because it does kind of spark our autonomic nervous system.
Speaker CAnd the sympathetic response, kind of that fight or flight response, it sparks that so quickly if the water stimulus is cold enough that it kind of affects this without getting too sciency.
Speaker CIt basically affects the release and stimulation of the catecholamines, which is like epinephrine, norepinephrine, which another term for that is adrenaline and noradrenaline and dopamine.
Speaker CWhich are these neurotransmitters responsible for this feel good effect and improving mood, attention, alertness, focus, energy, all of that is tied to the release of those chemicals in both the brain and the body.
Speaker CAnd the science has shown that that stimulus and that effect doesn't just happen in the short term immediately after that exposure, but it can last for hours.
Speaker CAnd I think a lot of people will, will say that you'll hear hear anecdotally a lot of people just say, you know, I don't know what it's doing, but I just feel great.
Speaker CI feel great afterwards.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd, and that is some of the science behind, behind a lot of that.
Speaker CSo it's, it's very interesting.
Speaker DBJ Correct me if I'm wrong.
Speaker DThe studies that I've seen have shown that again, if the water is cold enough, you get those benefits after just a minute or two.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DYou don't have to be in there for 20 minutes to feel these.
Speaker DAnd in fact, probably the colder the water, the shorter the time you're still going to get that response.
Speaker CYeah, and we can jump into that too, because I think the most common question that comes up with deliberate cold exposure is well, how cold does it need to be?
Speaker CAnd kind of like what you're talking about, Ken, with your own experience and the changing of the seasons and the different temperatures having sometimes different effects, are you realizing that if it's warmer you might need to stay in a little bit longer?
Speaker CYou know, there's, there's a lot of science and different studies around different protocols of, of time and exposure and then the, how cold the temperature needs to be.
Speaker CAnd it's, it's funny because I think it from reading a lot of different researchers opinions on this, based on the, the science most kind of come to this point where it's, it all kind of falls in that it depends bucket, right.
Speaker CIt's, it definitely is individual, but it kind of comes down to this, boiling it down into getting that person to say, okay, this is really cold and I want to get out, but I know I can safely say it whatever temperature that is for you.
Speaker CSo for some people, if they put their hand under the shower water or they put their hand in the ice bath and they're like, oh yeah, that's not too bad, it's probably not cold enough.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CBut if they jump in and they're like, okay, this is really cold, I don't want to be in here, but I know I can do it safely for X amount of time, I think that's the appropriate stimulus, it's likely enough to stimulate your autonomic nervous system to trigger the effects that we want.
Speaker CIf you look at kind of systematic reviews of the literature, most studies have shown that that range of temperatures, anywhere from 44 to 59 degrees Fahrenheit, and it's not that you can't go colder, but that that hasn't been there maybe isn't as much literature on that because.
Speaker BYeah, and that's probably cold enough.
Speaker BIt's probably cold enough for anybody to feel like, I don't want to be.
Speaker CAnd again, it can differ depending on the person and the person can get more adapted as they go.
Speaker CAnd it might be intuitive to think this, but obviously the, the lower the temperature, the less exposure you need.
Speaker CSo I think again, most would say if there's temperatures closer to the 59, 60 degree Fahrenheit range, you likely would need to be in the water for upwards of 30 minutes or more to really get that same effect.
Speaker CBut if it's closer to the 40 degree mark, it might only take 30 seconds for that stimulus to happen for that individual.
Speaker CAnd again, it depends on the individual.
Speaker CBut yeah, I would tell somebody that if you're excited to jump in, it's probably not cold enough for you.
Speaker CNow, you might be crazy or you might just realize, hey, the benefits are so much.
Speaker CIt outweighs any of that resistance early on.
Speaker CBut it definitely should be that shock factor to you.
Speaker CYou shouldn't want to get in there at first.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I'm obviously from Dallas, Texas, and Vanessa Ronsley, who is our other host for the podcast, she'll do some episodes, I'll do some episodes.
Speaker BShe's from Calgary, Canada, so that threshold for her might be a little different than what it is for me to feel like, ooh, that's really cold water.
Speaker BB BJ you bringing up Alcatraz is really interesting to me because I've, I've done that race as well, and I lucked out in the sense that I caught it on a warmer year.
Speaker BYeah, I, I want to say the water temperature for us was 62, 63, 64 the day of the race, which is much warmer than it normally is when we had a stronger current than normal.
Speaker BThat slowed us down quite a bit.
Speaker BBut we didn't have that like, shock factor of jumping into the bay and feeling like it was icy cold.
Speaker BLike, like you, you kind of hear people talk about.
Speaker BBut for an athlete that struggles in cold open water swims or just dreads signing up for races that have cold open Water swims.
Speaker BIs this a great way to combat that or is it just maybe your body's just not built for that kind of environment.
Speaker BYou should find warmer swim venues.
Speaker BWhat do you think?
Speaker CYeah, absolutely.
Speaker CAnd I think, you know, as we talked about the mental effects that we see the science for in boosting mood and alertness, focus, energy, all the other thing it does, like Ken alluded to as well, it's like you're training your grit factor.
Speaker CAnd there is something to be said about training that top down control of the prefrontal cortex, which is basically your grit factor area.
Speaker CLike, can I mentally overcome this?
Speaker CAnd not only that, but there are the physiological changes that do occur as you challenge that system.
Speaker CAnd that's another one of the big health benefits of, of cold water exposure is that there can be a boost in metabolism and you can actually change your physiology.
Speaker CAnd one thing we'll, we'll touch on, we won't go down this rabbit hole because it's, it's a topic in and of itself, but that's the topic of, of increasing your brown fat stores.
Speaker CSo there's something called brown fat, which is kind of known as your, your thermogenic fat.
Speaker CIt's, it's fat that has a lot more mitochondria.
Speaker CIt's, it's different than kind of the typical fat most people think of, which is our white fat.
Speaker CIt's more the subcutaneous fat that most people want to get rid of.
Speaker CBrown fat is very different and it's, it's actually fat that boosts your metabolism and through the process known as thermogenesis, which is just kind of the, the way your body then regulates its temperature warms itself up.
Speaker CThe more brown fat stores you have, the more able you are to, to warm your body and regulate your, your temperature.
Speaker CSo by training yourself through cold water immersion, you can start to increase your, your brown fat stores.
Speaker CAnd what's another interesting point with brown fat is many of us as kids have a lot more, a higher percentage of brown fat.
Speaker CAnd then as we age, we start to lose some of that naturally.
Speaker CAnd then if you don't use it, you lose it as well.
Speaker CSo I always think it's funny because I tell my kids, put your coat on when they go outside all the time.
Speaker CAnd they never listen to me and somehow they always seem fine.
Speaker CI'm like, oh, that's probably why they've got more brown fat stores.
Speaker BThey can actually so interesting regulate their.
Speaker CTemperature better than me because I'm freezing.
Speaker CI'm like, how do you not have a coat on, but they're literally built different.
Speaker BThey're literally built different.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BA little bit joke, right?
Speaker BWe say about certain athletes or something.
Speaker BOh, they're just built different or, oh, people.
Speaker BFolks from more northern countries that can stay in the cold.
Speaker BThey're built different.
Speaker BThey literally are in this case.
Speaker CYeah, yeah, no, totally.
Speaker CIt.
Speaker CIt is.
Speaker CIt is definitely a thing.
Speaker CAnd you know, as you train that system, like any system, you will adapt to those changes.
Speaker CSo I think there is that benefit of increasing your cold exposure to.
Speaker CTo change your system in that way.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker BThat is so interesting.
Speaker BI'm.
Speaker BI'm curious for the athlete who's listening to this.
Speaker BAnd, and maybe they're like, maybe they've dabbled with this before, but it's not part of the regular routine.
Speaker BMaybe they're like me, and they've never tried any form of cold exposure outside of just going for a run in the cold.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BWhat are the protocols for this?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BWe're.
Speaker BWe're.
Speaker BWe're hearing there's a different form factors.
Speaker BWe're hearing it needs to be uncomfortably cold to where you don't want to do it, and the colder it is, the less time you need, all that kind of stuff.
Speaker BBut, but I'm thinking just in terms of like, like, where does this fit in our weekly workout regimen?
Speaker BLike, how often are we doing this?
Speaker BI'm thinking, like, is there a time of day?
Speaker BLike, is this better in the morning or the afternoon or the evening or before a workout, after a workout?
Speaker BWhat's just the how to's for the best practices for fitting cold exposure into our daily routine?
Speaker DCoach KEN I would say when I'm looking at this and how I personally go about it, is that if I'm working with an athlete who has questions or somebody's brand new to this, let's start with that uncomfortable temperature, but one that is not feeling too cold.
Speaker DSo what BJ had already said, and when we're, when we're working in those warmer temperatures, the 44 to all the way up to 59 degrees, I think you can, you can look to, To.
Speaker DTo safely be in the water for, for up to 10 minutes.
Speaker DBeyond 10 minutes, you know, if the water is warmer might work, but really, once we see or once you get that vasoconstriction that happens in, in the skin and in the body, there's really not a ton of extra benefits to continuing to stay in there.
Speaker DSo you might say, oh, my grit factor wants me to be in here for 20, for 30 minutes, probably not necessary.
Speaker DAll of the time on those longer ice baths or those longer prolonged cold exposures.
Speaker DI like those to help with muscle recovery.
Speaker DSo if I'm finishing up a very long run or I am finishing a long bike, I might hop in immediately after that workout.
Speaker DNow, if I am going to the gym and I am working a strength day and I'm purposefully lifting to try to build muscle, then I think that there is some science out there that shows that the hypertrophy that occurs is actually diminished due to that, to that cold exposure.
Speaker DSo you know when you lift and you're sore, you want to feel that soreness.
Speaker DYou don't want to stop that.
Speaker DSo if it is a lifting day, I will do cold exposure prior to going to the gym or I'll wait 3, 4, 5 hours afterwards before I, before I hop in.
Speaker DAnd that's kind of those general longer, warmer, cold exposure days.
Speaker DIf I'm going for the really cold days, like I had mentioned earlier, the, the 33 degrees, the 34 degrees.
Speaker DAgain, I'm only jumping in for two, three minutes.
Speaker DBut I'm still probably doing that before my workouts and, and I'm not doing it really after my long runs either.
Speaker DIf I come home from a long run and it's is that very cold day, I may actually just throw cold water into my tub to help with the muscle recovery on the legs versus jumping into the 33 degree water.
Speaker DBecause I know when it comes into the tub on that cold day, it's going to be closer to 45 degrees coming out of the tap.
Speaker DI live in Pennsylvania and that's kind of our general water temperature in, in the winter.
Speaker DSo that's, that's really how I think about approaching it or, or tackling it for again, kind of different reasons, right.
Speaker DOr different modalities to this.
Speaker DAnd then finally I'll say if I'm, if I am thinking about outside of the workouts, the time of day I'm doing these.
Speaker DI do like the cold exposure in the morning because it wakes me up.
Speaker DIt gets that dopamine pump in the, all of those other, all of those other hormones that might be going from, from jumping in there.
Speaker DAnd then at the end of the day, right.
Speaker DI don't want to do it before bed because I don't want all of that.
Speaker DI don't want all of those, those hormones pumping in my body.
Speaker DI'll do more of a, when I'm going to bed, a warm shower, right?
Speaker DAnd so actually what happens, I believe, when you're Doing that too.
Speaker DIs that the cold water?
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DIt, it causes you to want to, to warm up your core and so blood comes into the body and that's another thing that kicks you.
Speaker DIt gets you moving.
Speaker DAt the end of the day, when you're in that warm shower, you're actually doing the opposite.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DSo you're warming yourself up.
Speaker DYour body, your body doesn't need to pull all of, all of the heat into its core, so it actually cools you down a little bit at the core because the warm warmness is on the outside and so you lower your body temperature.
Speaker DAnd that's actually better for sleeping.
Speaker DBut probably sleep science is a whole different podcast.
Speaker BKen.
Speaker BGoing into this conversation, I probably would have done a hard workout and dabbled with cold exposure therapy after the hard workout, thinking this is going to help my muscles recover and respond better after this hard workout.
Speaker BAnd what we're learning is don't do that because of what you just said.
Speaker BSo, so I, I'm just finding this so interesting.
Speaker BBJ is, is Ken right?
Speaker BAnd everything he just said, is there anything you want to add just for the best protocols for utilizing cold exposure as an athlete?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd I think he can spot on with a lot of that.
Speaker CI think one interesting thing with the anti inflammatory benefits of cold water immersion is that they have done some research and there's conflicting evidence.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker COn how much does it become deleterious to like anabolic strength building.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd I think there is some science to say if your primary focus is on strength training and hypertrophying of the muscle.
Speaker CSo like you said, Andrew, that that inflammatory thing that happens to our bodies once we break a muscle down is advantageous to build that muscle back up.
Speaker CSo why would we want to inhibit that?
Speaker CAnd there is some science there that would tell you if your primary focus is strength training to hypertrophy muscles, you should wait at least four hours before doing cold water immersion all the way up to the neck.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker COtherwise it could be not as advantageous.
Speaker CHowever, from an endurance training standpoint or high intensity training standpoint, there really hasn't been a lot of evidence to say that it, to do it immediately following that type of activity, that it would decrease performance or inhibit that process, matter of how you respond and how you feel.
Speaker CSo I think there is some science to say it can reduce doms delayed onset muscle soreness.
Speaker CSo for some, because it reduces that soreness feeling, they might like it after a long bike ride or a long run just so they can wake up and do it again.
Speaker CThe next day, or do another session the next day and not feel as sore.
Speaker CSo there may be some benefits there.
Speaker CUm, but again, if, if your primary focus is, is muscle building, maybe lay off or, or do it earlier.
Speaker COne interesting thing that Ken said that I think is key is time of day can matter.
Speaker CAnd especially if you're pursuing the cold water immersion for, primarily for the metabolic benefit.
Speaker CIf you were to do it earlier in the day, you would have a bigger gap to bridge with your body having to warm itself up.
Speaker CBecause our core body temperature internally is at its lowest about two hours prior to waking up, and then based on our circadian rhythms throughout the day, your core body temperature starts to rise.
Speaker CAnd then right before you go to sleep, typically the way your body's kind of trained, your body temperature will then start to lower.
Speaker CSo if you were going to do cold water immersion earlier in the day, before your core body temperature has kind of gotten to its peak, you would have to bridge a bigger gap.
Speaker CSo your body would kind of be burning, so to speak, to warm itself up a little bit longer or a little bit more to get there.
Speaker CAnd depending on how you are, if you were to do it right before bed, you would likely, you know, again, your body would have to ramp itself up with, with its core body temperature.
Speaker CSo it might take you a while longer than to get it back down to a cooler temperature where you would normally want to be before you go to sleep.
Speaker CSo it's.
Speaker CBut it's like some people that drink coffee right before bed.
Speaker CSome people, it doesn't bother them if you're super exhausted, wiped out from all your training anyways.
Speaker CIt may not matter if you were to do it right before bed anyways because you're already, you know, trashed and ready to sleep.
Speaker CBut that's something of note.
Speaker CJust to know time of day can matter.
Speaker BNow, a lot of people like to go back and forth between a cold stimulus to the body and then a hot stimulus to the body.
Speaker BAnd I've seen this just in a PT environment for myself where a PT on a certain muscle group would oscillate between hot and cold stimulus as part of my recovery treatment.
Speaker BAnd this obviously is, we're talking more extreme directions right between cold immersion like we're talking about.
Speaker BBut a lot of our, our gym facilities and, and a lot of athletes will enjoy using sauna and really like a very, very warm environment as part of their kind of, in a similar way, just get, just giving a different stimulus to the body that they have to grit through that does something different to the muscles.
Speaker BIs there anything where these two fit well side by side, or are they just kind of like.
Speaker BLike different methodologies that should be viewed as different methodologies?
Speaker CYeah, I think there's some really interesting research with this as far as total body exposure to the different elements, whether it's cold or heat or kind of oscillating between both.
Speaker CWhat you're saying, Andrew, before with PT is more in that contrast, more isolated to specific area, it's a little bit different.
Speaker CBut when you're talking about total body exposure, whether it's kind of that Nordic cycle of going from a dry sauna to then an ice bath, I think there's again, if your focus is on the metabolic changes from that change in temperature, I think there's a lot of science that says that can be even more advantageous of going from a sauna that's maybe 80 to 100 degrees Celsius, or 175 to 210 degrees Fahrenheit, or whatever that conversion is, to then cold water immersion, which might be in the temperature range of 40 to 50 degrees.
Speaker CThat change in that challenge of having your body respond again can create that stimulus that evokes that autonomic response.
Speaker CThat's enough to trigger those changes like we're talking about, where they.
Speaker CThey might cycle back and forth several times.
Speaker CJust so the body has to really ramp up its thermogenesis and you start to see that increase in brown fat activation.
Speaker CAll those things I've even heard.
Speaker CThere's one scientist in particular, Dr.
Speaker CSusannah Soberg, that she's a prime advocate of not drying off or not getting warm at the end.
Speaker CAnd so ending on cold is actually something that she's shown to be more advantageous when you're talking about the metabolic benefits.
Speaker CSo you force your body at the end than to warm itself up.
Speaker CAnd even getting to that stage of where you're inducing a shiver response can actually release a substrate called succinate that helps activate more of those brown fat stores.
Speaker CSo there is some science there to say that if you do a little bit of that contrast, going from dry sauna, for example, to cold water immersion and then cycle through a couple times, but then ending on cold and not.
Speaker CNot resisting the urge to get warm right away, like not even not toweling off or not huddling and, you know.
Speaker BClutching yourself, not having a blanket at the ready and a fire, yeah, that.
Speaker CChange can actually be more advantageous from, again, the metabolic response.
Speaker DI'm happy to hear you say that because that would be my typical Protocol for not the hot and the cold, but when I'm doing the very cold ice baths in the wintertime, hopping out, jumping into the house, I do have to towel off because otherwise my wife might have something to say about that.
Speaker DBut I definitely typically invoke that shiver response.
Speaker DAnd it probably takes a good 15, 20 minutes to get myself back to where I'm feeling good.
Speaker DSo my typical morning routine would be about 9am Hop into the tub, spend three minutes there, hop back up, come inside, and then just head up to work.
Speaker DI would have a few meetings that I would get on, and while I'd be on those meetings, I'd definitely be shivering.
Speaker DBut that was my typical go to morning routine over the winter.
Speaker BYou know, you're on a podcast with scientists when we're calling it a shiver response as opposed to just being shivery and like, oh, I got the shivers.
Speaker BNo, I've induced a shivering response.
Speaker BThat's what's.
Speaker BYeah, go ahead, B.J.
Speaker CI was just going to say, speaking of the different protocols, we've kind of touched on one interesting science piece that came out of a lot of Dr.
Speaker CSoberg's research was that she even wrote a book on winter swimming, for example.
Speaker CBut one interesting thing from a time standpoint that she found that was significant, significant to induce a significant response was that over the course of a week, you needed to get at least 11 to 15 minutes of that cold water immersion all the way up to the neck, just per week, 11 to 15 minutes per week in order to be significant in stimulating the body in that beneficial way.
Speaker BInteresting.
Speaker CSo again, depending on the temperature and the time spent based on that temperature, you might, for example, do 45 degrees Fahrenheit for up to three minutes, maybe up to five minutes, but just three times a week, based on her research would say that's significant enough to continue to make some positive physiological changes based on what we're talking about with metabolic changes, not to mention the mental benefits.
Speaker BNow, I have one more question for today, and then we'll kick it over to Vanessa for our coach cooldown tip of the week.
Speaker BAnd, and what, what I'm wondering as a triathlete, I mean, clearly there's, there's multiple benefits we've talked about here.
Speaker BThere's the, the, the grit factor, challenging yourself that triathletes appeal to.
Speaker BSo I think a lot of listeners will hear this and, and we've learned some best practices and I think we've, we've heard enough to know, okay, we should give this a shot and see what it does, you know, for, for our body.
Speaker BBut when I look at what a triathlete does during the week, right, we have our swim training, our bike training, our run training.
Speaker BA lot of us do some form of strength training, a lot of us are doing some form of stretching and mobility work.
Speaker BPeople have other recovery methodologies they're mixing in, right?
Speaker BWhether that's foam rolling or, you know, spending some time in the recovery boots or spending some time with their massage gun or getting actual massages at a, at a facility that does that, you know, there's a lot for us to do.
Speaker BWhere does this mix in?
Speaker BIs this just like, you know, one of several different recovery methodologies that if we're using one, we're using the others and we're recovering or, or is this like something that is, is, it is different and it is special.
Speaker BSo it's worth adding into the mix alongside of all these other things, like what's, what's holistically when we look at the week of a triathlete, where does this fit in and how much of it do we need compared to other things?
Speaker BCoach KEN yeah, I, I think it's.
Speaker DGoing to be different based on the athlete, based on your goals, what you have coming up.
Speaker DSo for instance, when it's winter time here and I've got a plunge on my back patio, I'm jumping in every day for three minutes.
Speaker DIt doesn't take any extra time, it doesn't take anything out of the way now that we're moving into the spring, into the summer and I don't have that plunge on my patio.
Speaker DWell, now it's a 30 minute drive to the location where I can get into a tub.
Speaker DIt's a 30 minute drive back, that water's a little bit warmer.
Speaker DSo again, I'm probably looking at a 10 to 12 minute plunge at that point.
Speaker DSo I'm not doing it every day, but I definitely will try to get there couple times a week.
Speaker DIf I had a race that I know is coming up in the spring and it's going to be in a cold lake like we have here in our spring Pennsylvania races, I'm probably prioritizing that because I want to get used to being in that cold water as I come to race day so that my body doesn't freak out if I've not been doing cold water immersion for, for a month prior to that race.
Speaker DSo for me, I'm going to prioritize it a couple times a week.
Speaker DI'm not going to use it to replace my other Recovery modalities.
Speaker DAnd when I' working with athletes, we talk about when are you stretching, when are you having a massage or working pt.
Speaker DLet's try to fit it all in.
Speaker DAnd again, I think it's going to be different for everybody.
Speaker DThe key is, though, that when you look at each week, you plan exactly what it is you're going to do.
Speaker DEach of those modalities you're tackling has a reason that you're doing it.
Speaker DYou're not just saying, oh, I heard somebody talk about this modality on a podcast.
Speaker DIs that for me?
Speaker DTalk to your coach, find out why that modality may or may not be for you.
Speaker DYou and incorporate the ones that are ultimately going to help you reach your goals and the ones that aren't.
Speaker DLet them go.
Speaker BBJ I think Ken hit that pretty well, but anything for you to add as we shut down the main set of this episode.
Speaker CYeah, I've probably mentioned this before on a podcast, but I think there's so many things we can do as athletes that I think a lot of times I'll ask the question of the athlete.
Speaker CLike, it's not about adding one more thing to your list, but sometimes you have to figure out, like, what do I need to stop doing?
Speaker CRight?
Speaker CSo, yeah, we might be saying, hey, you know, getting this environmental training through cold exposure is a great thing for your body.
Speaker CThere can be the recovery benefits, the health benefits.
Speaker CBut, you know, if, if diet is your biggest thing on your list to check off because you're eating at McDonald's every day, you know that that should be your focus.
Speaker CIt's not just like, hey, keep doing all these things that, you know, you need to improve on and then add a cold plunge to, to burn more calories and lose more weight.
Speaker CSo obviously it's just you gotta weigh all those things.
Speaker CBut I liked what we talked about earlier, where I don't think we need to consider this type of tool or this type of cold exposure as just a recovery method, but it's part of a pillar of health.
Speaker CSo I think as we talk about what to do, what not to do, you kind of have to scratch where it itches, address your lowest hanging fruit, but then also think about, yeah, maybe this is something that could help me in a lot of different ways and how do we fit it in, make sure it's accessible, make sure it's efficient, otherwise you won't commit to anything there.
Speaker CBut I think it makes sense.
Speaker AGreat set, everyone.
Speaker ALet's cool down.
Speaker EAll right, everyone, it's time for the coach Cool down.
Speaker ETip.
Speaker EI'm Vanessa, your average triathlete with elite level, enthusiastic enthusiasm.
Speaker EAnd I'm here today with tri dot coach Gina Rimel.
Speaker EAnd let me tell you, she has an absolute heart of gold.
Speaker EGina started her triathlon journey while studying kinesiology and she became hooked right from the get go.
Speaker ESince then she has actually lost count of how many short course races and 70.3s she's done and she has six full Ironmans under her belt.
Speaker EGina has her master's degree in human performance.
Speaker EShe's a tridot pool school instructor and coaches swimming and personal group training at a fitness center in Texas.
Speaker EShe loves working with beginners through to Ironman finishers and holds a special place in her heart for first timers.
Speaker EWelcome to the show, Gina.
Speaker FThanks so much for having me.
Speaker ESo Gina, let's get straight to the tip here.
Speaker EI, I think this is going to be a really great tip.
Speaker EWe've never had anything like this on the cooldown before, so I'm really excited to hear what you have to say and to share with our listeners.
Speaker ESo let's hear.
Speaker FPerfect.
Speaker FSounds good.
Speaker FI encourage my athletes to practice running barefoot.
Speaker FSo whether you're coming out of a sprint distance race in a pool or a full distance ironman in a lake or a river, you're going to have to get from that body of water to your bike barefoot.
Speaker FSo practice running on different types of surfaces like grass or mud, sidewalk, maybe some loose pavement and then do a little research so you know about how far your race is.
Speaker FSome of those races you may have to climb up a handicap exit or something like that and it's a little bit longer.
Speaker FBut if you are just practicing on your trainer and then putting on your shoes and running out the garage, you're, you're getting that muscle memory for the run, but you're not practicing that run barefoot in the conditions that it would be.
Speaker FThat's just one more way you can eliminate a surprise on race day.
Speaker FAnd the flip side of that is some races will let you clip your shoes into your bike and push your bike out to the dismount or the mount line.
Speaker FAnd that's another reason why you need to run barefoot or your shoes will already be on your feet and you need to practice running in those bike shoes.
Speaker FOur bike shoes are more solid.
Speaker FThey don't, they don't flex and they have those clips or cleats on the bottom that can be really slick or lead to a slip or ankle turn.
Speaker FAnd so you just want to practice running in those Shoes so that you can get your bike out to transition and then back into transition.
Speaker EThis is a fabulous tip, and it's something that I wish I had listened to prior to my adventure in Nice, because I have not actually told anybody this, but when I was coming out of the swim exit, I fell flat on my face.
Speaker ELike, I tripped and I fell flat on my face and.
Speaker EAnd it was one of those things, like, I.
Speaker EI don't know if it was due to being dizzy or, or just, you know, going from water to land or whatever.
Speaker EWas there a wrinkle on the carpet?
Speaker EI don't know.
Speaker EBut I ended up falling.
Speaker EAnd.
Speaker EAnd you're right.
Speaker ELike, it is something to practice.
Speaker EThere was a mass, there was an incline that I had to go up up in bare feet with wet feet.
Speaker EThere was carpet down, but it was slippery.
Speaker ESo I think you're totally right in suggesting that.
Speaker EThat athletes practice on a variety of terrain to make sure that they're getting that Just, you know, take away a little bit of that, the unknown that might be happening.
Speaker EAnd another thing that I think is really great is the research aspect.
Speaker ELike, find out what your transition area is going to be like, whether that's from swim to bike or from bike to run.
Speaker EUm, when.
Speaker EWhen I was racing in Wisconsin, I did the relay with Carrie Lubinow.
Speaker EAnd so she came out of the water and we had to run together to the exit point so that I could get on the bike because I was not prepared to run on concrete with my injury that I had.
Speaker EAnd so what we did, we ended up doing is we knew that the transition was a really, really long period of time.
Speaker ESo, A, we had done our research and B, knew that I could not run in definitely not run in bike shoes and definitely not run in bare feet.
Speaker ESo I actually wore my running shoes and we sprinted to the bike mount line.
Speaker EAnd then she collected my shoes for me and I got on the bike and got going.
Speaker EUm, so I think that this is a.
Speaker EA fabulous tip.
Speaker ETip for all athletes to know what the transition is going to be like and then to practice to make sure that there's no unknown there.
Speaker ESo thank you so much for sharing that tip.
Speaker EI love it.
Speaker EI think our listeners are gonna just think that it's a wonderful thing.
Speaker FIt sounds so simple.
Speaker FAnd we drill into our athletes.
Speaker FNothing new on race day, but if you've never walked or run barefoot, it's really different, Especially if you're used to, like, the HOKA shoes or a really squishy shoe and all of a Sudden you're trying to run up a concrete path.
Speaker FIt's a lot of impact.
Speaker FIt could be slippery.
Speaker FI know I've got semi sensitive feet.
Speaker FAnd then like I did Waco a month or so ago, it's all sticker burrs.
Speaker FLike you want to be prepared for how that feels so that you know how to react and how to fix your.
Speaker FFix whatever just went haywire.
Speaker EYeah.
Speaker EAnd, and even if that means, like knowing what the type of, of terrain you're going to be going on, if that's part of your race plan, to walk or to run, because you don't have to run like no one says you have to run.
Speaker ESo if it's something that you're not comfortable with, then you're going to take your time and you're going to, you know, walk and then reduce the impact or reduce the risk of injury or, you know, if you have sensitive feet, then just walk slowly and, and let it go.
Speaker FDon't, don't risk a slip or an injury on, on your way to transition.
Speaker FJust you haven't practiced something.
Speaker FBut at the same time, like, some of those jogs can be a little bit long.
Speaker FAnd if you haven't practiced that, I can waste a little extra energy because, oh, I'm going to sprint to the, my bike.
Speaker FAnd the next thing you know, you're a quarter of a mile into it and you're out of breath and you're trying to get your wetsuit off or your bike loaded and you're not focused because you've expended all this energy trying to get to your transition.
Speaker EAbsolutely.
Speaker EAnd, and not even to mention when you're going from that horizontal plane while you're swimming and then standing up, that, that can have a lot.
Speaker EYeah, you could get dizzy just from that in itself.
Speaker ESo it's important if you do have a, a long transition period, you want to make sure that you keep that heart rate low because it will spike.
Speaker FAbsolutely.
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