Sunday, November 11, 2012

A Picky Girl's Guide to Eating on the Trail
Part One: Day Trips

Not a bad lunch spot! High up on a ridge on Broken Top

During some downtime caused by my almost year-long recovery from an injury, I took a good, hard look at my diet and overall health. Based on the recommendation of my acupuncturist, as well as encouragement from my own improving health during this journey, I cut lots of junk out of my diet including wheat, dairy, soy, and sugar. Caffeine and alcohol were cut back to rare occasions.

Then I started the anti-candida diet and even more junk came out: anything with mold or fungus (mushrooms, fruits like melon, decaf coffee, kombucha); all vinegar except organic apple cider vinegar; starchy vegetables including potatoes, carrots, and beets; processed meats; beans; commercial sauces and condiments... my grocery list became limited to certain veggies, greens, berries, eggs, meat, oils, and nuts.  


The greens in my garden going off in June!

A typical day's meals were eggs and greens or a smoothie for breakfast, a giant salad for lunch, and a salad with something else (roasted chicken, grilled peppers and squash, soup, etc) for dinner. Similar to the Paleo diet (from what I've been told), but with less bacon! After about six months of this new way of eating, I had multiple health issues (like eczema) spontaneously resolve, lost weight, gained endurance, and felt much healthier in general.

But how do you eat like this on the trail? My traditional standby trail food was all of the sudden off limits: chunks of salami and cheese, pita bread, Clif bars, and chocolate!

My first full day trip after all these changes was a climb and ski of South Sister. I packed a salad, a bag of raw almonds and cashews, a bag of strawberries, and some Oskri bars.


Kind of excited to chow down on some South Sister Salad!

South Sister Salad

Fill a gallon zippered bag with the following:
  • Mixed greens like lettuce, mesclun, kale, chard, collards
  • Tomatoes
  • Cucumber
  • Red bell peppers
  • Avocado
  • Roasted chicken
  • Strawberries
  • Pine nuts
Dress it with some olive oil, fresh squeezed lemon and lime, salt, and some dried herbs.

It was a big-ass, stick-to-your-ribs kind of salad. It filled me up without weighing me down, didn't take up a lot of room in my pack, was easy to digest, and allowed me to be on my way quickly!

I also packed a bag of strawberries and two Oskri bars. The strawberries satisfied my sweet tooth, but they get a little funky in your pack so make sure you eat them during your trip (they won't survive!)

As for the Oskri bars... well, the Oskri bars are simply outrageous. They have two ingredients: coconut and rice syrup. Eating an Oskri bar is sort of like strapping on a jet pack: all that fat and sugar gives you an incredible burst of energy, without feeling all gross or heavy in your belly.


Yes, I like these bars... just a little bit!


My food experiment was a success; I felt well-fueled all day.

Some other ideas for day trip trail food:
  • Carrot and celery sticks
  • Justin's Almond butter packs
  • Spiced, mixed nuts and seeds (try curry powder or pumpkin pie spices -- just add the spices to the bag)
  • Beef jerky (look out for the MSG!)
  • GoRaw cookies or bars

What do you eat on the trail if you have allergies or other health concerns that keep you from eating typical trail food? Please add your ideas to the comments below!

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Living Well on Crutches

On New Year's Day I slipped and fell mid-switchback on an icy ridge. When I stood back up, I realized immediately that I couldn't bear weight on my left leg. The following 6 weeks were full of ups and downs: doctor visits, x-rays, a work/ski trip to Utah, a canceled ski trip to Jackson, crutches, dance parties, ice packs, a hangout session with Glen Plake, and a general sense of frustration not knowing what the hell was going on with my ankle.

It was finally suggested that I get an MRI, and my instinct was right on: in addition to the torn ligaments (sprain), I did some damage to both my talus bone and its cartilage. Surgery may or may not happen, depending on my pain level when the sprain and bone bruise are more or less resolved. Back on the crutches again!


Not thinking about the new snow... not thinking about the new snow...


I've been on crutches before, but it takes a few days of struggling (and maybe a little whining) before you learn some tricks to living well with these damned things:

  1. Get a small backpack, messenger bag, or fanny pack (Jammy Pack?!?) and keep it with you all the time. Mine has a phone, wallet, keys, lip balm, meds, water bottle, and room for random things I need to carry from one place to another.
  2. Get a disabled parking permit as soon as possible. 
  3. If anyone offers you help with anything, take it. Those 10 steps you save on the crutches could be used for something you have to do on your own later.
  4. Do your grocery shopping at a mega-store with electric scooters. They are awesome!
  5. If you have a dog, you won't be going on any leashed walks anytime soon. Thank you dog parks! Just make sure you don't crutch through dog poo... eew.
  6. Keep your body moving. This is as important for your mental health as it is for maintaining your physical health. Swimming is a great way to get exercise with a broken body.
  7. Drive-thrus! Drive-thrus! We have quite a few here in Bend: Prescriptions, thai food, ATM's.... these are a lifesaver if you are exhausted from crutching around everywhere.
  8. And finally, love your caretaker, if you are lucky enough to have one!