by cynthia23 » Tue Jul 03, 2007 12:16 pm
This is a good question, 5150. MagikW gives some good guidelines. I also think there is an element of personal variability tied to ethnicity. Some people, like Pavel the Ironman, seem to function very well in high temps. Pavel reports he does poorly in cooler temps and seems to hit his stride when temps are over 80. This may well be a function of ethnicity: Pavel is Greek. People of Mediterrerean, African, or Latin American extraction seem to do well in the heat, probably because they evolved bodily mechanisms that responded to their warm conditions. On the other hand, people of Northern European extraction don't seem to do so well in heat, and perform better in cooler temps. With your name, I strongly suspect you, CrazyIrish, to be ... uh ... Irish. I am also half Irish (gramps emigrated from Belfast) and I notice that the conditions under which I seem to flourish athletically (Inasmuch as I can ever be said to flourish athletically) are cool, foggy, moist, overcast days. By an amazing Darwinian coincidence, that pretty much describes the climate of Ireland....alas, cool, foggy days are rather infrequent here. But at least I have an excuse for my lousy times ....I think the best advice is trial and error: go out in various weather conditions and notice how you perform. Keep written track. Attend carefully to subtle symptoms, such as a slight headache, irritation, fatigue, or other "mental" symptoms. These often flag overheating. the bottom line is to pay attention to how you feel. It is pointless to work out in situations when it's too hot for your body: you won't be able to push yourself hard enough to get a good cardiovascular work-out. "Pushing through" overheating is a terrible idea and as I discussed elsewhere will rapidly lead to heat exhaustion and a mild form of brain damage, and one bad case of heat exhaustion predisposes you to worse cases in the future, which can really screw up future work-outs. It's better when it's too hot--for you-- to seek a cooler place or work out indoors/in a pool etc. This is being sensible, not wimpy.
Q: How many therapists does it take to screw in a light bulb? A: Only one, but the light bulb has to want to change ...