Nutrition on the Trail What to Eat, When, and Why It Matters More as We Age
Ever hit mile 3 and felt your legs go heavy, your focus blur, and your motivation quietly disappear? You hadn't done anything wrong, but what you ate (and when you ate it) had set you up to fade.In this 20-minute episode of Active Trails, we break down thethree-window nutrition framework built specifically for hikers 55 and older: what to eat before the trail, what to carry during, and the often-missed recovery window in the hour after you get home.
You'll learn why protein needs rise with age, why your thirst signal is no longer a reliable guide, and why the timing of meals can matter more than the meals themselves. We cover practical, real-food answers , no complicated math.What's inside: → The pre-hike meal that sets you up for energy, not a crash
→ Trail snacks that hit 25–30g of protein without weighing down your pack→ The 60-minute recovery window — and why missing it costs you more the older you get→ Anti-inflammatory foods that help your joints and muscles
Free downloads: Click the link to download.
1. Pre and Post Hike Nutrition [https://drive.google.com/file/d/133-vNfMixT7pZHxHCEumyq0ndy9WL4ex/view?usp=drive_link]
2. Energy and Electrolyte [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1zbWQ3N1-0Sd_wo7ErHKb_0hSucfUEkya/view?usp=drive_link]
If you're an active adult who wants to feel strong on every walk, this episode is for you.
All nutrition information in this episode is general guidance only. Always consult a healthcare provider before making significant changes to your diet, especially if managing chronic conditions or taking medications.
🔬 RESEARCHNOTE
A 2019 review in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that older adults require approximately 50% more dietary protein per meal than younger adults to achieve the same muscle protein synthesis response — roughly 25–40 grams per meal versus 20–25 grams.
🔬 RESEARCHNOTE
Studies published in the Journal of Applied Physiology show that older adults show impaired thirst response at equivalent dehydration levels compared to younger adults, and are less able to self-regulate fluid intake during and after exercise. For hikers, this means scheduled drinking — not drinking to thirst — is a genuine safety strategy, not just a performance tip.
🔬 RESEARCHNOTE
A 2020 review in the Journal of Nutrition, Health & Aging found that older adults who consumed 25–40 grams of protein within 60 minutes of exercise showed significantly greater muscle maintenance than those who delayed eating — even when total daily protein intake was the same.