I'm fairly new to the board, but I've used the forums for guidance on more than one occasion. I've come to a cross-roads of sorts, and I'm definitely in need of some advice.
Over the last 4 months, I've lost just under 50lbs on the diet. I'm still sticking to it, but obviously my weight loss has slowed over the last month to an average of 1-2 lbs per week (which is healthy). I'm about 30 lbs from my goal, and I've been working out nearly every day. I've recently gotten back into cycling, and the amount of cycling I am doing requires (at least according to most sources) a far greater amount of carbs than Atkins allows. I'm not talking about cycling around the block, I mean a 62 mile marathon type of event.
My question, I guess, is should I stay on Atkins until I hit my goal or modify my diet now for a "cycling" diet and hope that the amount of exercise I'm getting will offset any possible weight gain from extra carbs? I've read that Atkins is horrible for serious exercise and endurance because the body needs even more carbs to burn for fuel, and that it isn't meant for seriously active people. Any truth to any of this? I'll take any advice I can get. Thanks!
Over the last 4 months, I've lost just under 50lbs on the diet. I'm still sticking to it, but obviously my weight loss has slowed over the last month to an average of 1-2 lbs per week (which is healthy). I'm about 30 lbs from my goal, and I've been working out nearly every day. I've recently gotten back into cycling, and the amount of cycling I am doing requires (at least according to most sources) a far greater amount of carbs than Atkins allows. I'm not talking about cycling around the block, I mean a 62 mile marathon type of event.
My question, I guess, is should I stay on Atkins until I hit my goal or modify my diet now for a "cycling" diet and hope that the amount of exercise I'm getting will offset any possible weight gain from extra carbs? I've read that Atkins is horrible for serious exercise and endurance because the body needs even more carbs to burn for fuel, and that it isn't meant for seriously active people. Any truth to any of this? I'll take any advice I can get. Thanks!



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