KONA: Ultimate Athlete Prep Guide

Training for Kona

Heat Adaptation: Train in heat or simulate it with sauna post-session. Use it to shift plasma volume and prep mentally.

Swim Fitness: Build open water confidence and aerobic durability. Include sighting, pack positioning, and strength work.

Hilly Bike & Wind: Include long tempo climbs and practice in wind. Use terrain-based watt pacing.

Being Lean & Fresh: Body comp matters, but being under-fueled or over-raced is a bigger risk. Be smart about taper and race build.

Season Length: Late-season race → Watch fatigue. Limit tune-up races post-August. Plan backward from Kona.

Logistics

Have a Car: Makes life easier for swim practice, athlete check-in, and getting away from crowds.

Crowds: It’s busy. Prep mentally and plan downtime to escape it.

Dig Me Beach: Great for daily swims but don’t overdo standing or walking on Ali’i Drive.

Swim Course Practice: Get in early to acclimate. Watch currents and timing.

Family Planning: Be clear on boundaries—you’re racing. Create space to focus.

Avoiding Illness: Travel smart (sanitize, hydrate, rest). Don’t over-socialize race week. It’s a virus hotspot due to volume of people.

The Course

Swim Start: Chaotic. Line up aggressively. Everyone is fast. Have a fight-ready mindset.

Bike: Crowded early. Stay patient. Queen K winds change mid-race. Use perceived effort more than data.

Wind Cut-Outs: Crosswinds especially before and after Hawi. Practice handling and gear shifting in wind.

Run Camber: Be aware—uneven surfaces can tax stabilizers. Rotate shoes in training.

Staying Cool: Ice, arm coolers, hat dousing, and pacing all matter. Don’t burn the first hour.

Bike Execution + Equipment

Front Wheel Choice: Shallow front if winds forecast strong. Confidence in handling > aero gain.

Special Needs Bag: Spare salt mix, mental reset item, optional caffeine gum/gel.

Skin Suit vs Salt Water: Check for chafing spots. Use lube in all seams.

Bike Foot Hot Spots: Lighter shoes. Consider vented insoles or powder.

Sunscreen: Long-lasting sport-specific. Consider white fabric coverage instead for performance in sweat.

Nutrition Strategy - Practice in Training – Don’t Wing It

Race Fuel Basics:

Fluid: 750 ml/hr + 250 ml water if using gels.

Calories: ~300–400 cal/hr on the bike. Less in hot races.

Salt: Use “The Right Stuff” or dissolve salt in fluid (¼ tsp per bottle).

No Solid Food Needed unless practiced. Use early only.

Run Fuel: Carry or grab gels with sodium. Gels + sports drink for the final 30 km.

Pre-Race Days:

3–4 days out: Avoid gluten, stick with rice, sweet potatoes, lean proteins.

Night Before: Don’t overdo carb load. Keep dinner clean and familiar.

Race Morning: 400–600 cal 2–3 hrs before start. Sip electrolyte drink till 30 min out.

Run Start Tip:

• Eat out of T2 (gel or liquid calories) to control effort and front-load energy.

• Use run start as a build. Don’t be the hero in first mile.

Mental Prep

Everyone is Fit: Expect a tough swim and fast packs. Don’t panic.

Race Your Plan: Bike packs and heat will test discipline.

Know Your Numbers: Have pace/watt/hr ranges, but trust feel.

Be Flexible: When GI goes south, when pacing falters—adapt, don’t spiral.

“Courageous Call”: Know when to stop, reset, and come back. Don’t let ego ruin the day.

Wind Riding Tips

Headwinds: Stay aero, gear down, stay steady. It may require threshold effort.

Crosswinds: Lean in. Don’t stiffen up. Practice!

Tailwinds: Big gear, high cadence, stay efficient.

General Rule: Work when speed is low. Flow when speed is high.

Athlete Diagnostic Checklist

Use this for planning and reflection:

• Training Fitness (1–7):

• Heat Acclimation:

• Swim Confidence:

• Equipment Readiness:

• Nutrition Plan Practiced? (Y/N)

• Mental Preparedness: (Focus, Reactions, Confidence)