davidmorr wrote:RDI is probably meant for people doing "ordinary" things. If you are doing heavy exercise, you probably need more than that.
Therefore you have a bushwalkers RDI.
Before my initial post I had been thinking about what you're getting at. The average persons RDI as opposed to a bushwalkers RDI. Quite obviously you need a greater energy and calorie intake if you're exerting yourself. But without any knowledge in dietetics I don't have a clue how the rest of the vitamins and minerals stack up. It stands to reason that some of these will need higher levels but I wouldn't have a clue what. On the other side; regardless of how much you're exerting yourself I would presume some of the recommended vitamin and mineral intakes would be exactly the same.
davidmorr wrote:It's probably also relevant that a few days of unbalanced diet are not going to do you any long term harm...
That is very true. Though if doing a 10+ day walk, it could heavily effect the amount of food that you're carrying.
To get the maximum use from your food and you need the right food, the right quantity and at the right time of day. Minimal extra, just what you need to maintain yourself for the prolonged duration.
Son of a Beach wrote:Do they give any indication if the "RDI" is the same as used for other non-bushwalking-related packaged meals? Ie, are they for people sitting around in an office doing nothing, people doing extreme physical exertion all day, or somewhere in between? Ie, how is RDI calculated?
On the back of the Back Country packets is states: "
A complete meal, the dish you have chosen is nutritionally-balanced to meet the additional energy needs of outdoor adventurers." So it would appear they have a RDI adjusted for a adventurers/bushwalkers needs.
Energy 1684kj per serving x3 (presuming 1/3 RDI) gives us 5052kj.
Calories 401kcal x3 is 1203kcal.
After checking out a few online calculators, apparently I need 14000kj and 3000kcal a day for bushwalking. So, perhaps I should be taking double serves all day!
5052kj x2 = 10104kj.
1203kcal x2 = 2406kcal.
As I thought, there are some V&M that are unaffected by how much exercise you do. It appears that
most of the V&M will not reach the maximum recommended RDI if a Back Country meal single serving was to be taken as 1/6 RDI. As David said its not going to matter if you're unbalanced for a couple of days anyway. As obviously your energy levels are going to be the most important aspect to look after.
Thanks for the input, its got me asking myself and google the right questions and I've found the answers I was after.
A few links for anyone wanting to read into this more or want to calculate their RDI:
http://www.consumer.org.nz/reports/rdi- ... calculatorhttp://www.kellogg.com.au/Home/Nutritio ... fault.aspxhttp://www.kellogg.com.au/controls/di%20calculator.htmIf you want to get real deep:
http://www.nhmrc.gov.au/_files_nhmrc/pu ... nts/n6.pdf
One foot in front of the other, Hack all pain, Never stop walking.