I lived and trained in Tennessee for years before moving out to CO, so I’m not stranger to heat and humidity. I’ve also long preferenced the spirit and attitude of warehouse space gyms vs. the shopping mall environment of many commercial gyms, so I’ve done my time in hot ass gyms. Even here in Durango, my non ac warehouse space gym has a pretty rough couple of weeks in Late July and August where it’s cooking inside the gym.
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“ For example, a male cyclist improved 28 seconds over 16 km time trial at 14,271 feet after 10 days of heat acclimation compared to the time trial before the heat acclimation process2.”
This doesn’t tell me much, even if I cross reference the footnote. What was the scenario? Did the cyclists go from low elevation (and what precise elevation?) to 14k, do the time trail, return to low elevation and humidity (what % ?) and then Return to 14k? Without providing that information, there’s not much to conclude about 28 seconds. Maybe the cyclists was constipated the first time and took a big shit the 2nd time. Why didn’t they do the process 3,4,5+ times with different subjects? What was the temperature difference between the two tests? What did the subject eat for breakfast each time? How much sleep did he get? What was he doing the day before? Did his girlfriend break up with him? That’s the problem with these types of studies: they don’t use a significant enough population sampling and they don’t perform these studies over any significant amount of time nor seem to account for significant variables such as diet, conditions, sleep and stress.
All that being said, I do think training in suboptimal conditions such as high heat and humidity can do something to prepare you for performing in suboptimal conditions such as high altitude. If you drive an old beater car around, you probably know something about how to keep it running despite the oil leak, backfiring and wonky cold start. Turn over the keys to someone who’s been driving a brand new Tesla and they may have a hard time keeping it running well. But let’s not turn this into something it’s not: the best way to prepare for altitude is to acclimate. Anything short of that is just dealing with the hand you are dealt. If you live in South Alabama, then you train in the heat and humidity of South Alabama. That’s what you have to work with so you make it work.