Today’s Vegetarian Elite
will be presented
in German,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese), Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Hungarian, Indonesian, Hungarian, Indonesian,
Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Mongolian,
Nepali, Persian,
Portuguese, Russian,
Spanish, Tagalog,
and Thai.
Adventurous viewers,
today on Vegetarian Elite,
we will visit
the Tirol Mountains
in Austria to meet
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer –
scientist, author,
and vegan athlete.
Dr. Wirnitzer’s
scholarly background
is in Physics
and Sports Science.
She wrote
her Master’s thesis for
Physics on paragliding,
and subsequently, earned
her Doctorate degree
in Sports Science.
She dedicated
her doctorate thesis
on studying herself –
a female athlete on
a vegan diet participating
in a difficult extreme
mountain bike marathon.
Since the age of 14,
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer’s
great passion
as an amateur athlete
has been
in mountain biking sports.
After her success at
the TransAlp Challenge
in 2003,
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer
conducted her
Sports Science research
in tandem
with her preparation
and participation for
the TransAlp Challenge
2004.
In the competition,
which is regarded
as the world’s toughest
mountain bike marathon,
Dr. Wirnitzer finished
at top region
of the world’s elite
of mountain biking.
And she accomplished
all this on
a pure plant-based diet.
The TransAlp Challenge
is probably
the most significant
and most difficult
mountain bike stage race
there is.
You have to imagine:
in road cycling there are
three major biking tours
that everyone knows;
the Tour de France
as the ultimate
road cycling race.
And after this model,
TransAlp Challenge
was launched in 1998.
It is designed
as an 8-day race and
on each of these days,
a marathon will be run.
You have to imagine
that the average
is to overcome a nearly
3,000 meter altitude
in a day, so you could say
it is equivalent
to three mountains
as well as
a distance of about
80-100 kilometers daily,
which you must cope with.
And you can imagine
this strain
physically, mentally;
but also the heat, which
must be added there.
And these special challenges
in their complexity,
that’s what’s so special
about this race.
For the first time ever,
Dr. Wirnitzer scientifically
brought the vegan diet
into the context of
this sporting excellence.
She first studied
an extreme mountain bike
stage race, namely
the TransAlp Challenge,
to determine how intense
and demanding
it would be physically.
The main study
participant in this project
was herself –
a female athlete
going through a strenuous
multi-day mountain bike
marathon race.
She would also report on
the vegan dietary intake
during the TransAlp
Challenge 2004.
Aside from presenting
the collected
and analyzed data
in her doctorate thesis,
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer
also availed the information
in her published book
“bikeeXtreme.”
In principle, to cope with
an 8-day race means
to prepare intensively
physically and mentally,
for one to two years;
i.e. goal-oriented,
very consistent training,
which must be controlled
and planned individually,
constantly.
But also on the one hand,
you must acquire
the competition experience,
because
you also do not know
how the body will react,
when for eight days
you stand at the start
again every day, perhaps
the day before you fell.
And the mental strain
that each day
you sit at the wheel
for up to 8 hours,
coping with extremely
difficult descents,
bearing the heat,
30-35 degrees Celsius;
maybe the food and fluid
intake, which is
very complicated in
the mountain biking sport,
essentially
much more complicated
than in road cycling.
This complexity makes
this race very complex
and so demanding
for the athletes.
In the TransAlp
Challenge, participants
face challenges
of being exposed
to the weather elements,
while every day
trying to master
almost 3,000 meters
of altitude changes on a
100-kilometer long course.
Under such
exhausting conditions
that require peak endurance
and strength, nutrition
is of utmost importance.
That’s the basic character
of the off-road cycling,
that the opportunities
to eat and to drink
are very limited.
The problem
intensifies even more
if it is very hot
and one likes
to offer a very high level
of performance, because
one wants to win or
to be on the podium again.
For example,
one has to deliver
high performance ability
for a very, very long time
and if you make
a dietary mistake,
for example, drink now
or too late or take
the wrong energy drink,
then it could be that
for example,
during a long descent that
I do not have a chance,
have too little energy
and thus
suffer a performance dip,
which I can’t compensate
for any more
during the race and then
my strongest competitor
is the winner on this day
and not me.
And these challenges
that one has to overcome
are simply very complex
during the race.
After the race the first thing
I have to do is,
on the one hand
is to maintain my bike
thoroughly because
without an optimally
functional device,
I cannot have
a good finish.
And the second is to
regenerate my body again.
Dr. Wirnitzer achieved
extraordinary success in
the TransAlp Challenge
of 2004.
As an amateur athlete,
it was a feat that brought
her into the leading group
of this extreme
mountain bike race,
which consisted almost
entirely of professionals.
Which performances
were your biggest ones
in life and which meant
the most for you?
That includes
the TransAlp Challenge
in 2004 for sure.
We had sighted the top 20
as a very realistic target,
and the grandiose thing
was we could undercut
the top 20 in our category
by far and managed
with 16th overall rank –
the connection
to the world elite
as an amateur team, and
that is very outstanding.
With her impressive
race finish and informative
Sports Science study,
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer
has been invited to lecture
throughout Europe
to present and promote
her findings at international
scientific summits.
Her findings have been
published in a number of
peer-reviewed journals
around the world
from 2005 to 2009.
In 2005, she was awarded
the Young Researcher
Award in the category of
“Sports Training” by
the University of Prague.
We will be right back
with our feature on
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer
and the advantageous
vegan diet.
We will learn
what discoveries
scientists had already made
100 years ago
in regard to the
performance-enhancing
vegan diet.
Welcome back to
Vegetarian Elite
and the first
of our two-part program
on scientist, author, and
vegan extreme athlete
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer.
Regeneration phases
are an important aspect
of an athlete’s endurance.
It has been
proven scientifically that
the regeneration phases
are much shorter
for a vegan
than a non-vegetarian
because the consumption
of animal protein
puts one’s body
in an acidosis state
while even at rest.
How long should
a recovery period be,
and why
should you abide by it?
Dr. Wirnitzer explains:
The problem is,
the body needs
at least eight to 16 hours
to regenerate,
in order to be back
at the start the next day
with completely filled
energy reserves.
And if I cannot
guarantee this, it means
that my capability
is simply reduced
the next day at this start
and cannot make use of
my performance potential
anymore.
Although I perhaps want
that, my body simply
does not allow that.
Therefore,
the regeneration
after competition
is extremely important.
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer
also talks about
the prevalence of
the animal protein myth.
If we study
scientific sources in detail,
a different picture
emerges with evidence
supporting the superiority
of the vegan diet.
Studies such as these date
from over a century ago
to contemporary times.
There were also indeed
many studies
which compared
the flesh eating people
with vegetarians.
I read in your book
that at the end of the 19th
and the beginning
of the 20th century
there were already studies.
Can you tell us more
about it?
This story is very exciting,
especially because
it is very controversial
and in their early stages
the superiority of the
vegetarian or vegan diet
was shown, the evidence
for the various benefits
of a vegan diet
were already there.
But since that time
we’ve omitted
these positive results
or ignored them.
Interestingly,
between 1850–1860,
there were a variety
of scientific studies
from the nutrition sector;
even then, the importance
of carbohydrates was
already demonstrated
as the main fuel
for the human body
during everyday stress,
but also
for physical exercise.
And the interesting thing is,
since that time
these findings have been
hushed up and denied.
And unfortunately
although these results
have been there,
there were scientists –
one could say now,
who were very close to
the meat and dairy lobby,
who were zealous
advocates of protein.
And they even
had the opinion,
that a man could never
get enough protein.
And everyone
who was rich
or wanted to be civilized,
took as much meat, milk,
cheese and eggs
as possible.
As I said, although
it was already known
at that time
that the preferred fuel
for the human body
are carbohydrates
and not protein.
This has been ignored
over the centuries, and
that is also the reason
for this misconception,
which is even now
still deeply rooted
and cemented.
Athletes on a vegan diet
have much shorter
recovery times.
They have more strength
and endurance,
and consequently
are more powerful.
In summary,
it has been found
when one takes
the meat eating athletes
and then compares them
to strict vegetarians,
athletes who live strictly
as vegetarian/vegan
could bring in strength,
resistance, and
endurance capabilities
up to 3 times greater.
For example, they were
able to cycle longer,
they were able to withstand
much greater stress
by specific test series
or exercises over
much longer periods,
at a greatly reduced
recovery time
which was only one-fifth
of what omnivores
or meat-eaters needed
to recover again from
complete exhaustion.
And these are
revolutionary results
even though
they have been there
for 100 years already,
and athletes hardly are
aware of this knowledge.
I find that is still exciting
today when I tell you this.
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer
was brought up
in the beautiful
Austrian countryside
surrounded by mountains
and forests.
She and her family
shared a love
for nature and athletics.
Basically,
I am an outdoor freak.
So that includes running,
marathon running,
nordic walking,
mountain running,
many hours of
walking through the snow
in the winter,
mountain biking,
bicycle racing as a training
but also downhill,
in order to easily grasp
this technical handling
of the bike and simply
bring it to perfection
because it is also a
performance-determining
factor in the race itself.
How well I can master
a difficult, technically
difficult downhill section,
must also be trained.
So everything that has to do
with perseverance,
with the outdoors,
with the mountains,
and forests,
is actually my life.
With this affinity
for great outdoors,
young Katharina naturally
grew to adore animals.
In her early years
as a teenager,
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer
was moved
to become a vegetarian
when she became aware
of the cruelty involved
in raising animals
for meat consumption.
I started to be vegetarian
at 16 years of age as
my premonitions intensified
that animals are tortured
for my diet and because
of the information
I had collected at that time,
which have shown then
that for my nutrition
animals had to suffer,
which I didn’t want.
And that was
the decisive factor
to abstain from it
at 16 years of age.
Tell us about that moment,
in which you realized
that you never wanted
to eat meat again.
It was not so much
a special moment,
but it was rather
a process between
16 and 25 years of age,
where it crystallized
for me then,
specifically in the study,
in this area of conflict,
humans, animals,
sports and nutrition,
that just this evidence
that I gathered, these
scientific facts, condensed.
Although her motivation
towards a vegan lifestyle
was her love for animals,
Dr. Wirnitzer soon
realized the other benefits
that came with
the plant-based diet.
And my private motives
are ethical.
But from the sporting
point of view of athletes,
there is really
no better diet
than the vegan diet to be
more effective in sports.
For more information on
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer
and vegan health,
please visit
www.bikeeXtreme.org
Her book “bikeeXtreme”
is available on
www.Amazon.com
Amiable viewers,
it was a pleasure to be
in your company today
for Vegetarian Elite
featuring the vibrant
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer.
Please join us again
for part 2 of her program
airing next Saturday,
February 12th.
And now,
coming up next
on Supreme Master
Television is
Between Master
and Disciples.
May veg role models
such as Dr. Wirnitzer
help inspire more trends
toward a healthier, kinder,
and sustainable world.
Today’s Vegetarian Elite
will be presented
in German,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian,
Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Mongolian,
Nepali, Persian,
Portuguese, Russian,
Spanish, Tagalog,
and Thai.
Open-minded viewers,
in the first part of
our program last week,
we met
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer,
a scientist, athlete, author
and vegan from Austria.
She not only placed
herself among the leaders
of one of the world’s
toughest mountain bike
marathon race,
the TransAlp Challenge
2004, but was also
the first scientist to study
excellence in mountain
biking in connection
with the vegan diet.
The TransAlp Challenge
involves a complete
transverse
of the rugged European
Alps mountain range,
covering nearly
600 kilometers and
20,000 vertical meters,
all within eight intensely
grueling days
in the elements.
It was during
her participation in the
TransAlp Challenge 2004
that Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer
had carried out
her fascinating doctoral
dissertation project.
For me it was important
to investigate
mountain biking
where it takes place,
that is, outdoors
in the mountains.
Therefore, I made
the decision to carry out
a field study during
the authentic stress
of competition.
And the challenge
to persevere in this
field study to the end
was very difficult due to
the overall complex
conditions, because of
course the competing
team was stationed
at a new start
and finish every day.
These overall conditions
with accommodation,
with hygiene,
with food intake,
were very challenging.
And in relation to this,
I simply tried to study
the athletes, the subjects
that I researched, under
the truly authentic stress
of competition.
In terms of capability,
for example,
heart rate analysis
or fluid shifts in the body,
which gave
very good conclusions.
Or how is the endurance
profile of mountain bikers
who are even able to
finish after eight days?
And there was simply
a lack of studies.
So it was just
as important to carry out
this study for the first time,
because the stress
is simply a very different
kind, whether I complete
a race in 1.5 hours
on a circuit,
which I manage for
the fourth or fifth time,
where each of
the technical difficulties
already is known to me,
or whether I have to
overcome
a TransAlp Challenge
where I don’t know
at the start what are
the difficulties I have to
cope with that day.
You have written a book
called “bikeeXtreme.”
Can you perhaps tell us
more about that?
If I may show it
to the viewers.
My book actually was
created at the end
of my science project,
which is also called
“bikeeXtreme,” in the
context of my PhD thesis.
And perhaps I may add
generally –
all the projects I do,
always have a final goal
for me, namely, to make
the knowledge that I
thereby acquire available
to other people.
Because I think
knowledge and
increasing knowledge
makes sense only if it is
accessed by humans.
The idea of the book
was to investigate this
toughest mountain bike
race as a whole for
the first time,
and perhaps I may
explain why my study,
my project as well as
this book are
also revolutionary
and so special.
I'm the first scientist in
the field of sport sciences
who for the first time ever
researched a mountain
bike marathon race.
Then the second point is:
worldwide,
I am the first one who
researched a stage race,
and then even
this toughest stage race,
to research
the performance capacity
during the stress
of mountain biking over
eight days, specifying
the endurance profile
of mountain bikers.
Then, I was also
the first woman who
researched this extreme
stress during an
ultra-endurance exercise.
And last but not least,
the fifth factor as to
why my research
is brand new: I have
brought the vegan diet
for the first time
in the context of high-
performance sports,
which was never
before done.
And these five factors
have never been studied
in sports science.
So, this book brings
together five factors that
constitute completely new
territory on the map of
sports science, especially
that of mountain biking.
And what are
the reactions of the other
athletes and are readers
reacting to this?
The feedback from sports
colleagues in this area
and from people who are
very well-versed
and know about cycling,
about training, nutrition
– it’s very positive.
And they designate my book,
my work, my academic
research differently:
either as the standard
by which to optimally
design training and
planning, or as basic
reading for the Alpine-
bikers, for those
mountain bikers
participating in the
TransAlp Challenge,
or athletes, or just as
the manual for marathon
runners, for the mountain
bike marathoners,
whether it be for one day
or several days
of competition.
So overall, the response
is very positive.
When we return,
the tremendously active
and accomplished
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer
will share some
knowledge about the best
nutrition for athletes.
Welcome back
to Vegetarian Elite.
The right nutrition
is very important
for peak performance
in athletes.
For Austrian
extreme mountain biker
and sports researcher
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer,
the choice of
an animal-free diet
was crucial both for the
science and for her heart.
For me it was
a very clear decision.
Out of ethical reasons,
I do not want animals
suffering for
my happiness in life,
for my food,
for my pleasure.
It was extremely easy
for me to make
this transition, because
actually for me it was
a longer process to decide.
All the scientific facts
that I gathered during
my studies came together
with the ethical information,
the exploitation
of animals,
the torturing of animals;
it all simply came
together in a perfect
mosaic with all
its small puzzle pieces.
And it was for me a very
clear and simple path.
Athletes are always
very concerned that they
consume enough protein.
What are the biggest
errors and how much
protein do athletes
actually need?
Overall, protein
is the nutrient that is
most misinterpreted
and misunderstood
and now I would like
to emphasize clearly:
it is far overemphasized.
This chart shows
the energy needs
according to the general
popular dietary
recommendations,
as would be covered by
the individual nutrients,
from carbohydrates,
protein, and fat.
But you must know
that such nutritional
recommendations
for omnivores who eat
a mixed diet are supported
by the meat lobby and
dairy industry because
they want to sell
a product that the body
does not really need.
If you look at the average
person on a vegan diet,
you see already clearly
that on the one hand,
the carbohydrate field
is increased,
but at the same time –
so, the yellow bar –
the protein requirements
of these scientifically proven,
healthy vegan
living people, that I
would also emphasize,
are reduced
to one-third already.
That means it is
scientifically confirmed
that the excessive value
given to protein
is unnecessary and
is not rooted in human’s
physical needs,
but is really just
a marketing strategy.
This graph shows
probably the most
difficult bike race
in the world,
the Race Across America,
and my study of
the TransAlp Challenge
from the year 2004.
It is so clear and confirms
all previous studies that
the preferable nutrient
under maximum
peak performance in
sports is carbohydrates,
which during
my mountain bike
competition comprised
more than 80%
of the overall diet,
so that the body was
able to maintain
the high performance
for a long time on
a maximum power level.
You see clearly that
the top athletes, bodies
that are tailored perfectly
for extreme loads
so to speak, in which
the body works already
extremely efficiently
with a maximum 12-13%
of protein of the total
energy that it has to take
in daily –
has more than enough.
This means
if it has more protein,
there will be difficulties,
it means a reduction in
the athletic performance.
And it has just been
shown that the body with
a protein requirement
of high-quality protein
in the range of 8%
to 12% or 13%
of the total optimal intake
of daily energy functions
optimally and has all
the essential amino acids.
This is mostly said
by the opponents
of the vegan diet – that
only meat would have
the essential amino acids
itself and vegetable
protein would not.
That is just
complete nonsense and
one can also prove this
scientifically quite well.
Even in the large number
of plant-based products,
the protein in the plant diet
has all essential
amino acids. In total
there are only eight
essential amino acids
which humans have to
take each day to more
than meet their needs.
And studies for
vegetarians and vegans –
non-athletes – also show
clearly that vegetarians
far exceed their protein
requirements as well as
their iron,
(the second critical and
often criticized nutrient)
and also exceed
the daily nutrient
recommendations.
Thus, protein deficiency
is absolutely no issue.
On the contrary,
it actually only burdens
the body when one takes
too much, and 30%
protein is far too much.
Quite clearly, humans,
whether athletes
or non-athletes,
do not need more than
between 8% and 12-13%
of protein in relation
to the total amount
of energy that humans
consume per day.
Apart from the fact that
these vegetarian-meat
products are very
delicious and I would not
want to give them up
because they greatly
enrich the menu,
be it when we have
veggie cheese or
even vegetable steaks
for barbecue dinner, seen
from the side of demand,
it is not really necessary
to consume these meat
substitute products.
Indeed, if you know that
if you eat a bowl of
bean salad, for example
from kidney beans,
and a luscious brown
bread from whole-grain,
for example,
this 10% protein, which
I have to take in per day,
have been covered.
So when I regularly eat
and because I like to eat
whole grain bread
or cereals like
whole grain pasta, then
this protein requirement
is already
more than covered.
What are your future goals?
Ah, my future
is very exciting, I think.
Scientifically, I have
an enormous amount
of ideas in my head.
This scientific area that
I have entered still has
so many unknowns
that my head actually
overflows with
great ideas in the area
of mountain biking,
but also in the area
of the vegan diet.
From an athletic
point of view,
I have withdrawn from
competitive sports a little.
I am out daily in nature,
I do not need competition
with others.
Fueling both body
and mind with healthy
plant-based fare,
it is no wonder that
Dr. Wirnitzer is so
radiant with vitality and
flow of creative ideas.
Would you like to convey
a message to our viewers
in conclusion?
For me there is actually
no way back.
It was the best,
most important and
most sensible decision
of my life to live vegan.
I need no meat,
no animal suffering
to be externally pretty
and internally beautiful,
to be satisfied,
to be healthy.
On the contrary,
everything points to it.
Therefore,
cherished viewer,
become vegan,
save the world,
save your health, be
active and physically fit.
You will benefit
every day of your life.
I never regretted
this decision and for me
personally, there is
no way to go back anymore.
So, “Go vegan!”
Our appreciation
and best wishes,
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer,
top-notch athlete and
respected scientist
with many talents
and a caring heart.
May we all find
inspiration seeing
your energetic life
spent in nature, as well as
your important
contributions
to sports science,
fitness, and nutrition.
For more information on
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer
and vegan health,
please visit
www.bikeeXtreme.org
Her book “bikeeXtreme”
is available on
www.Amazon.com
Bright viewers, it was
a pleasure having you
with us today
for Vegetarian Elite
featuring the plant-strong
and intelligent
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer.
And now,
coming up next
on Supreme Master
Television
is Between Master
and Disciples.
May we all thrive on
the life-enhancing
vegan diet.
Be Veg,
Go Green
2 Save the Planet!
Bright viewers, it was
a pleasure having you
with us today
for Vegetarian Elite
featuring the plant-strong
and intelligent
Dr. Katharina Wirnitzer.
And now,
coming up next
on Supreme Master
Television
is Between Master
and Disciples.
May we all thrive on
the life-enhancing
vegan diet.