Hiking Nutrition
Article Library for Hikers, Backpackers, and Thru-hikersHiking Calorie Requirements and Calorie Calculators
The first thing you'll want to know about hiking nutrition is hiking's energy requirements, i.e. calorie requirements. Hiking can require a higher amount of calories than your normal activities of daily living.
Of course this is wholly dependent on the length of your hike and the amount of exertion you perform on it. A one hour walk on the flat woodland around Trippet Ranch, Topanga State Park, CA, with water bottle in your hand, will burn a lot less calories than strapping a 30 lb pack to your back and walking 10 to 15 miles per day, on the John Muir Trail, in the Sierra Nevada Mountains.
It's important for hikers and backpackers to understand their energy requirements on the trail, not just for the sake of calorie counting for general health reasons, but more so to know how much food to pack for the trail. So how do you start to understand your calorie needs on the trail?
Calories burned on the trail per hour
Firstly, you can estimate your hourly calorie needs on the trail, using averages for given trail conditions and body types. A male day hiker, using a pack weighing less than 10 lbs, may on average burn about 360 calories per hour, for a variety of trail conditions. His female counterpart may burn 270 calories on average.
These numbers come from my own calculations published in my article How Many Calories Are Burned When Hiking?
Backpackers burn even more calories since they are lugging heavy packs up and down hills and mountains. A male backpacker may burn around 480 calories, with a 30 lb pack on their back, for again, a variety of trail conditions. A female backpacker with a 25 lb pack may burn 350 calories.
Trail specific hiking and backpacking calorie calculators
The hiking calorie numbers I've quoted are based on models. If you want a more accurate calorie count for your body and your hike, I've designed multiple hiking calorie calculators to help you. All you have to do is put in your age, weight, height, and time spent on a variety of trail conditions (flat, moderately sloped uphill, steep uphill, etc.) to get an estimate of the calories you'll burn on the trail.
Further, my backpacking calculators require that you put a pack weight in. And my daily calorie count calculators require you pick a few more options, like how much your slept, or how active you are, in the time spent the rest of your day, outside your hike.
Day hiking calorie calculators
Backpacking and thru-hiking calorie calculators
My first backpacking and thru-hiking calories calculator is similar to my day hiking 'calories burned on the trail' calculator, except I've added in the ability to input your pack weight. Once you add all your information in, it will tell you how many calories you will burn with that pack on your back, for similar trail condition parameters as the other calculators.
I actually did make a simpler version of this calculator, just to make sure I was getting the mathematics correct with the pack weight and MET multiplier relationships in the model. So if you like simple, check that one out.
Finally, for the multi-day backpacker or thru-hiker, I've created a total daily backpacking calorie counter, which again lets you add in your info, the trail info, and pack weight, but further lets you add in how many hours you slept in your tent, and from that figures out your total daily calories. This one is helpful for planning how much food to bring for a multi-day section or full journey.
Day Hiker's Total Daily Energy Needs Calculator
Day Hiking, Light Pack Calories Burned on the Trail Calculator
Day Hiking, Light Pack Calories Burned on the Trail Discussion
Thru-Hiking Total Daily Calories Calculator Based on Trail Conditions
Trail Conditions Specific Thru-Hiking Calories Burned on the Trail Calculator
Simple Thru-Hiking Calories Burned On The Trail Calculator
How Many Calories Are Burned When Hiking?
Hiking Fluid and Electrolytes
As a hiker or backpacker, you should have a good understanding of fluid and electrolytes. This is because the venture obligates you to plan out your body's needs, and pack them on your back, away from the convenience and safety of civilization. What is on your back is what you have to keep you alive.
Hydration on the trail and sweat rate
How much fluid you need on the trail is mostly dictated by your sweat rate. However, as is often the case, you might not be able to drink the exact same amount of fluid you lose through sweating on the trail, in that moment. But that's okay. Your main objective when in the act of hiking, regarding fluids, is to 1) avoid dehydration, 2) take in enough fluids to continue your natural thermoregulation, and 3) if on a multi-day backpacking trip or thru-hike, avoid over hydration, and hypervolemic hyponatremia.
Go ahead and check out my articles on how to calculate your sweat rate, tips for measuring your sweat rate on the trail, and take a look at my sweat rate calculator. The first in this set also goes over how to work with your sweat rate data to avoid dehydration, and over hydration.
Total daily fluid needs and baseline metabolic fluid needs
And your main objective, post day-hiking or while backpacking, is to take care of your total daily fluid needs. Therefore, knowing not only your sweat rate, but your baseline metabolic fluid needs is also something you should be thinking about. Basically these two things - your metabolic needs and your sweat rate - will dictate your total daily fluid requirements.
For day hikers, its less of a concern. Whatever fluid deficit you walked off the trail with can be dealt with, via recovery hydration, and titrating your intake to lightly colored urine. But for backpackers and thru-hikers, you have to have that recovery fluid on your back. And for it to be on your back, you should have planned out your pack's fluid capacity, long before you hit the trail.
Check out my article 'How Much Water Do You Need For Hiking?' which goes over fluid requirements for the trail and for the day.  Also take a look at my handy chart showing the weights of different water bottles and bladders, for your pack weight planning needs.
Electrolytes, minerals and vitamins for hiking
Going hand in hand with fluid input on the trail, are electrolytes. The most important of which is sodium.
Sodium replacement on the trail is vital to keeping your nerves and muscles working properly. If sodium levels in your blood drop too low, too fast, that becomes a medical emergency. So if you're on a multi hour hike, you need to pack sodium with you, either through salty snacks, or electrolyte solutions and powders. Salty snacks have the advantage in that they contain sodium chloride, and chloride is another electrolyte that is significantly lost through sweat.
Check out my article on sodium replacement and hiking, that goes over normal sodium concentrations in sweat, contains a small list of salty foods and meals for the trail and backpacking, and touches on how you feel and how to tell when your sodium is low.  Day hikers may also want to check out my article on the post-exercise recovery solution called Gatorlyte, which does actually have some chloride in it, like an oral rehydration solution would.
Long distance thru-hikers also need to be concerned about vitamin losses through sweat. If you're a thru-hiker, and are planning to have a hot section on the trail, check out my Sweat, Mineral and Micronutrient Losses Related to Hiking at Higher Temperatures article. Then follow that one up with my guide to assessing yourself for malnutrition on the trail, when thru-hiking.
Basic Fluid Requirements and Water Bottle Weights
Sweat, Mineral, and Micronutrient Losses Related to Hiking at Higher Temperatures
Gatorlyte Rapid Rehydration Drink - Your Questions Answered
How Much Water Do You Need For Hiking?
How Much Sodium Do You Lose Through Sweat?
How to Measure Your Sweat Rate When Hiking
Sweat Rate Calculator
How to Calculate Your Sweat Rate
Pedialyte Sport - Your Questions Answered
Hiking Protein
Protein Requirements for Hikers and Backpackers
Hikers and backpackers require more protein per day than the general public, on the days around when they are participating in their sport.
The International Society of Sports Nutrition, through their 2007 statements on endurance exercise, infers that hikers should get around 1 to 1.6g/kg of protein per day, divided up every 3 to 4 hours, or 4 to 6 times per day. They further state that 0.25g/kg per meal, or an absolute value of 20 to 40 grams, is what is needed for optimal muscle protein synthesis around exercise. Also, directly after an intensive bout of hiking, the hiker should take in 0.25 to 0.5g/kg of protein, alongside 1 to 1.5g/kg of carbohydrates to repair exercise induced muscle damage, and replete glycogen stores.
Thus, if you are just participating in a casual, low energy hike, with little elevation gain, and which is only an hour or two in duration, you likely will only need about 1g/kg. However, if you are backpacking with a 35 pound pack, up a steep pass, over the course of 4 hours, you will likely need 1.6g/kg or more.
And once you start having to adjudicate large talus or steps, with a heavy pack, such that you are performing resistance type lunges for a significant period of time, then you could even go up to 2g/kg of protein to help build leg muscle mass, and ensure positive levels of amino acids are in your blood, during the critical 24 hour period after such a big hike, when your muscles are open to taking in larger amounts of them.
Related: Click here to check out my article on protein requirements for day hiking, which could also be applicable to backpackers, except my protein examples include non-backpacking type foods. The article also goes over what types of proteins to eat, and how to quantify the different qualities of proteins. Lastly it goes over safety issues, regarding adding larger amounts of protein in your diet.
Protein Requirements for Older Hikers and Backpackers
Protein Supplements for Hiking and Backpacking
Protein supplements help a hiker or backpacker, who has trouble meeting their daily protein needs through the use of high quality, whole food sources.
And because protein and carbohydrates work in a synergistic fashion, when you consume them directly after exercise, I've found that mass building protein supplements are the way to go after a high exertion hike, since they have both these components, with enough essential amino acids and leucine to ensure muscle protein synthesis.
If you would like to know the details on how much essential amino acids and leucine you should be taking in after hiking, click this link to read my article on the best protein supplement to use after hiking. After that, I also have my personal review of the recommended product (Naked Mass Chocolate) here.