bobs yeruncle
Participating member
- Location
- Golden Horseshoe
I sweat like crazy and work in a humid continental climate (hot summer subtype) so for the summer months I make a diy electrolyte blend using the sodium-free salt substitute sold in grocery stores. They're mostly potassium salts, sometimes with added magnesium and calcium:

To make a blend I use a kitchen scale: 300 grams sugar, 100 grams salt, 30 grams salt-substitute in a mason jar, shake thoroughly. The ratio I base on oral rehydration therapy, about twenty grams of mix goes in one litre of water, or about a teaspoon per cup (8 fluid oz) for our imperial friends. Not enough sugar to be sweet, the reason for its inclusion is that glucose aids absorption of sodium and water in the gut. The salt sub is just for the added potassium and magnesium because I find it helps keep me from cramping as much, and a little potassium wont hurt (but its a relatively small part of the mix because too much will) plus some added calcium so I don't sweat out all my bone density. The easy way to do a single serving is one tablespoon of sugar and one teaspoon of salt in a one litre bottle of water. I do add a bit of stevia-based sweetener so it doesn't taste like a gun barrel, but if you're a more virtuous man than I then you don't need to worry about it.
I only use that mix at work, when I get home I guzzle unsweetened iced green tea like it's going out of style (and brush with novamin toothpaste, teeth don't like sugar and salt)

To make a blend I use a kitchen scale: 300 grams sugar, 100 grams salt, 30 grams salt-substitute in a mason jar, shake thoroughly. The ratio I base on oral rehydration therapy, about twenty grams of mix goes in one litre of water, or about a teaspoon per cup (8 fluid oz) for our imperial friends. Not enough sugar to be sweet, the reason for its inclusion is that glucose aids absorption of sodium and water in the gut. The salt sub is just for the added potassium and magnesium because I find it helps keep me from cramping as much, and a little potassium wont hurt (but its a relatively small part of the mix because too much will) plus some added calcium so I don't sweat out all my bone density. The easy way to do a single serving is one tablespoon of sugar and one teaspoon of salt in a one litre bottle of water. I do add a bit of stevia-based sweetener so it doesn't taste like a gun barrel, but if you're a more virtuous man than I then you don't need to worry about it.
I only use that mix at work, when I get home I guzzle unsweetened iced green tea like it's going out of style (and brush with novamin toothpaste, teeth don't like sugar and salt)










