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December 2025

My Glucose Was a Disaster for 4 Marathons. The 5th Changed Everything.

Caution: Nothing in this blog is medical advice. Diabetes is highly individual. Bolusing during a marathon carries very real risks. Talk to your healthcare team before experimenting.

Context: I run 100+ km per week in build phases. My body is adapted to high volume - exercise is the norm. What I lay out here may well be a product of my unique circumstances.


I've run six marathons as a Type 1 Diabetic. For most, my glucose looked like the elevation profile of a Tour de France stage.

0% time in range. Entire marathons above 14 mmol/L. Crossing the finish line feeling like I'd run through treacle. You train for months, nail the fitness, and then your glucose decides to do its own thing.

It's frustrating. Really frustrating.

Then came Malaga.


The conventional T1D advice: disconnect your pump 60-90 minutes before, let basal tail off, trust exercise to handle glucose.

I followed it. Here's what happened:

Race Strategy TIR
London '23 Pump off 90min before. No insulin during. 0%
London '24 Pump off. 1-2 small boluses. Relaxed (dropped A goal, recovering from illness). 97%
Valencia '24 Pump off. Unfamiliar hotel breakfast. Reactive bolusing. 53%
London '25 Pump off at start. 1 bolus mid-race. 41%
Malaga '25 Pump never disconnected. Proactive micro-boluses. 93%

Two successes. Three disasters. What changed?

The Carb Load

Fuel wise, I always take 4-5 Beta Fuel gels per marathon. That's 160-200g of carbs in under three hours. These gels use a 1:0.8 maltodextrin-to-fructose ratio - optimised to maximise absorption through two separate intestinal pathways.

Getting carbs into your blood isn't the problem. Getting them into your muscles is.

The Science Gap

Scientists still don't fully understand how muscles take up glucose during exercise. Exercise has a means to open up transporters (GLUT4) for glucose to enter cells without insulin.

When you disconnect your pump, you rely almost entirely on these non-insulin mechanisms. They work - to a point. But my data suggests that point is below 200g of fast carbs.

The Cortisol Factor

Pre-race nerves spike cortisol. Cortisol increases insulin resistance. You start with your system working against you.

London '24 was different. I was recovering from illness and had dropped my A goal. I wasn't racing - I was just trying to finish. Less stress, less cortisol, less resistance. The small boluses I took were enough.

When I actually cared about the result? They weren't.


Malaga was different. Two changes:

1. I never disconnected my pump

Background insulin kept running. The basal prevented the runaway hyper that sank Valencia and London '25.

2. I (micro)-bolused proactively

Approach Result
Reactive (Valencia) Glucose hits 15+ → panic bolus → 20km chasing it down
Proactive (Malaga) Glucose approaches 9 → 0.3-0.7u bolus → never spikes

In Malaga: 2-3 micro-boluses. 0.3-0.7 units each. Timed as glucose approached 9 mmol/L - not after it spiked.

Result: 93% TIR. Flat trace. For the first time, I ran a marathon where I could actually focus on running - not constantly checking my CGM and doing maths in my head.

The Visual Proof

Valencia Marathon glucose trace showing high glucose throughout
Valencia: Started at 20 mmol/L. Spent the entire race chasing. Hit range at the finish. Then went hypo.
Malaga Marathon glucose trace showing stable glucose
Malaga: Started at 8. Stayed flat. Finished at 7.

Same runner. Same gels. Same fitness. Different strategy - and a completely different experience.


What I Think Happened

Two factors seemed to matter:

  1. Having insulin available - whether basal or bolus
  2. Acting proactively - catching rises early, not chasing spikes

This is n=1. London '24 worked with pump off but boluses. Malaga worked with pump on and micro-boluses. The common thread: I wasn't running on zero insulin and hoping exercise would save me.

I'll be repeating the Malaga approach.


I'm not recommending this strategy.

Bolusing during a marathon carries real risk. Exercise increases insulin sensitivity. Hypos during endurance events are dangerous. Diabetes is individual.

I can't say this will work again. But it's the clearest signal I've found in five marathons of data.

What I am saying:

  • "Disconnect and trust exercise" didn't work for me
  • The science on exercise glucose uptake is less complete than the advice suggests
  • Five marathons of CGM data showed a clear pattern
  • Changing my approach broke that pattern

How I Spotted the Pattern

These insights didn't come from memory - they came from actually sitting down and reviewing my data.

I built Glucose Insights to do exactly this - filter to specific events, see glucose before/during/after, read the notes I left myself. Laying five marathons side by side, I could finally see what was working and what wasn't.

Without that, I'd still be guessing. And probably still frustrated.

If you're a T1D athlete trying to find your own patterns, it might help.


If you've tried something similar - or completely different - I'd genuinely love to hear about it. We're all running our own experiments out here, figuring it out as we go.