Family Hydration

Hydration for middle elementary (ages 9-11) doing martial arts

Training-day target 2,250 ml/day. Uniforms (gi, dobok) trap heat, the dojo is often warm, and the culture rewards pushing through — all three produce under-hydration faster than most youth sports.

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Middle-elementary kids (ages 9-11) doing martial-arts training face a different hydration problem than either the general age group or the general sport. Uniforms (gi, dobok) trap heat, the dojo is often warm, and the culture rewards pushing through — all three produce under-hydration faster than most youth sports. Heavy uniforms + sustained movement produce sweat rates of 600-1,000 ml/hour, often more than the athlete recognises because the gi absorbs rather than evaporates the sweat. Sessions at this age approach full duration (60-75 minutes) with real competitive play and tournament weekends. Target 2,250 ml (2.3 L) of total fluids on a training day — approximately 350 ml above the middle elementary (ages 9-11) baseline to cover the session's fluid loss.

Targets for middle-elementary kids (ages 9-11) doing martial-arts training

Training-day target for middle-elementary kids (ages 9-11): 2,250 ml

Baseline for the middle elementary (ages 9-11) age band is 1,900 ml from IOM pediatric guidance. martial-arts training adds approximately 350 ml on top, covering the ~550 ml lost in a typical 75-minute session.

Source: IOM pediatric fluid intake + sport-specific sweat rate research

Pre / during / post — the only framework that matters

Start the session ahead, not catching up. For this age band and sport: a pre-session dose 60-90 minutes before, scheduled sips during, and weight-based replacement after. Non-training days use the age-band baseline only — don't over-drink on rest days.

Urine colour is the cleanest daily signal

Pale straw by the mid-afternoon bathroom visit means the athlete started the session hydrated. Dark yellow or amber before training means a pre-session 500 ml top-up, not 'just start'.

Age maturity: Sessions at this age approach full duration (60-75 minutes) with real competitive play and tournament weekends.

Match intake to real session length. A preschooler's 'soccer practice' is structurally different from a teen's — don't apply teen protocols to 5-year-olds, and don't apply preschool protocols to competitive tweens.

Practical tips for this age and sport

  • Pre-class: 400 ml in the hour before — warming up in a dry-ish state is critical
  • Water station breaks: every 15-20 minutes during the class — 100 ml minimum
  • Gradings and competitions: pre-hydrate 48 hours out, not just on the day
  • Post-sparring: 300 ml + electrolytes within 10 minutes
  • The athlete's bottle lives in the sports bag, not the kitchen — proximity is 80% of adherence
  • Post-training recovery snack + water, not one or the other

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When to watch or act

Signs of Dehydration

  • Muscle cramps or leg heaviness mid-session — top up immediately and review the week's intake
  • Urine darker than light straw before training — pre-session deficit, top up 500 ml before starting
  • Performance drop in the last third of the session — classic hydration signal, not 'being tired'
  • Headache or nausea during or after training — stop, hydrate, don't push through

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much water does a middle elementary kid need on a martial-arts training day?

About 2,250 ml (2.3 L) of total fluids across the day. Baseline for this age band is 1,900 ml, and martial-arts training adds the rest to cover the 75-minute session's fluid loss.

What's the pre / during / post split for this age and sport?

Pre 300-400 ml in the hour before, during 150 ml every 15-20 minutes, post 400-500 ml within 30 minutes of finishing. Pair post-drink with a carb-salt snack.

What about sports drinks — does martial-arts training need them at this age?

Only for sessions over 60 minutes at real intensity, or on hot tournament days. Plain water + a salty snack handles 95% of training at this age.

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