Rowsandall
Training diary and random remarks around my rowing
RSS
  • Home
  • Season’s Bests
  • Wolverine Scores 2015/16
  • About
  • OTW
  • OTE
  • testing
  • Privacy Policy
myimage (24)

Aug 16 2017

Bird Song and Sunrise

Tuesday

No training. It was my 20th wedding anniversary. We had a fun day ending with a very nice restaurant dinner.

Wednesday

Got up very early and headed to the lake. Glorious steady state in absolutely flat water, rowing in the river Svratka gorge.

I am going to refrain from numerical analysis today. I mostly ignored the SpeedCoach and worked on feeling the boat run. The conditions were ideal to do that. Working on the recovery, playing with slight nuances in the speed profile of the recovery.

I am absolutely stunned by the low heart rates I scored today. Perhaps an after effect of the restaurant dinner (including wine)? Or the calming effect of listening to the forest bird song?

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 5 • Tags: OTW, rowing, single, steady state, training

myimage21-2.png

Aug 14 2017

Monday: 4x1km/5min – 16 minutes of pain

I didn’t do my weekend homework – so I had to get to work early and do it in the morning. Visits from the US and I got to play my boss. It all went very well, except that the A/C broke down in our building and it was 28 degrees in the meeting room. We should have moved to the patio, where it was just 26 degrees.

So after a long day I waved goodbye to my guests and headed to the rowing club. I was going to do a 4x1km and tried to get some of the Masters crews to row it alongside me, but nobody fancied this training. I don’t blame them. It is quite hard. But I am doing a mini cycle with threshold training and intensive distance, hoping it will move my anaerobic threshold a bit, which should help me at the Masters Worlds, if I manage to convert that to boat speed.

That’s the theory. Besides that, the 4x1km is just a hell of a session. The big advantage of rowing with a power meter is that you can take the average power of the last time as a target, and then try to improve. There is still a weather influence. It will be harder in choppy conditions, but it is still a lot more quantitative than trying to row to feel or a target pace.

I was tired and worried that I would have low grit to complete the session, but everything turned out better than expected. The target power was a bit lower than the first three intervals of last week (because the overall average was lowered by a dramatically slow fourth interval), so it was tough but doable, and I was able to focus on technique as well.

A slight additional difficulty was the fact that the place I chose to row the workout brought me in near collision course with big tourist boats on all intervals except the first one. In the second interval I managed to cross in front. In third and fourth interval I had to row through the wake. That explains short drops in power.

myimage (21)

Interesting that my heart rate graph shows more red in the third interval. The fourth one was definitely a harder one.


Work Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|-SPM-|-Pwr-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
01|01000| 04:12 |02:06.2| 29.2| 293 | 169 | 180 | 8.1 - headwind
03|01000| 03:58 |01:59.0| 30.5| 294 | 173 | 181 | 8.3 - tailwind
05|01000| 04:08 |02:04.4| 30.6| 292 | 173 | 182 | 7.9 - headwind
07|01000| 03:57 |01:58.5| 31.1| 296 | 172 | 183 | 8.1 - tailwind

I set average pace on the lower right of my SpeedCoach and rowed this like an ergo training. Static start. Off you go, a few start strokes, then drop the pace immediately. Row slightly under the target until the average power hits target, then keep holding target power.

Here are the metrics charts. I include all of my regular ones this time. You can click on one of them to see a bigger version and then browse through the image gallery. The point I am trying to make is that it looks like pretty consistent rowing.

I am still fascinated by the trend flex charts. Here is this row, pace vs power, split by stroke rate:
For comparison, here is the power/pace behavior with every individual workout stroke:

Most of those high stroke rate strokes are from the final 250m in the final interval:

Those 250m really really hurt. I think I haven’t been that deep in the pain box in training, recently. Again, that is the power of training with a power meter. Having a target and wanting to improve is what really kept me going.

I improved by 1 Watt. One tiny Watt. In terms of energy expended, that is 1/200th of an Apple. The progress is that the way I rowed it, it felt easier.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: 4x1k, 4x1km, intervals, lake, OTW, rowing, single, threshold, training

bokeh_plot41-3.png

Aug 13 2017

Sunday – mix double – training racing

Spent most of the day running errands and doing some work in the garden. I grilled some nice steaks for lunch.

At the end of the afternoon we headed to the rowing club. Romana and I arrived earlier than the Masters Men’s Pair, so we took some time to check the rigging of our double Orca. All OK.

First a warming up and some training starts.

myimage (17)

The high stroke rates in the beginning are our usual drill. Starting to row with arms only, then arms+body, then half slide, 3/4 slide, and finally on to full slide.

Pazdi and Krocan weren’t ready yet, so we did the first 500m with race start on our own.

myimage (18)

 

Then a longer rest paddle. A training start with Pazdi and Krocan next to us in the pair, and finally the second 500m. We lined up the boats and off we went. The pair was leading slightly out of the start and they managed to keep the lead all the way to the end. I called “go” with 200m to go and increased the stroke rate.

Romana is a “feel” rower. She doesn’t need any gadgets, is not very interested in looking at graphs and playing with data. But this time she wondered aloud whether the stroke rate increase had increased boat speed. Let’s check the graph.

myimage (19)

The static chart is not very easy for reading the stroke rate, so let’s look at the flex chart:

bokeh plot (41)

So yes, there seems to be an increase in pace. But what is interesting is that the pace seems to increase even more when we drop the stroke rate slightly after a few strokes of the sprint. Here are the comparison charts for 500m take 1 vs take 2:

bokeh plot (44)

 

bokeh plot (43)

 

The second 500m was 5 seconds faster. We rowed it in identical conditions. Same part of the lake. Same weather (mirror flat water, no wind).

Then we did another loop of the lake together with the pair. On the 3km straight stretch from Sirka to Rokle, Romana and I rowed really well together. We fell into a nice rhythm at stroke rate 23. It didn’t feel hard at all. Our timing was just perfect, and we moved from rowing slightly behind the pair to passing them and finishing about 50m ahead of them. Nice row. Everything just clicked.

myimage (20)

 

You can see how my heart rate nicely stays in the very narrow blue band during the entire 3km stretch (7 minutes to 19 minutes) . I was watching the SpeedCoach during the row and when the timing was perfect, the pace improved from 2:12 to 2:09. A few times the pace dropped to 2:16, but focusing on timing brought that back to 2:12 easily.

The pair were wondering what was going on. They were visibly working hard and we passed them so easily. That 3km stretch was the one that brought out the smiles.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: double, mix, mixed double, race simulation, rowing, steady state, training

img_1569.jpg

Aug 13 2017

Saturday – A bike ride instead of a row

On Saturday morning, our usual training time, we had to bring our son Dominik to a summer camp. He wanted to participate in a “Parkour” camp. The place was an hour driving away. I guess it was only when we arrived there, that Dominik realized that he actually doesn’t know anyone at the camp. He was a bit silent. I think he will be OK. The camp staff looked like nice people.

Romana and I drove back to Brno to do a row in the double. Bad luck. There was a really strong wind, and wind surfers were having fun. We wouldn’t be having fun, so we decided to not even go out. With a few other rowers who were present, we agreed to go 6pm on Sunday.

At home, I finished a project with my youngest son Robin. We have been building this garden shed. We were finishing the roof, and I sent Robin up on the roof to fix the roof coverage. He had a lot of fun doing it. At the end he lied down on the roof and proclaimed he was Snoopy. I wasn’t even aware that he knew the Snoopy character.

sn

 

It was 4pm by the time we were done. I set out for a bike ride to compensate for the missed row. Here is the Google Earth plot of the ride.

ride

 

The records are broken in two parts. I started recording using my Garmin Forerunner, but after 16km the battery died. So I continued using the Strava app on my phone. Here is the elevation profile of part I:

Cycling 2017-08-12, Elevation

I am a slow rider and a slow climber. I ride on a mountainbike. The 40 minutes of steady climbing was a good workout, comparable to a hard 10k on the erg. On the Google Earth map, this section starts top middle and goes north (top right) to the top of the village Vranov, where I took this picture:

IMG 1568

The church is huge. The climb to the church is long. Then you pass the church, turn, and the climb gets steeper. At the top of the climb I turned left and descended to Adamov. One day I must ride up that climb, because it is pretty long and steep. Nice training. Instead, I decided to continue towards Bilovice nad Svitavou, following the Svitava river.

Here is my heart rate plot for the first part:

Afternoon Ride part II 2017-08-12, Heart rate

 

This second part was 7km along the Svitava river. Then I stopped to take this picture:

IMG 1569

 

A nice, cold StaroBrno 10, fresh from the tap. A light beer. Nice and refreshing. I am always amazed how good beer tastes after a row or a ride.

I still had to climb out of the Svitava valley and get home, so I only took one beer and then hit the road again.

Afternoon Ride part II 2017-08-12, Elevation

Afternoon Ride part II 2017-08-12, Heart rate

You can see that I managed to get my heart rate up to quite high values (high for cycling, that is) on the flat first part along the river. I was riving on a bigger gear and I was trying to catch up with a cyclist in front of me.

Strava estimates both rides to be around 200W on average, and that is consistent with how I felt.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: bike ride, cross-training, rowing, training

kaart.jpg

Aug 13 2017

Friday – A very short row

I headed to the lake for a row with my brother-in-law Tomas. I left work at 1pm, to get the row done before the afternoon series of conference calls would start.

While I was driving, the 5pm call was moved to 2pm. The logic behind that was that the US participant couldn’t make it, and my European colleagues didn’t want to have a call at Friday Happy Hour time. I only found out after the row.

At the rowing club, I found a rather tired Tomas. He had had a party the evening before, and he had slept on a patio, but there had been a pretty violent thunderstorm around midnight. (Romana and I got up and frantically started closing windows. Lightning was visible at a frequency of more than one per second. In our street, one tree fell.)

OK, we would just do a quick round and we would do starts practice and a few short bursts.

myimage (15)

On the rowing data side, I switched to the Leaflet open source library for interactive maps and I am glad I did. The Google Maps never really worked, and the Leaflet API is very user friendly. It was pretty easy to figure out how to automatically zoom the map to the level that just fits the entire row. I also added a few layers (satellite, street, outdoors, nautical) to play with. Here is the result:

kaart

 

Maps are nothing revolutionary, of course, but having a user-friendly library opens possibilities for map based representation of rowing and weather data. Plenty of ideas, very little time to implement.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: double, OTW, rowing, training

Capture23

Aug 10 2017

Thursday – kilometers & thoughts about volume

Wednesday

Cycled to work.

At the end of the working day, I decided to take the train. I could have cycled and get in 45 minutes of training, but I also wanted to read a few documents. The train ride would be a great opportunity to do that (I am very bad at reading work documents at home). The train broke down between two stations, in 30 degrees C. After 10 minutes, I left the train, walked to the closest bus station, took the city bus. Trip home took 75 minutes. I did my reading.

Romana had been rowing with her double partner Veronika, who is over from Ostrava. Veronika was staying over at our house for another session in the morning. We discussed training volumes. The Ostrava people are volume junkies. Here is my volume from Stravistix.

I am doing pretty well compared to 2013, ’14 and ’15. I think that volume wise the year is going to be very similar to 2016. I do not have time to do the volumes that the Ostrava guys are doing, but I might be able to make my program a bit more robust against events that threaten volume. Business trips. Low energy. The likes.

The Stravistix tool also lets you look at elevation climbed. This year, I seem to be a climber. I think it’s biking with my kids.

It is not, actually. I browsed through the different sports on Stravistix, and it is rowing. I am a rowing climber! I guess it has to do with elevation correction being changed on Strava.

Thursday

This morning I joined the girls for a row on the lake. They went out in the double, delighted to see an empty lake. (I am already used to it and enjoy rowing in the morning).

Unfortunately, I had left my heart rate belt in my locker at work.


Workout Summary - media/20170810-065633-Sanders SpeedCoach 20170810 0603amo.csv
--|Total|-Total-|--Avg--|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
--|Dist-|-Time--|-Pace--|-Pwr-|SPM-|-HR--|-HR--|-DPS
--|16558|87:29.0|02:38.5|160.6|19.6|0.0|000.0|09.7
W-|16558|87:30.0|02:38.5|160.0|19.5|000.0|000.0|09.8
R-|00000|00:00.0|00:00.0|000.0|00.0|000.0|000.0|00.0
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|-Pwr-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
00|01000|05:26.1|02:43.1|124.3|24.2|000.0|0.0|07.6
01|01000|05:05.2|02:32.6|166.3|17.8|000.0|0.0|11.0
02|01000|05:36.6|02:48.3|152.7|18.1|000.0|0.0|09.8 - turn
03|01000|04:44.0|02:22.0|174.4|18.4|000.0|0.0|11.5
04|01000|04:35.0|02:17.5|198.7|20.6|000.0|0.0|10.6
05|01000|05:40.2|02:50.1|158.5|20.6|000.0|0.0|08.6 - turn
06|01000|04:55.3|02:27.7|179.0|18.7|000.0|0.0|10.9
07|01000|04:50.0|02:25.0|205.1|21.0|000.0|0.0|09.9
08|01000|05:44.6|02:52.3|157.3|18.7|000.0|0.0|09.3 - turn
09|01000|04:43.3|02:21.6|168.4|18.9|000.0|0.0|11.2
10|01000|04:33.5|02:16.8|194.0|21.2|000.0|0.0|10.4
11|01000|06:00.8|03:00.4|137.2|19.9|000.0|0.0|08.4 - turn
12|01000|05:31.4|02:45.7|157.1|18.4|000.0|0.0|09.9
13|01000|05:43.6|02:51.8|152.7|18.9|000.0|0.0|09.2
14|01000|06:04.1|03:02.1|144.5|19.8|000.0|0.0|08.3 - turn
15|01000|04:58.2|02:29.1|144.0|17.8|000.0|0.0|11.3
16|00558|03:18.1|02:57.4|113.4|18.3|000.0|0.0|09.3

The wind was getting stronger during the row. I pushed off a bit earlier than the girls in the double, and I was about 500m out when they pushed off. I decided to row the long version of the “tour du lac”, going into the turn at the Rokle end, instead of turning the boat at the beginning of the turn. I thought that that would allow them to gradually catch up, but it didn’t happen, because the girls did start practice.

After 12km, I chose to row up the lake again, expecting to meet the double half way and then row back to the dock together. I didn’t find them. So I completed another loop and returned to the club. The double was already in. I think I missed them when they were rowing in the reflection of the sunlight on the water. Anyway, you can see how I rowed slower in that final loop, scanning the lake for a double.

During the bulk of the row, I threw in a few rate ladders, the 4min/3min/2min/1min type at 18/20/22/24 spm. All well.

I tried to see if reducing work per stroke at constant stroke rate would slow me down or reduce the distance per stroke. I have the feeling it doesn’t, but the data may be skewed by changing wind strength.

The jury is still out.

Now I am on a long phone conference with my colleagues from Phoenix. Listening mode. After that, around 7:30pm, I will start the cycle ride home (45 minutes).

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: 1x, lake, OTW, rowing, single, steady state, training

myimage (10)

Aug 8 2017

Tuesday – a tough 4x1km on the water

[amazon_link asins=’0544947223′ template=’ProductAd’ store=’rowingdata-20′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’bed92e4b-7c3e-11e7-bf61-c376ad7ff20a’]

I am reading the book “Peak” by Ericsson and Pool. Interesting stuff. They talk about “deliberate practice”. In summary, deliberate practice involves practicing with well-defined, specific goals, getting constant feedback, and constantly moving a little outside your comfort zone to avoid stagnation.

I think that having a power meter makes it a lot easier to implement “deliberate practice” in rowing.

So for Monday, the training schedule asked for the good old “Pete Plan” classic: The 4x1km at 5 minutes rest. On the erg, I haven’t done this one in a long time. The last one was in September 2015. On the water, I have done a few. Here’s a summary:

So, OTW, should I aim for 2:01 pace? Really, this depends a lot on the weather. Now that I have a power meter, I should really row these workouts to a power target. So, I looked at my CP Chart. A 1k should take me around 4 minutes, roughly, but I was going to do four of them. On the other hand, there was going to be a 5 minute rest period between the 1k efforts. Now, the CP chart tells me that on the water, I should be able to hold 345W for 4 minutes, and 250W for 16 minutes. I “guesstimated” that I should aim for a value in the middle: 300W. I also wanted to row at Work per Stroke (“WpS”) values below 600J. The hypothesis is that this is the most efficient Work per Stroke value for my rowing.

That fixes the stroke rate to 30spm and higher. So, the targets were clear. Now, the execution.

There was some wind when I arrived at the rowing club, and the wind was increasing in strength. During the warming up, I quickly decided to do the 4x1k in the gorge, because if the wind would get any stronger, I would be testing my rough water skills rather than my fitness and rowing efficiency.

Then, it was time to start the series of 1000m intervals. The straightest part of the gorge is about 900m long, and with a slight turn at the end you can call it a 1k effort. The wind would be a straight tailwind and headwind, for the alternating intervals. My first interval was a tailwind one, towards the castle.

As in the previous OTW versions of this workout, I would do all intervals from a static start. I started the first interval way above target power, stroke rate and WpS and had to work hard to reduce them. The average WpS was 614 J, and the interval did get make me tired.

A 5 minute paddle, 2 minutes towards the castle, 30 seconds to turn and drink, 2 minutes back, 30 seconds to align for the start. This time it was a bit easier to hit the WpS values, but about 100m in I was in trouble. I heard a hissing sound right next to my boat, and when I looked, I saw a very angry parent swan and four young swans. I ignored the swans and carried on. Luckily, the swan decided not to charge. Then, 300m into the row, I was in trouble. Deep trouble, that I could not row away from. Pain. Hard breathing. The feeling that this was not a sustainable pace. With 400m to go I had to start counting strokes, and I somehow managed to make it to the end. WpS: 570 J.

In the third, tailwind interval, I decided to ignore the tiredness and rate up. My time equalled that of the first 1k, but I rowed this one at a WpS of 557 J. I also think that the wind was helping me a bit more than in the first interval.

For the last interval, I carefully lined up as far from the swan family as possible, which would make me row a bit more of the turn at the end of the 1k, and started. My suspicions about the wind strength were confirmed immediately as I settled down for 32spm.

I wasn’t able to hold 32spm. I somehow made it to half way rowing slightly under target, power wise, but at that point I had a very serious fight with the “handle down daemons”. If I wouldn’t be a blog writing rower who was rowing to meet a clear target for this session, I doubt if I would have completed this interval. I did dial down the power though, and only in the last 10 strokes did I rate up and power up a bit. I wish I could say that the power drop in this interval is due to the turn in the end, but I am afraid that that is only partly true. Still, kudos to myself for finishing the session. What did I write above about comfort zone? WpS result: 518 J.


Work Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|-SPM-|-Pwr-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
01|01000| 03:53 |01:56.8| 30.0| 311 | 170 | 180 | 8.5
03|01000| 04:12 |02:06.3| 30.9| 294 | 174 | 182 | 7.7
05|01000| 03:53 |01:56.9| 31.8| 296 | 171 | 180 | 8.1
07|01000| 04:20 |02:10.3| 30.9| 270 | 172 | 179 | 7.5

So in the end, I managed 293W. Slightly below target, and a good starting point for the next time. Comparing that to the erg, I think it is a good score. The 1k on the erg lasts 30 to 50 seconds shorter than the OTW 1k. Also, the OTW and OTE power values do not correspond 1:1, and it is usually estimated that they are about 15% lower OTW. For my analysis, I use 6%, so the erg equivalent is doing 4x4min/5min at 1:44 pace.

A good starting point for the next time.

Here are a few plots that tell the story:

Inconsistent stroke length
Zooming in at pace and stroke rate. What a struggle, that last interval
Power & WpS. Target was 300W and 550-600J

The cooling down was a slow affair in a heavy headwind and significant waves:

Edit

I used rowsandall.com’s Physics Department to do an estimate of wind corrected pace. I used 1.5 m/s as the wind speed. At that time, Brno airport reported 7.7 m/s, and the wind prediction for the Brno lake was increasing from 2 m/s to 4 m/s at that time. But I was in the relatively shielded gorge. Here is the result:

Wind corrected pace

So in the end the data for the first three intervals seem to hover around 2:00 pace, perhaps even slightly faster if I assume that the wind was increasing. I hope so, because I was really depressed by the slow average pace.

The last interval is still dramatically slow.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 7 • Tags: 4x1k, 4x1km, hard distance, OTW, rowing, training

«< 36 37 38 39 40 >»

Calendar

May 2025
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  
« Jan    

Tags

1x 2x 4x2km 6k 8+ 1000m concept2 crewnerd cross-training cross training crosstraining ctc double eight erg ergometer head race head race prep intervals lactate lake masters mix OTE OTW pete plan quad race race prep racing river rowing running single sprint sprintervals steady state strength taper technique test testing threshold training training plan

↑

© Rowsandall 2025
Powered by WordPress • Themify WordPress Themes
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok