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Training diary and random remarks around my rowing
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Jun 16 2019

The End of an Era – Primatorky 2019

The picture (from a previous edition of the Primatorky regatta) says it all. Racing in eights in the center of Prague. By the way, that is our club’s men’s eight in the lane on the left, and I believe the picture is from the final race on Sunday, two years ago.

The racing happens between the Rower’s island and the finish at Naplavka. Naplavka, the river bank, being turned into a sponsors’ market, offering products from gourmet ham sandwiches to Lexus sports cars.

The special thing about the race is a giant turn after about 800m of racing. Every lane has a big colored buoy and it is a huge turn they are doing:

But first things first. It was Saturday morning, June 8, and Romana and I drove to the club in Brno to pick up our trailer with the rental boats for the camp. We would bring it to Prague to be picked up by Wintech Czech Republic.

The long drive on the D1 highway was thankfully uneventful. And that is almost a miracle. Here is my list of things to bring on a car ride to Prague over the D1:

  • 3 liters of water
  • Two chicken sandwiches
  • The AC/DC album “Highway to hell”
  • A copy of the book “On the road” by Jack Kerouac
  • A piece of paper with the motivational text: “Success is not a destination, but the road that you’re on”

Well, there was some excitement. News from the race course.

  • Our Juniors eight had been disqualified for steering the wrong side of the buoys
  • The boys 15/16 eight (with my son Dominik) had been disqualified as well. Their coxswain had turned too late and they crashed into the next lane’s boat
  • My youngest son’s boys 13/14 year eight had won their heat and were through to the semifinal

Yes, coxing is hard on this course, and unfortunately the disqualifications were entirely the result of our coxswain’s errors. That said, it was very hard for the cox of the Juniors. They had put a young and unexperienced boy on the cox’s seat. This 13 year old is a good cox on our home lake, but I don’t think he was prepared for the pressure of racing.

View towards finish from Rower’s Island. Vysehrad castle on the right

We arrived in Prague, I moved the singles to the agreed place where Wintech would pick them up, handed over the bag with NK Empower Oarlocks to a guy nicknamed “Navy”, and I took some pictures of Robin preparing for his semifinal:

The boys 13/14. Robin Roosendaal on bow seat

They won their semi.

A quick lunch, a stroll through through the finish area (I bought a polo shirt) and a few hours of hanging around in the CVK Praha club house and it was time for us to launch our Masters 8+.

Our preparation has been abysmal. We didn’t manage to get in more than 3 practice rows. I think we were in our weakest form in years.

And we were the crew to beat. We have been winning this race 6 times in the last 7 years. (Last year’s edition was canceled due to a ferocious thunderstorm.) The one time we didn’t win, it was due to a grossly unfair start and the race was declared undecided without a rerow.

Three clubs from the Prague region had made a “Sélection de Raisins” in order to put a strong eight against us. It was all very exciting.

The Race

Attention! Go!

Off we were, about 2 strokes behind CVK Praha who started at Attention, and slightly behind the combination crew to our left. Coming in behind, we started to pass the two crews. It took about the first 500m to get back and then disaster struck. CVK Praha to our right and the combination to our left both started to go off course and they basically closed us in. We raced a few strokes with clashing blades, then with our hands in the air as protest, and it took ages for the umpire to decide to stop the race. He waved the red flag and we stopped rowing. Then he blew the horn to alert the other crews and they stopped rowing as well.

With something between 650 and 750m in our legs, we turned the boats and rowed back to the start.

Of course, this was a tremendous advantage for us. CVK Praha was disqualified. I think the combination crew should have been disqualified as well, but the umpire claimed that we started to go off course as well.

Here is our GPS track. In the race, we are going from the bottom to the top in the two tracks on the right hand side, the straight one being the second start. Looking at the GPS track, I think the only thing our coxswain did was to try and avoid boat damage when the other crews were coming off their tracks. But it’s hard to tell.

Anyway, a second start. I didn’t mind, but I was a bit worried about how much our less trained crew members would have left in the tank.

We started well and were leading right out of the gate. Then, unfortunately, the combination crew took over, underrating us but going faster. By the railway bridge, with 350m to go, my 2 seat was level with their 6 or 7. We rated up (from 38 to 42) and tried to pass them in a final push. However, fatigue made it hard to row well and although we managed to speed up and we were faster than the opponent, we lost by a bit.

Exciting racing. Disappointing result, although I think we didn’t really deserve to win. We need to prepare better.

After the shower and a beer with the disqualified CVK Praha crew in their club house, we all went to the Bohemians rowing club for the Masters Party. It was great. Of course, we were being made fun of: “Why do Brno rowers race with one hand in the air? Is that how they teach to row in Brno?” but there was beer and wine, live music, good food and dancing. I’ll leave the rest to your imagination.

On Sunday morning, Romana and I saw our son Robin get a second place in a very good race, and then we hit the road again. Back to Brno.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0

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Jun 15 2019

The Rowing Camp

From June 2 to 7th, I was busy hosting a rowing camp. You can read all about it here: https://pryglrowing.com/2019/06/10/the-june-2019-rowing-camp/

I didn’t row on Monday as I was too busy with the camp. On Tuesday, I joined the camp participants on their third session. My session was

1x1500m in tempo 24

2x(4x1min/1min)/6min (stroke rate 30, 32, 34, 36)


Workout Summary - media/df_20190615-132747.csv
--|Total|-Total----|--Avg--|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
--|Dist-|-Time-----|-Pace--|-Pwr-|SPM-|-HR--|-HR--|-DPS
--|11883|01:10:06.1|02:57.0|155.8|21.9|149.5|183.0|07.7
W-|06377|00:31:12.8|02:26.8|225.7|24.8|153.2|183.0|08.7
R-|05517|00:38:54.2|03:31.6|099.6|19.6|146.5|183.0|08.0
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|-Pwr-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
00|02923|15:46.1|02:41.8|165.7|19.7|144.8|163.0|09.4
03|01474|06:25.1|02:10.6|226.9|24.4|166.0|175.0|09.4 - 1500m at 24spm
04|00238|00:59.4|02:05.0|278.0|29.5|153.5|169.0|08.1 - 30 spm
05|00241|00:58.6|02:01.7|320.2|31.9|172.4|180.0|07.7 - 32 spm
06|00234|00:56.2|01:60.0|327.0|33.3|174.5|182.0|07.5 - 34 spm
07|00224|00:53.2|01:58.9|329.8|33.7|171.9|182.0|07.5 - 36 spm
08|00259|01:02.0|01:59.9|270.5|29.1|150.6|168.0|08.6 - 30 spm
09|00281|01:05.0|01:55.6|297.1|31.5|170.2|177.0|08.2 - 32 spm
10|00242|00:54.2|01:51.8|327.4|34.0|170.9|179.0|07.9 - 34 spm
11|00255|00:56.5|01:50.8|351.7|36.1|174.2|183.0|07.5 - 36 spm

It was a great outing, and fantastic to have a sparring partner. It was also very hot, which I think explains the high heart rate.

On Wednesday, I had a very hectic day. I had to go to the office to do a big demo (which turned out to go really well). Then we had a dramatic row with the eight.

Lots of soul searching. It was also extremely choppy, which was a change after the super flat water we had had for three days.

On Thursday, I did a race preparation workout, combined with some technical exercises and start practice. I also invented a new drill, the “Romanian Drill”. I may explain it later. For now, I keep it as a secret drill for camp participants.

We did a 250m and a 500m at full power, racing side by side. It was great!

On Friday, after the end of the camp. Romana and I took the double and did “one lake”.

Just a nice low rate row to enjoy the lake after we had successfully completed the camp!

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0

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Jun 15 2019

Morava Race

It’s been a hectic and very exciting period, and that’s the reason my last blog post was from May 25th. Here’s a very quick run through the sessions starting on May 27th.

May 29th session 1: Weights. On Monday I was too tired, and on Tuesday I was too busy to workout. I do pretty heavy weights sessions, so I think this was a pretty heavy one.

May 29th session 2: Row in the 8+. One of the few preparation sessions we had for our short season. If I remember well, it was choppy. BoatCoach was misbehaving. I thought I had set it to splash guard, but it switched off during the row. The map also showing me taking a jump to North Africa during one or two strokes. It surely didn’t look like I was visiting the Sahara. It was more choppy, wetter, and less coordinated.

On June 30, I drove to Racice to pick up the boats for the camp. Here are Daniela and Dave from Czech Concept2/Wintech/NK:

May 31st: A quick row in the double. We simply ran out of time. It wasn’t very intensive, but it was a pleasure to row the double with Romana.

June 1: Morava Regatta on our home lake. Kazi and I rowed the heat of the men’s 2x. We came in fourth place . It wasn’t a very good race, and we expected to not proceed to the finals. It turns out our time was better than the winner of the second heat, and we qualified for the final on Sunday. We are trying to race faster crews in preparation for the Masters Worlds, so this was good. It was unfortunate that we couldn’t deal with the wakes from the umpires launches and that we couldn’t steer a straight course.

Sunday June 2: Our final race on the double. We were bold and did something you should not try at home: We changed some rigging parameters on our boat just before a race.

And off we were to the final:

We raced a much better race this time, and managed exactly the same time as on Saturday, but this time we

  • rowed in a headwind (as opposed to Saturday’s tailwind)
  • managed to pass another crew which is always a great feeling

Here are some charts comparing the Saturday and Sunday races:

Looks pretty similar, but we had a tailwind on Saturday, and it all felt much more controlled on Sunday.

On the same day, my youngest son Robin (on the right in the picture below) won his heat and final in the boys 4+, and can now call himself Champion of Moravia.

My final race of the weekend was a 2k in our Masters eight. We raced better than we had ever rowed in a training and managed to win a bronze medal.

The picture shows our crew on the right, the winning Men’s crew from our club in the middle, and Lodni Sporty Brno taking silver on the left. There was a little competition going on of funniest pictures on the podium. We weren’t very good. I liked our Juniors 8+:

I took a quick shower and then it was time for the camp to start …

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: 2k, 2x, 8_, 8+, double, eight, Morava, OTW, race, racing, rowing, training

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May 26 2019

A week of rowing

Saturday

A steady state row in the single. This was the weekend of the Brno international Juniors regatta, so I decided to not go on the lake but row on the river instead. There was a strong wind and the lake was very choppy, so this was a good choice anyway. I didn’t have a lot of time to Row because I had to be back in time to coach some of Romana’s girls in Romana’s absence.

steady state

Nice row.

Sunday

Originally, I wanted to go on the double with Romana after the last race of the Juniors regatta, but somehow it went differently. Our club has bought a new LiteBoat Quattro (4x/4x+ combo) and it arrived from France on Sunday morning. I helped putting on the riggers and rigging it, including a complex foot steering mechanism, and so we wanted to try it out. It wasn’t an overall success. The foot steering mechanism was somewhat loose so I had trouble steering it. I did like cutting through a huge wake caused by a motorboat, though.

short row

It was a short row, because we all wanted to be home in time.

Monday

I managed to leave the office at a reasonable time and I did a very nice steady state row in the single. Again to the castle to avoid the choppy lake.

steady

Interesting to see the difference in pace in the tailwind versus headwind part, compared to the power which is nearly constant.

Tuesday

Another day where I arrived early. I had to leave work early to go to the bank to solve an unpleasant issue. During my last visit to the USA, it seems my bank card was copied. Suddenly, suspicious payments at a gas station in North Carolina showed up in my electronic banking app. I blocked the card immediately, and this Tuesday I had to go to the bank to pick up my new card.

I suspect this happened on one of the dinners. I hate it when they take your card to do a swipe of the magnetic strip, and then you sign. I think this is a technology of the 1980s, but in the US it is still widely used.

The workout was 4x5min with each five minute interval 2 minutes at 24spm, 2 minutes at 26 SPM and 1 minute at 28 SPM.

intervals

I had company from the Masters E pair, but I was slightly faster than them. The wind was a very light breeze from the south west, nothing to write home about.

speedvspace

The speed vs pace chart looks pretty ok, I think.

Workout Summary – media/20190521-1635470o.csv
–|Total|-Total—-|–Avg–|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
–|Dist-|-Time—–|-Pace–|-Pwr-|SPM-|-HR–|-HR–|-DPS
–|11886|01:02:30.5|02:37.8|169.1|21.8|145.7|179.0|08.7
W-|04472|00:19:33.5|02:11.2|239.4|25.7|162.5|179.0|08.9
R-|07417|00:-81:53.0|-5:-24.1|495692181610166.6|85618463765934.2|641582514294807.5|179.0|-0.0
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|-Pwr-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
01|01105|04:51.2|02:11.8|238.2|25.1|158.2|173.0|09.1
02|01096|04:51.9|02:13.1|242.1|25.8|164.1|178.0|08.7
03|01154|04:58.4|02:09.3|232.9|25.9|161.6|178.0|09.0
04|01118|04:52.0|02:10.6|244.8|26.0|166.0|179.0|08.8

First two intervals were in a light headwind, last two in light tailwind. I was happy with the pace and it was a very enjoyable training session.

Wednesday

We were supposed to go out in an eight, but only three people showed up, unfortunately. Also the lake was very choppy, so my original idea to row a 4- wasn’t going to be a very meaningful training. We settled for the erg, doing 2x(4x250m/250m)/4min.

I have no data, unfortunately, but I was happy to hold 1:37 to 1:38 on the intervals. I think this is slightly faster than I would have been able to hold a year ago. I believe this is my weights training paying off.

Friday

I had a quite difficult morning. Our club was supposed to go to the races in Hodonin, but it had been raining very hard in the preceding few days, and the water in the Morava River was rising fast. On Thursday evening, I received following video from the race venue:

I thought racing in these conditions was madness, but the race organizers were postponing their decision. On Friday morning I decided for myself to not race and not send my sons racing. The official decision to cancel the Regatta was done only at 3pm on Friday.

I did a weights session. Bench press, dead lift, squats, cable row, plank. Pretty heavy.

Saturday

Finally! Romana and I went out in the double. We did a short sprint workout: 2x(8×20″/20″). It was fun and it was nice to climb into the higher stroke rates.

sprintervals

Somehow the heart rate monitor misbehaved again, I may have to go back to the chest straps.

After the row, we drove to Klentnice to fine tune the menu for the rowing camp dinner. The Fara restaurant in Klentnice, in the Palava area, just 40 minutes south of Brno, has true genius loci.

food

View

Sun, vineyards, nice modern architecture, ruins of a medieval castle. What do you want more?

Sunday

We were supposed to race in Hodonin, but the races were canceled because of high water. So I invited my 2x partner from Hodonin to come train in Brno. The boys were doing the Pete plan pyramid (250, 500, 750, 1000, 750, 500, 250m) and we decided to join them. There also was a mixed masters 4x on the water, so in the end we were an armada of 2 singles, one pair, one double and two quads doing the same workout, which was big fun. We have a buoyed 6 lane course.

Workout Summary – media/20190526-1226280o.csv
–|Total|-Total—-|–Avg–|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
–|Dist-|-Time—–|-Pace–|-Pwr-|SPM-|-HR–|-HR–|-DPS
–|13065|01:31:23.5|03:29.9|000.0|23.0|126.1|181.0|06.2
W-|04064|00:14:51.9|01:49.7|000.0|32.7|157.2|181.0|08.4
R-|09007|00:-315:49.3|-17:-26.4|000.0|-1302108410965260137714941952.0|-5016110237894753553529962496.0|181.0|-0.0
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|-Pwr-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
01|00320|01:08.4|01:46.9|000.0|30.5|152.3|166.0|09.2
02|00503|01:48.1|01:47.4|000.0|33.3|110.0|125.0|08.4
03|00743|02:45.0|01:51.0|000.0|32.0|166.2|179.0|08.4
04|00996|03:46.3|01:53.6|000.0|31.0|166.6|179.0|08.5
05|00777|02:54.6|01:52.3|000.0|32.7|163.7|177.0|08.2
06|00493|01:41.3|01:42.7|000.0|36.5|166.1|181.0|08.0
07|00231|00:48.2|01:44.2|000.0|36.0|152.3|168.0|08.0

Splits according to the GPS. In the second 500m we were quite competitive with the boys quad and took the rate up to 38spm in the final bit.

sprints

Here is our stroke rate vs pace chart:

pace

After a short coffee break, we rowed another 10k with lots of drills and technique training.

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

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May 18 2019

The working week (Monday to Friday)

Monday

A busy day at work and no training. I decided that recovery from an intensive weekend of racing was a good idea.

Tuesday

Weights! My personal trainer decided that I am ready for the “big exercises”. So we did only three of them:

  1. Bench press
  2. Dead lift
  3. Squat

The protocol is to start with light weights (or only the bar) as a warming up, then gradually increase the weights until I can do about 10 repeats, with stretching between each series of 10. Then weights are increased one more time to get to failure somewhere between 5 and 10 repeats. After that weights are reduced again to do a few series at 15 repeats.

For the deadlift and squat the protocol was a bit more gentle. We didn’t push to failure but stopped at the point where I was starting to fail on technique, i.e. I was starting to use the wrong muscles to just get the weights lifted.

After that we did some 10 minutes of exercising the core.

Boy, I did feel this training the next three days.

Wednesday 

I have started calling our Masters eights crew together, and this time it was a success. We had 11 candidates show up, so we hit the lake with a double, a single, and an eight. The water was slightly rough and the coxswain slightly inexperienced, as the map clearly shows:

I had some data challenges. Forgot to charge my heart rate belt.

Well, it was just steady state. A pretty short workout as well, as some of our crew members were time pressed.

Thursday

More data issues. I still haven’t managed to sort my regatta bag and move some essential equipment from the regatta bag to the training bag. I have a pretty good system. A separate “rowing electronics” bag that goes into my small training bag or my big regatta bag. The problem with regattas is that they are so hectic that I become messy with where I put my gear. So rowing electronics ends up in the wrong part of my regatta bag, and then I show up on a training day to discover I have left the SpeedCoach holder at home. Sigh.

At least the OH1 heart rate arm band was charged. However, it didn’t seem to respond very well in the first 20 minutes of the workout.

The session was 4 series of 6×45″/75″ at race pace. These series are tuned to our lake length, and after doing one, I wondered if I would be able to complete the workout. In the end I manned up and just did it. It was so beautiful rowing weather that it would have been a sin to shorten the time on the water:

I gave myself some technique targets, focusing on finishing the stroke strong. I am not sure if I am fooling myself, but it looked like I was faster when I focused on that. Here are the data to prove it:

I am charting “Wash” vs “Boat Speed” for each “on” stroke. The line is my totally unscientific interpretation of the data. So a 5% pace improvement? That would be encouraging!

Friday

Another weights session. Bench press. Squats. Deadlift. And cable rows. Seventy five minutes of heavy work. I am due for a light steady state session today.

By sanderroosendaal • OTW • 0 • Tags: eight, lake, OTW, rowing, single, sprintervals, training, water, weights

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May 13 2019

Land week followed by river racing

Monday – Wednesday

No training. I got a car to the airport at 6am, took a flight to Jordan and arrived at the hotel hungry, but also on the first day of Ramadan. We chose to respect the fasting times. We had a great dinner in a local Arab restaurant, close to the hotel.

Amman street, in front of hotel

On Tuesday morning, I hit the hotel gym and did a pretty good workout. Twenty minutes of cardio (elliptical and spinning), and then 5 times the following circuit:

  1. 15 push-ups
  2. 30 squats
  3. 6 pull-ups
  4. 30 sit-ups

Doing that five times without stops is a pretty intensive workout, believe me. Here is the view from my hotel. The gym was basically the entire upper floor of the two story building behind the pool. A pretty good gym. The only thing missing was a proper rowing machine.

The rest of Tuesday was meetings with a potential business partner, followed by a dinner with said partner. On Wednesday morning, we had a bit of time to walk around the old town and the citadel. Here are some pictures.

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Then we took the plane home, getting a view of Jerusalem and a great view of the Mediterranean coast of Turkey and Greece from the plane. My colleague only took a picture of Jerusalem. Dome of the Rock near the center of the picture:

Thursday

A pretty heavy weights workout. I didn’t have time to go to the lake.

Friday

No time to train. Another full day of work trying to catch up after a trip. And then, at the end of the day, we drove to Piestany and had dinner in our hotel next to the reservoir.

Saturday

A full day of racing on the river Vah.

My first race was at 3pm, the Masters Men 4x. We came second in a time of 3:23, almost 6 seconds behind the winners who were clearly faster than our ad hoc crew. I rowed on bow seat. We rowed into a pretty strong headwind, which also created some chop.

The second Saturday race was in the eight. We didn’t have enough men to fill the eight, so Romana and Radka joined us. We didn’t pass any of the 100% male boats, so no egos were hurt in the process.

The last race of Saturday was very special. My son Dominik and I rowed a “family double”, Dominik on stroke seat and myself on bow. The race was over 500m, and our main opponents were the local Strecansky family. We had a brilliant start and we quickly took the lead, creating a very comfortable gap between ourselves and our opponents. It was a joy to row, and according to our fans on the shore it looked very compact. It’s a pity nobody took a picture.

Three fun races within 2 hours.

In other races, Dominik came second in the boys 15/16 heat in the double, qualifying for Sunday’s A final, and Robin won the boys 13/14 coxed four. Robin also came fourth in the boys 13/14 double.

Sunday

Sunday racing started early for me. We opened the regatta with a 500m on the mixed Masters quad, which we lost against the locals.

Yes, that is an average stroke rate of almost 42 SPM! It wasn’t me! I was suffering on bow seat.

An hour later, it was time for me to row the single. For lack of trailer space, I had to leave my own boat at home, and I was racing this in a club boat built for 90kg.

Pretty disappointed with the result. Peter Strecansky basically rowed away from me. For 700m I was rowing in second place, and then Andrej Hudec passed me. I think the river flow gave us about 10 seconds, so the time is equivalent to a 4:00 row on standing water.

Looking at the data afterwards I am more positive. I was tired from Saturday’s racing (but so were my competitors), and I managed to keep the stroke rate at a reasonable 31spm or higher for most of the race. When I increased stroke rate, it helped boat speed.

I guess this is not a bad result given the heavy week with travel.

The final race of Sunday was the Masters 2x. We didn’t do a proper warming up, because we were assisting with an emergency (asthma attack of a kid). Everybody responded quick and professionally, luckily. We got her sitting up straight and calmed her down while someone was getting her medicine, and after a few puffs she was slowly but surely improving. With that solved and the kid in good hands, we launched the double to meet the competition.

I was stroking this one, with Kazi on bow. Same line-up as our Euromasters win. We were leading straight out of the start, did a ten stroke piece in the middle to demotivate any attempts by those who were chasing us, and a final push for our fans. Quick, easy win. In form, we should be a bit faster than this.

The rowing was good for most of the race. It was easy to hold 33 SPM and 35 SPM with a light stroke, and we were clean and compact. When we did the push, I felt the boat speed up.

Dominik and Mirek won a bronze medal in the boys 15/16 doubles A final, passing the local boat in the final 200m to beat them by 0.5 seconds. Robin won the boys 13/14 coxed quad by a 10 second gap.

Here’s a picture taken on Saturday after the “fun racing” block (family doubles, mixed kids doubles) which was won by four crews from our club.

And that was the end of a weekend full of activity. The weather was perfect. Sunny on Saturday, cloudy but dry on Sunday.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: racing, rowing

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May 5 2019

Work hard and relax

Hard Work

Romana and Dominik are racing at the Juniors Regatta in Munich. It’s a good opportunity for a selection of our club’s youth to get international experience and measure themselves with the Germans, who are producing quality juniors. I only found out that Dominik could have started in the lightweight Juniors B category, and he would be rowing in the front of the pack. I have mixed feelings about this, though. I understand how it makes for more interesting competition for kids who are lighter. But knowing how hard lightweight rowing is for some grown-ups, I wouldn’t want to see people limiting their food intake to make weight at that age.

As a former lightweight rower, I will say my opinion. For many athletes, lightweight rowing is not healthy. It forces people to take in less food than their training regimen requires, and fosters an unhealthy relationship with one of the best things there is in life: eating and enjoying good food (without feeling guilty). Let alone the lure of helping your performance by taking banned substances.

The natural conclusion of that is to stop lightweight rowing as a separate category, and I think I am OK with that. And I am more than OK with that for people under the age of 18.

This morning, I had a nice long sleep in, a slow breakfast and then spent time helping my youngest Robin with his Dutch homework. I also decided which restaurant in Amman I was going to have dinner in on Monday evening, which involved googling sunset times. It’s the first week of Ramadan, after all. I have good memories of Amman, so I am looking forward to going back to Jordan. After that, I headed to the office to drop some presents. One of my best people is going on maternity leave, and unfortunately I have a business trip coinciding with her last day in the office. So the least I could do was organize a collection and buy some nice presents from what was collected (plus a little extra).

Then on to the lake. I wasn’t too hopeful. Looking at the flags around the office, it would be windy. On Friday, the conditions were like this:

Today it would be tougher. I was hoping the lake would be rowable, knowing that the wind is always stronger in Slatina, where my office is, than in Bystrc at the lake. When I arrived, it wasn’t too bad. It looked like the south end of the lake was very choppy (but still rowable) and the north end was more sheltered and quieter.

So I stayed on the north end.

The training looked brutal on paper: 2x(3x3min/3min)/5min at race pace.

But a Masters sprint race takes less than four minutes. So taking that literally, it would be like rowing 3/4 of a race, then returning to the start, rowing another 3/4 to the race, and repeating that another four times.

I decided that 2k pace was meant. I don’t have enough data for this season to make a reliable estimate of my 2k power, so I just picked 28 to 30spm and 270W. (Rowsandall.com tells me my 2k power is at 241W, but that is probably an underestimation, as I haven’t done any long hard pieces on the water recently).

I rowed the 3 minute pieces at “Rokle” (see map above, top left), and the wind was ‘interesting’. It was mostly North to North-East (0 to 30 degrees) but it was turning, so there were strokes with tailwind during a headwind interval, and the other way round.

And here’s the summary:


Workout Summary - media/20190505-1105450o.csv
--|Total|-Total-|--Avg--|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
--|Dist-|-Time--|-Pace--|-Pwr-|SPM-|-HR--|-HR--|-DPS
--|09785|55:26.0|02:50.0|157.4|22.4|149.1|183.0|07.9
W-|04228|17:56.0|02:07.2|262.9|28.7|166.9|183.0|08.2
R-|05562|37:31.0|03:22.4|107.0|19.4|140.5|183.0|08.5
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|-Pwr-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
01|00697|02:55.0|02:05.5|265.6|28.3|165.7|178.0|08.4
02|00669|02:59.8|02:14.4|267.5|28.3|168.2|181.0|07.9
03|00723|03:01.6|02:05.6|251.8|28.4|165.7|182.0|08.4
04|00752|03:02.0|02:00.9|275.4|29.7|167.3|180.0|08.3
05|00669|03:01.0|02:15.3|253.6|28.4|166.9|183.0|07.8
06|00717|02:56.6|02:03.1|263.4|28.9|167.5|182.0|08.4

I am a little disappointed with the power averages for some intervals, but it has to be said that there was some turning, and I did have to work hard to keep myself above 270W in the straight bits.I was pretty happy with interval number 4. This was with a nice tailwind, but I felt I could row lightly at 30spm and I didn’t have difficulty keeping the power up. I was also able to tap down cleanly and find rest in the recovery at 30spm. This is how I want to row all my intervals and race pace pieces! (Easier said than done.)

Relax

After the training, I felt very tired. I decided I needed to do something nice and relaxing, so I took the car to the Maximus Infinit Wellness resort, only 500m from our rowing club, and indulged in 90 minutes of sauna and relax. It was wonderful. Today, I really enjoyed the cold bits of saunaing. Taking the ice cold shower. Swimming in the little lake with a water temperature of 10 degrees. Standing outside in just 6 degrees C, with just a towel wrapped around my body. It was wonderful.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0

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