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Training diary and random remarks around my rowing
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Mar 29 2019

The End of March

Monday – Rest Day

Tuesday – Erging with the Quiske Virtual Coach

I wanted to do this week’s weights session during my lunch hour, but I found out I had left my training shorts at home. So, instead, I spent an hour on the erg in the evening.

The Coach like some aspects of my rowing:

Let’s translate that image:

  • A score of 5 on Drive Ratio
  • A score of 5 on Legs Rhythm (percentage of time seat is moving)
  • A score of 6 on Legs Speed (fast is better according to the Quiske virtual coach)
  • A score of 8 (yay!) on Seat Stopped (which is a measure of how well you are sequencing)
  • A score of 5 on front loading of the drive (Quiske likes front loading). Another way to look at this is as a measure of opening the back too early (which I like more than front loading)

Here are my own charts on drive rhythm and drive speed, adding power and stroke rate for reference:

So I rowed three intervals and used Quiske in the first and last ones. The virtual coach liked the last interval much more than the first one. What are the differences?

More interesting is to look at seat speed (dashed line) and handle speed (solid line). The blue line is the session average, green is in the beginning of the session and red is near the end. Here are my observations:

  • Seat speed faster than handle speed in the first part of the drive? That doesn’t look good.
  • Handle speed then takes over seat speed in the first half of the drive. This is my back opening (or my arms bending). That doesn’t look good either.
  • As I get tired (red curve), the hands away is less pronounced.

All in all a whole lot of technique things to check on.

Wednesday

A brutal weights workout, well at least for my tiny muscles. After months of body weights and cable machine exercises, I am starting to be ready for the “big” weight lifting exercises.

I did a 2k warming up on one of the horribly maintained Concept2 ergometers, the one with the working battery. In true gym style I have to set the slider to 10, but that is only to get a reasonable drag factor (120).

The sets shown on the left are the “work” sets. For each of the workouts, I did a few “warming up” sets, where I gradually increased the weights. The prescribed “work” was 3 sets at 60% of 1 Repetition Maximum (1RM) and 2 sets at 70%. I had to guess my 1RM maximum, because I have never done the testing.

Each set was to be done to exhaustion, but as I had no chaperone, I stopped one or two reps early, just to make sure the weights wouldn’t collapse on me.

I found a very cool app to record my workouts. It’s called “Simple Workout Log“. It’s perfect.

It doesn’t get in the way.  You prepare a routine with all the exercises you want to do, then when you do a set, you quickly enter the weight and number of reps, which is a one thumb operation. Also adding a new set is a one click. Even though the app looks very simple, you can basically operate it with one finger, and it seems to be very well thought out. The next screen I needed was always just one click away.

I am not very sympathetic to people playing with their phones in the gym. When you’re working out, you’re working out. OK to use a phone to record your workout, but I see people writing emails, making phone calls, texting, apping, facebooking, and what not, all the while occupying workout stations.

Once you have done a few sets, the app also estimates your 1RM maximum, which is probably slightly underestimated in my case, for the reasons mentioned above, but it is a very cool feature anyway: It gives you a little table of weights for 1 rep, 5 reps, 10 reps, 15 reps etc.

It’s also syncing to the cloud so you can use the app on different devices. And finally, it charts your progress. I think I am going to be finding a lot of motivation from this extremely simple app. It shows that providing just a little extra functionality on top of a paper notebook can already be very valuable.

So Bench Pull, Leg Press, Bench Press, and Power Clean, in that order. Power Clean is really the exercise that I am the weakest on.

For next week, I have hired a weight lifting pro for one hour, to help me with form.

Thursday – Morning Row with Quiske

I had a late ending work day, so I went out in the morning. I forgot to wear my heart rate band and when I discovered that on the dock, I was too lazy (and time pressed) to go back to my locker. This was supposed to be a steady state row anyway, so I wasn’t expecting any heart rate data of interest, and as I have a power meter, I can use power to measure training load.

I actually did a few 2 minute intervals at fixed stroke rates (22, 24, 26), with tailwind, and with headwind. I did this with the plan to run the same test on a boat I was going to test on Friday. I will defer the Quiske analysis to the end of this post.

Friday – Boat testing (also with Quiske)

Up early for the drive to the Argonauten rowing club in Vienna. My own sculls on the roof rack. It’s just a 90 minutes drive, so I left 5:15 to be in time for a 7AM training. The single didn’t have a C2 holder, and it had one of those modern reverse wing riggers, so I didn’t have a place to put the NK SpeedCoach.

The chart you see is a miracle of data fusion. I recorded heart rate on the Polar OH1 arm, position and speed using the Garmin watch, and I got stroke rate and stroke length from the Quiske app (using their CSV export to Rowsandall). So in the chart, each window is from a different device. As you can see, I just did a short workout on the Alte Donau.

The little backtracking bit of my trajectory is when I saw some Vienna Masters rowers and friends (Andreas Kral and Marko Milodanovic) park their double (called “Kralovic”) at the Donaubund dock, so I shouted “Good Morning” and then reversed to their dock for a little chat.  A very pleasant surprise. I have to consider coming to their International Regatta, but there are so few free weekends this coming season …

I did the same 22spm, 24spm, 26spm intervals as on Thursday, and I took a few strokes at 35-37 spm as well, just to test the boat. Here’s me doing 22spm:

So how did the comparison work out?

  • Bird song in Vienna is the same quality as in Brno. I love morning rows for the bird song.
  • I won’t go into comparing boat speed, because the water temperature in Vienna was much higher (a tropical 8 degrees C) but the Alte Donau is much shallower, so comparing boat speeds is not a good thing.
  • The boat felt very comfortable, familiar, and responsive. Stiffer than my own older single. Very similar to our (same brand) double ORCA.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

In the Quiske boat acceleration charts above, red and cyan are Thursday (my boat) and green and blue are Friday (test boat). Here is the oar angle speed chart (same color coding):

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

And what shocking conclusions do I draw from all those beautiful curves? The following:

  • The boat run is similar

Is that all? Yes.

Well, almost. There is also a little bump at the start of the oar angle curve. I have circled it in red here in the 26spm chart:

That is me being to cramped at the catch. I need to get rid of that bump.

And now that I look in detail again, I notice that I am cleaner on the tap down today than yesterday. Not sure if that is the boat or just me trying to row cleaner because of a coach on the bank.

And then there is a final thing. Looks like the last part of the recovery is a little different. Hm, have to think more about this.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: 1x, quiske, rowing, single, Vienna

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Mar 25 2019

Sunday – Sparring with the boys

I took another Filippi, with the right shoe size this time. The downside was a very heavily rigged pair of Croker sculls. Croker is OK, but I wasn’t comfortable with the heavy rig.

But we were under time pressure and I was on a borrowed boat, so I didn’t change the inboard or oar length. Just got on with it.

I was joining the boys (15/16 year olds) with their final session of the camp.

The idea was to run 4 2k trials, at stroke rates 22, 24, 26 and 28 SPM, downstream. The rest would be the paddle back to the start. Jakub, the boys trainer, would be the starter, while Romana would note the finish times at the end of the dock of the Pardubice rowing club. Here’s the workout map, indicating the start and finish:

We met a little earlier than what I considered to be the 2000m point, but Jakub stopped us at the 969th kilometer (measured from the mouth of this river Elbe at Hamburg) which was 1300m from the finish. I didn’t mind too much. Here’s the summary, noting that this was rowed downstream so the pace values are flattering. Also, I think my Polar OH1 heart rate arm band moved after interval 02 and the heart rate values are unreliable for the two final races.


Workout Summary - media/20190324-1630470o.csv
--|Total|-Total-|--Avg--|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
--|Dist-|-Time--|-Pace--|-Pwr-|SPM-|-HR--|-HR--|-DPS
--|15091|112:15.0|03:43.2|000.0|21.8|119.1|171.0|06.2
W-|05282|21:43.0|02:03.4|000.0|25.4|133.1|171.0|09.6
R-|09814|90:32.0|04:36.8|000.0|20.9|115.8|171.0|06.0
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|-Pwr-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
01|01315|05:37.3|02:08.3|000.0|22.5|150.2|164.0|10.4
02|01323|05:29.8|02:04.7|000.0|24.7|155.9|171.0|09.7
03|01332|05:20.5|02:00.3|000.0|26.7|109.8|113.0|09.3
04|01312|05:16.0|02:00.4|000.0|28.0|115.0|120.0|08.9

So we spent nearly two hours on the water rowing four five minute sprints. Yes, but it was fun!

It was especially fun because my son Dominik (pictured above) was starting 30 seconds before me, so there was a little family prestige thing going on here.

Here’s the old guy. The family prestige match ended in 4-0 for the old guy, but the margins were very small.  I rowed slightly higher rate in the 24spm race, because things were going well and I had a natural tendency to push for higher rates, despite the heavy rig. Of course, in the 26spm race I tried to close in on Dominik and he defended, so we both rated slightly higher. Finally, in the 28spm bit, I started off much too aggressive, seeing 1:53 pace on my SpeedCoach, and I paid for it coming out of the bend when I saw my pace drop from 1:58-1:59 to 2:05 when a slight headwind started to blow and I had difficulty getting the stroke rate back to 28spm. Here are the important charts:

I beat Dominik with margins of 5 to 15 seconds. Still, I find it amazing given that he is 40 seconds slower than I am on the 2k erg. Of course, he is 15 kg lighter than I am and he has the musculature of a strong 14 year old. It would have been great to compare power and stroke average force if we had power meters.

I chatted to Dominik’s trainer after the session, and he told me bluntly that Dominik has better technique. That’s his explanation. It hurt a little, but he gave me some good technique feedback so I guess I have to put my pride aside and start working on some of the flaws he saw.

After the session we had an hour to prepare the boats for transport. We went for a quick lunch, and then I towed the trailer back to Brno, which is a two hour drive. I was pretty exhausted at the end of the day.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: 1x, OTW, river, rowing, single, training, trials

4EBC73FF-B948-4D23-AE6B-BC73411ECBA3

Mar 24 2019

River dweller

On Friday evening, Robin, Lenka and I took the train to Pardubice. Romana is here already since Monday doing a training camp with the girls of CVK Brno.

flat water

I don’t think we can complain about the rowing water here in Pardubice, but I am getting ahead of myself. The rowing was the second workout of the day, the first being a short run.

I decided that I liked a bit of competition on the water, so I joined the boys (under 16) in their workout. They did 4 series of 5 two minute intervals at one minute rest, starting the first two minute interval at 22spm and increasing by 2 SPM for each interval. So

4x(5x2min/1min)/5min @ 22/24/26/28/30 SPM

The rest period of five minutes was not exactly defined as five minutes, but as the time to turn the boat, drink a bit, and wait to recover. In Pardubice, the trainer riding a bike on the bank has no access to the turning points, so this is an ideal location for the youth to catch a few minutes of extra rest. After five days of training two or three times a day, I guess they needed that.

map

It was a great training. I rowed about as fast as the fastest of the boys, so there was good competition going on. I really enjoyed the Filippi single for lightweights that I was able to use (because one of the girls had to leave camp early for a booked vacation) enjoying its stiffness and responsiveness compared to my own single. The only thing I didn’t like and which turned out quite painful in the end, was the size 40 shoes, which were much too small for my tired old big feet. Actually they prevented me from reaching as far in the catch as I am used to. I short slided a bit.

chart

The power values in the above chart are notional. I am not sure I was able to capture the river stream well, and there was quite a large difference in pace going upstream or downstream.

What I liked most about this session is how you start at a leisurely 22 SPM focusing on technique and how the progression allows you to take over technique attention points to higher stroke rates. Perhaps this was an illusion because it is really the first time after the winter that I am rowing at higher stroke rates, but I seemed to rate up easily and really enjoyed how the boat responded.

I may also be subconsciously convincing myself to upgrade my old and faithful Dolfijn to a Dolfijn II?

The small shoe size made me decide to skip the third training session of the day and join Romana with coaching from the bank instead. A few pictures:

kuba

Kundak

holly

girls

And a sort video. Some of these girls learned to row only recently:

By sanderroosendaal • rowing • 0 • Tags: intervals, rowing, single, training

mapka

Mar 22 2019

Mirror Flat Lake in Brno

Thursday. Sunny weather. Which means -2 C in the morning, which is a bit chilly on the scooter, and 14 to 16 degrees in the afternoon, which is great for rowing.

Half of our club is in Gavirate for a camp, and the other half are doing a camp on the Labe (Elbe) river in Pardubice. I will join the Pardubice crew for the weekend. But this Thursday it meant that I had the lake almost for myself. There were a few rowers from the club on the other side of the lake.

Steady state. I didn’t monitor the Power values during the row, but focused on Effective Length and Work per Stroke.

During km 6 to 8 I rowed without feathering. I was pretty happy with the execution of the drill, but looking at the data after the row, it shows that I significantly shortened the finish during that bit.

I had a fun “Masters Rower Price” moment in the final 3km full lake stretch. A junior from the other bank was trailing me and apparently doing some intervals. He was fiercely rowing at 30spm and catching up. His rowing was ugly, but he had the strong body of an 18 year old. When he was almost level, I increased stroke rate from 17spm to 24 spm and was able to stay ahead of him by keeping the length and rowing nice and clean, until he gave up. I enjoy those moments. Here’s a zoom in on that bit:

Recently, I have started to use Boat Speed in meters per second for the speed plots, but I am adding a pace (seconds per 500m) for those not used to the meters per second values.

How much more enjoyable is this. Being out on a sunny day on the lake, gliding over the water, outrowing a junior. Compare that to doing mindless steady state on a static erg in a basement, without company. I may ditch erg training early this season. Time to do more running.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: OTW, rowing, single, steady state, technique drills, training, water

th

Mar 20 2019

About Stress and Training Load

Monday and Tuesday were long and stressful days at work. They happen, right? I work with people and I lead a group that executes complex technology development projects in the Aerospace industry. Stressful days are part of the job description.

But I am still learning (or perhaps refusing to learn my lesson) about the relationship between work related stress and training stress.

In terms of improving fitness, training “stress” is good stress. You won’t get any fitter, stronger or faster by being a couch potato. You have to get off the couch and exercise. Actually, exercising helps a lot to relax from work related stress.

Work and life related stress can be “good” stress also, in the sense that you need the stress to perform well. However, it adds nothing to improving fitness or strength.

And then there is “bad” stress. Non constructive stuff. Painful stuff. Sad stuff.

But while exercising can relieve some of the other forms of stress, in another way all the forms of stress add up. On a busy day with good work related stress, the training has to be lighter. On a bad stress day, I might as well take a day off.

Monday and Tuesday were busy days of work, mostly busy in a good way, but there were also a few projects that had issues. I cannot go into details, but “We have accidentally killed the Austrian Arch-Duke and now Austria has declared war on us” is a good way to describe one of the issues. It’s my job to solve. So that’s what I do. We are not at war any more.

And I was wise on Monday, taking a rest day (training wise).

On Tuesday, I was forcing myself to get back to training. Easy. Steady State. On the erg. After 30 minutes I bailed. Erg is boring, tedious, and you need a certain amount of concentration and motivation to do it, especially when you do it alone, in your basement.

On Tuesday, I had time for a longer lunch break weights session. Nice. Go to the gym. See some other people. Pull and push some weights. Think through some work related things during the pauses between sets. This is much more tolerable than erg training when your mind is occupied with work related stuff.

Make Note to Self.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: concept2, ergometer, rowing, training, weights

IMG_1526

Mar 17 2019

Double the Fun

Beautiful weather today. The wind direction turned 180 degrees since yesterday and calmed down. It was sunny and 14 degrees, but on the lake it felt like 20. I am talking Celsius scale now.

The Masters were present in a large group. Martin, Lubica, Zuzana, and Darinka took a quad. Tomas went out in the single. Romana and I did our first workout in the Double of the year.

Warming up. Then breaking down the strokes by stops. In Dutch we call them “first stop”, “second stop”, and “third stop”. These are stops at, respectively, the finish, arms away, and body rocking over. We started with all three, then removed the first, then the second and finally went back to rowing continuously.

Then, we rowed without feathering for 2km.

And finally we did a special, secret, technique drill that makes us very fast. You can see its mark at 6800m and 9000m in the chart above. And here’s a panorama shot from our dock:

And another one:

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

Screenshot_2019-03-16_15-01-24

Mar 16 2019

Fanatically OTW

Thursday

A workout that doesn’t look so hard on paper, but after I’d done it I was sure my arms would fall off.

30 minutes of running/cycling. I did both, in the fitness center close to the office.

Then the following:

6 sets of 20 burpees / 20 jerk (20kg), one minute rest between sets

6 sets of 20 squats (12 kg) / 40 boxing punches holding 6kg dumbbell.

Pretty explosive and pretty heavy on shoulders. It was fun.

Friday

I was able to leave work early and arrived at the rowing club at 4pm. I decided to take the single out. It was “nice” weather. A light rain, but it wasn’t too windy. Steady state and mainly technique focus. I used the effective length metric on the NK SpeedCoach/Empower in combination with the Work per Stroke. Returning to the water after a winter of erging, my strokes are a bit too heavy around the catch. Need to lengthen up, lighten up and still get those Watts in the stroke.

You can see in the section between 0:42 and 0:56 how it all came together and I cradually increased the stroke rate to 24spm. Unfortunately, the Empower Oarlock disconnected after 36 minutes and I had to pair it again with the SpeedCoach. After the training, I downloaded and installed new SpeedCoach firmware.

Saturday

The forecast was that the wind would be strong during the night and slow down in the morning, but when I arrived at the club, it was not a calm lake. For a moment, I considered using the LiteBoat coastal single, but in the end I wanted to get more practice in in my own single. I figured that the water would be calmer on the opposite shore and in the canyon.

Here’s how I rowed (short sliding) the crossing of the lake to find calmer water:

The training was 3x2km at 24 spm. As I rowed up into the canyon, I decided to row two intervals into the headwind, and two intervals with tailwind on the way back. It seemed a pity not to do 4 2km intervals, and it was perfectly doable. The tailwind intervals were very enjoyable, and I was happy to see that I could rate up to 27spm in those bits without really getting tired.

Well, I did get tired, but I was having so much fun that I didn’t notice. After lunch, I had to do groceries, and at one point, all I really wanted was to find a quiet part of the store, lie down and rest a bit.

I do have video from the row, but as it’s the start of a new OTW season it’s not perfect. I mounted my GoPro 90 degrees rotated, so instead of a nice wide view, I have a portrait video. Also, I left my Windows computer in the office, and I am still learning the video editing software on the official Rowsandall developer’s notebook, which is running Linux (because developing under Linux is so much easier and the rowsandall.com site itself also runs on a Linux distribution). I haven’t found anything that could replace Dashware to get telemetry data into the video.

While my videos are uploading, I can only show a comparison between Friday’s technique session and today’s choppy, higher rate session:

You can see that I was a bit shorter today, but I find that acceptable given the conditions. Otherwise I think I should be happy with the result.

After the row, I had a nice coffee at the club house, giving me the opportunity to boss around the juniors who were loading my trailer. They are going for a week long training camp on Monday.

It was good to get some good OTW kilometers in the bank.

Edit 1

The first high res video has finally uploaded. The other one will be ready in 40 minutes:

Edit 2

Second video uploaded. Second 2km – headwind.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: 4x2km, choppy, OTW, rowing, single, training

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