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Training diary and random remarks around my rowing
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Mar 12 2019

To the radio tower

Friday

Weights training. I had to go for my last shot related to the India travel in the morning. So I did the weights a little lighter than normal.

Went to a concert with my son. In bed after midnight.

Saturday

No training? It depends how you see it. I spent four hours cleaning out the rowing club workshop, where we had stored lots of stuff during the reconstruction of the club house. It was a combination of physical work (lifting boxes, cupboards, boats, and other stuff), with that of an historian (deciding what to keep and what not). We have boxes full of trophies from the 1920s, 1930s, 1950s, and younger. Old coaching related literature, 1930s club house restaurant menus, etc …

Sunday

Erg workout at the club, with some other masters. I went with their workout, which was sort of steady state but with lots of rest and alternating 20 and 24 SPM. Here is the main bit:

rowing chart

There was also a warming up and cooling down and a long stretching session.

Tuesday

On Monday, I had a long day at work with a few performance review with my subordinates. Exhausting. I decided to take a rest day and work on the Rowsandall.com site. Fixed a few bugs. Improved a few things.

The training plan prescribed otw rowing but the weather wouldn’t have allowed that. Windy and wet snow.

Today, the work day was nice and relaxed. It involved a one hour drive to the engine factory in Olomouc for a meeting with the Olomouc site leader. Had a coffee break on the highway on the way back, it felt nice to not be in an office. I returned in time to get some work done in the Brno office as well, so all in all a nice and varied day.

However, since my illness I have difficulty getting back into the rhythm. Had to force myself to go down to the erg basement and row. The erg seems boring and one dimensional after having tasted the OTW feeling again. I decided to dial up the “Mountain Loop” in Zwift (connected to the erg via the PainSled app) and force myself to Row/ride the full loop.

There were lots of people on Zwift, so I ended up riding the way up in a huge group, and stuck with a few guys who were about as fast as I. Riding up to the radio tower I got my heart rate up a bit too high, but it was fun, even though the splits weren’t were I would have liked them to be.

Zwift screenshot

Zwift screenshot

In the screenshots, I am the guy with the black/red striped shirt. In the end the workout was where I wanted it to be in terms of rScore.

rowing chart

By sanderroosendaal • rowing • 0 • Tags: Comcept2, erg, OTE, rowing, steady state, training

IMG_1477

Mar 7 2019

60 minutes of bliss and 5 minutes of terror

Monday

Up at 5:30 for transport to the airport. Flight to Paris, then on a (delayed) flight to Casablanca. Check in to the hotel and one local beer tasted before going to the land of nod.

Tuesday

Up early. It was still dark outside. Also, I wasn’t sure where to go running in Casablanca. It was a pity, because exploring new places by running is an excellent way to get more sight seeing out of a business trip.

I headed down from my 26th floor hotel room (magnificent views!) to the gym at the second floor. A typical hotel gym. The training plan prescribed 30 minutes of running which I replaced with 10min/10min/10min of treadmill/elliptical/spinning. After that, the second part of the session looked horrendous:

6x (20x burpee + 20x jerk 25kg)/60″

6x (20x squat 10kg + 40x boxing with 6-8kg dumbbell)

I was under time pressure so I did 6x (20x burpee + 40x boxing). And that was hard! So all in all a session of 50 minutes but I got some work done.

We had a good meeting, and then there was some time for sight seeing. We took a taxi to the biggest mosque of North Africa, right on the beach, and took a few pictures.

The famous lighthouse “El Hank”

Then we took a taxi to the fishing port. We passed “Rick’s Cafe“, then a part of the waterfront that looked like a piece of Monaco transplanted to Morocco. You can see it in the background of this picture.

In the port, we watched the boats getting prepared and leaving. We were at a significant risk of being covered in seagull poop, but we still stood there watching for a while, taking in the aroma of diesel, fish, sea water, and other undefined.

We had great seafood in a nearby restaurant.

Wednesday

Basically spent the whole day making it back from Casablanca to Brno, with stops in Paris and Vienna.

Thursday

Back in the office and lots of things to do. But it was great spring weather and I knew that our local rowers have been rowing OTW since Monday! I needed part of the action, so I left early, claiming to be tired from the business trip and grabbing the opportunity offered by one canceled meeting. Drove home, grabbed rowing gear, went to lake.

The lake was perfectly flat. Took out the single and did a little over an hour of 18spm steady state. I had no need to go any higher. This was a session to work on technique on the water, after a winter stop of three months. Oh, how I enjoyed feeling the boat run between strokes, something that no erg can simulate, dynamic or not.

I must have switched off the SpeedCoach after the warming up. I noticed half way the first “lake” that the SpeedCoach was showing “Ready”. It took a while for me to realize that this was not OK. So the session was recorded as 55 minutes, but I rowed for 68 minutes. I have the Garmin backup data to prove it.

After 40 minutes it started raining a bit, and when I was closing in on the last part, the water got a few wrinkles. I turned at “Sirka” and started the final 1000m back to the rowing club. After a minute or so I heard the wind, and then I felt it. A very strong headwind came up and within 30 seconds the lake turned very choppy. And another 30 seconds later I was rowing in white caps and getting water in the boat. As I caught water, a little later it took just too big waves to completely fill my boat with ice cold water. I saw my water bottle float away but I decided not to go back to catch it. I was only 400m from the dock but I was fearing I wouldn’t make it.

Actually, I turned around to see if anybody was outside on the rowing club who could help me. Nobody there. I swore loudly, but in the wind nobody heard it.

Look at the chart and you see the frightful bit. With 200m to go I was considering to just paddle in survival mode until the wind would die down, but eventually I made it to the dock. There, I found that my shoes had been blown into the water and were nowhere to be seen. Well, the advantage of cold, numb feet is that you can walk without feeling the sharp stones. I had to put the boat in slings  and secure it before I could put it in the boathouse, because the wind had slammed the doors shut.

Well, that was quite an unexpected adventure. But it was great to be out on the water again. Here are some of the metrics:

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

Capture

Mar 2 2019

Starting up after illness

It’s been a long time since I worked out. Here’s the chart that tells the story:

On February 14th, I did a normal 60 minute swim session. Nothing to complain about.

On Friday, February 15th, I was heading to my weights session when I noticed something like an upcoming cold. I don’t need HRV measurements to figure out when to take the intensity back. I am blessed with a pretty good feel for the state of my body. I did, however, decide to press on with the session. A weights session is intensive for the muscles, but in my experience it doesn’t worsen an upcoming cold.

On Saturday, I woke up with a very sore throat and a terrible headache. I canceled my session, thinking that a day of rest and a slow spinning or running session on Sunday would get me over it.

On Sunday, I was worse, and I canceled the light exercise that I had planned.

On Monday, I had a 39 degree fever. I should have stayed in bed, but I moved to the sofa and did my work calls from there. There was a major emergency at work that needed my full attention.

Of course that doesn’t help recovery. On Tuesday and Wednesday, I worked from home, still with a fever. On Thursday, I tried to get to the office, but that was a mistake.

I took the weekend after to get more rest and finally climb out of the valley of misery. On Tuesday, I still wasn’t feeling ready for a workout, and on Wednesday and Thursday I was on a two day work related conference that left me no time to work out.

So, long story short, today was the first day for two short workouts. A 30 minute run followed by a 30 minute workout in the rowing club weights room.

The weights room workout consisted of:

  • Bench pull
  • Leg press
  • Bench press
  • Hyper extension
  • V-ups
  • Rope skipping
  • Jerk
  • Push ups

And finally a ten minutes of cooling down on the spinning bike.

The stats are pretty depressing, but it was so good to be active again:

There is also some very good news. The ice on our lake is retreating fast:

Tomorrow, I will do a group erg session with our Masters training group.

On Monday morning, I will fly to Casablanca for a customer visit. I’ve never been to Casablanca, so I am looking forward to it. The following video pretty much sums up what I know about Casablanca, but I expect it to be a bit different:

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: illness, rowing, run, trainign, training, weights

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Feb 14 2019

The Naked Rower

Monday

A planned rest day. Note to self. A rest day means going to bed early. Recovery has a lot to do with sleeping well and sleeping enough.

Tuesday

Unplanned “rest” day. I arrived home from work, looking forward to doing a steady state workout. I found the house dark. My daughter Lenka was in bed with a fever. As the rest of the family is out in the mountains (it’s school vacation), she had been alone the entire day.

So I scrapped the training and headed out to the pharmacy. Also had to do the groceries which I thought Lenka had done.

Wednesday

I worked from home in the morning, to make sure Lenka would be taken care of. As I was up pretty early, I had time to do my Tuesday’s workout before my first call.

Nothing special. A bunch of longer intervals rowed at steady state pace. I did however put the Quiske pod under my seat pad and rowed with the Quiske app. I am not going to go into details about the Quiske app, but the essential thing is that it measures your instantaneous handle and seat speed and is able to make recommendations about your rowing style based on that.

The app gives you live feedback on how you are doing versus their ideal style.

I have to say that I would like to distinguish between “technique” and “style”.

The picture above shows the famous classification of rowing styles. You can row any of those styles without technique flaws.

Anyhow, I was curious to see how I would fare. Here was Quiske’s summary after 20 minutes:

So all yellow and one red, nothing green. That isn’t very good, isn’t it? Well, I opened the debate about this with the developers of Quiske. You can read it here on the Rowing Data Facebook Group. 

So in this picture you can see a chart of my typical handle (solid) and seat (dashed) speed during a rowing stroke. The table above it gives you the “Virtual Coach” ideal values versus mine. You can see that I am not so far away.

It’s funny to see the data versus how it felt. I am (I think) very consciously working on leg push and a more phased stroke (legs, trunk, arms) but to get the balls green during the row I had to change much more than I thought I would have. It felt very awkward.

With a coach present in the erg room, normally you would get corrections immediately. The Quiske system is great for basement rowers like myself, to get honest and factual feedback.

I would like  the Quiske app to be programmable to a certain style, though, as I think coaches should have the option to promote the style they think is best, as opposed to having it prescribed by the developers of Quiske. On the other hand, I understand how labor intensive it is to develop a set of metrics that correctly catch a certain style and quantifies deviations from it (at various stroke rates), so I don’t see this as a major issue. You can always look at the curves directly.

And as my preferred style does approach what Quiske recommends quite well, I am going to use it more often.

The workout was a 3km warming up followed by 20min/3min + 12min/2min + 10min at 20/21 spm:

I seem to be suffering from missing strokes in the data stream. Not sure what is the culprit. This time I was listening to classical “ether” radio, and the only bluetooth connections were between my iPhone and the PM, the OH1 and the PM, and between the Quiske Pod and my Android Phone. Usually I have an additional Bluetooth link between iPad and iPhone (for Zwift) and between the iPad and the radio (for music).

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: concept2, ergometer, in-stroke, quiske, rowing, steady state, training

myimage

Feb 14 2019

Sunday – 6 x 5 minutes

This was a 6x5min/3min with the 5 minute intervals being 1 minute at 22 spm, 2 minutes at 24 spm, 2 minutes at 26 spm. It’s one of those semi hard threshold workouts that are not popular among the polarized training disciples, but I figured it would be a good one to do a day after an erg race. More steady state would be a bit boring, and my aching muscles might decide to convince my mind to stop the workout early. More sprintervals would be stupid. I guess it was a good day for crosstraining, but I only had a small time window to work out.

I did a 3km warming up row.

I had difficulty connecting the heart rate belt to the PM or to the phone, and it didn’t occur to me that I could record the Heart Rate on the OH1 arm band as a separate data flow, to be merged with the rowing data later on. I decided that it wasn’t a big loss to not monitor heart rate during this workout.

And here are the other data. Ignore the pace for interval “00”. Some of my algorithms ended up in a weird corner of the data landscape. Power is correct:


Workout Summary - media/20190210-1626390o.csv
--|Total|-Total-|--Avg--|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
--|Dist-|-Time--|-Pace--|-Pwr-|SPM-|-HR--|-HR--|-DPS
--|10467|47:59.0|02:17.6|167.4|21.6|0.0|000.0|10.1
W-|07766|29:53.0|01:55.5|225.8|24.6|000.0|000.0|10.6
R-|02715|18:00.0|03:18.9|071.0|16.7|000.0|000.0|13.8
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|-Pwr-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
00|00270|01:00.0|01:51.2|192.0|21.9|000.0|0.0|12.3
01|00514|02:00.0|01:56.7|219.3|24.0|000.0|0.0|10.7
02|00537|02:00.0|01:51.7|238.8|25.0|000.0|0.0|10.7
03|00243|01:00.0|02:03.4|185.5|22.0|000.0|0.0|11.1
04|00516|02:00.0|01:56.2|222.4|24.4|000.0|0.0|10.6
05|00526|02:00.0|01:54.1|239.1|25.9|000.0|0.0|10.2
06|00247|01:00.0|02:01.5|194.3|22.4|000.0|0.0|11.0
07|00509|02:00.0|01:57.9|214.5|23.9|000.0|0.0|10.6
08|00537|02:00.0|01:51.8|251.2|26.2|000.0|0.0|10.2
09|00246|01:00.0|02:01.9|195.5|22.4|000.0|0.0|11.0
10|00518|02:00.0|01:55.9|224.5|24.5|000.0|0.0|10.5
11|00504|01:53.4|01:52.6|244.8|26.3|000.0|0.0|10.1
12|00250|01:00.0|02:00.2|200.9|22.6|000.0|0.0|11.0
13|00520|02:00.0|01:55.3|227.1|24.5|000.0|0.0|10.6
14|00533|02:00.0|01:52.5|245.9|26.7|000.0|0.0|10.0
15|00239|01:00.0|02:05.7|192.0|22.8|000.0|0.0|10.5
16|00518|02:00.0|01:55.7|225.5|24.2|000.0|0.0|10.7
17|00540|02:00.0|01:51.2|255.3|26.6|000.0|0.0|10.1

As said, I didn’t push it too hard, and I still had the feeling I did a decent workout. I did a 1k cooling down to finish the session.

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

sander

Feb 10 2019

Saturday – Unexpected New Personal Best (1k)

A typical weekend in a rowing family. Romana had to get up at 6am on Saturday to drive to a Rowing Training Seminar in Pardubice, a 2 hour drive from Brno. (It turned out to be a really interesting day of training, with hands on instruction on how to make weights and circuits training more playful and interesting for kids.)

I had the luxury of sleeping in until 7AM. I got up, had breakfast and did some Rowsandall related computer work. At 9, I left the house to pick up three of Romana’s girls training group in various villages around Brno, and drive to the town of Piestany, Slovak Republic, two hours and fifteen minutes from Brno. Not a long drive but it crosses the infamous Buchlovice hills and the White Carpathians mountains range which despite modest elevation pose significant risk for winter driving. (See below.)

Here is a picture of my squad of the day. Tereza on the left came with the rest of the club. Second from left Anicka, then Kristyna, and finally Eliska.

It was a quiet and uneventful drive.

For two of the girls it was their first indoor rowing regatta. The Piestany indoor races are a pretty relaxed event. This being abroad, there is not the anxiety of people trying to qualify for national squads. Competitors from Slovakia and Hungary are largely unknown, so you just row and try to set a personal best.

We chatted a bit about their previous 2k times and expectations. Of course, Romana had given me instructions, but it was nice to hear out the girls and trying to set their expectations. Anicka and Eliska are sisters. The younger, Eliska, openly wants to beat her older sister Anicka, so that created an interesting dynamic.

The first race was Kristyna in the girls 15/16 age category. She walked on to our rowing club in November and the only guidance was a 2k done when she rowed for a week, with a 9:17 result. Romana estimated her at 9:00. She’s big and strong (for her age) but she’s lacking a bit in fitness.

She started off the 2k and I had to slow her down to 2:15 pace, which she ended up doing in a stroke rate of 25spm. I tried to get her to row 27 spm at 2:14 pace but it was hard to get her to rate up.

Rowing in the slowest heat of the girls 15/16 event, at half way Kristyna was leading over the rest of the heat, mainly girls from Hungary.

But she was suffering. Her inner Maria Sharapova woke up while I was trying out all encouragement cards I had in my sleeve to keep her average below 2:15 pace. It’s hard to coach a girl you don’t really know, and I also find it hard to estimate her level of suffering sitting behind and not seeing her face. At this point in a race you cannot invent new technical calls, so I focused on keeping her breathing, sitting up straight, and counting strokes. Nine minutes is long. In some aspects, a 2k is a much tougher event for small girls than for the 25 year old 110kg gorillas.

The other girls in the heat were no threat, because Kristyna was leading by more than 70 meters, so I kept reminding her of the great average pace (2:14.xx) and motivating her to set a “sub 9” 2k.

At one point I told her to rate up a bit (she was on 28spm by now) and Kristyna responded by shaking her head. That got me. Coxing an erg race is really hard work.

She finished in 8:58!!! The first PB of the day, and I was so happy for her.

The second race was the younger of the sisters. Eliska. This was 10 minutes after the race with Kristyna. Her PB was 8:52. Eliska announced that she wanted to row at 2:12 split (8:48 pace) and accelerate in the second half of the race.

The first 500m were pretty intense. At the first stroke, somehow the PM5 jumped to Watts, and Eliska was doing 38spm and 220W. I made some quick conversions in my head, instructed her to slow down to 34spm, ignore the numbers on the screen and just keep rowing. I waved to the jury. I wasn’t sure if pushing the “Unit” button on the PM would mess up the event software and throw her out of the race. The jury was focused on other things, and I didn’t want to leave Eliska and walk over to them.

After a minute of internal debate, I decided to push the “Unit” button. To my relief, the PM switched to Cal/hr and Eliska was still in the race. Another two button pushes gave her the right screen, showing an average pace of 2:12.7 after 500m and everything was fine.

She even said “thank you”.

By this time Eliska was rowing in the middle of the pack but she was just slightly behind two girls who had gone out really fast and started to suffer. I coached her through the middle 1000m during which she passed those two girls, and her final result was a PB at 8:50.

The last girl to coach was Anicka, and also Anicka told me what to do. She wanted to go out in 2:09 (“maybe 2:08”) and then accelerate. Her PB was 8:36, so that seemed a good strategy. Luckily no PM malfunction this time, and we seemed to be off into an uneventful race, with Anicka rowing in the middle of the pack and just doing her own thing.

With 1200m to go, at an average pace of 2:08, she suddenly dropped to 2:21. What?

It was difficult to judge, sitting behind her, but she didn’t seem to be suffering too hard, so I started to coach her back to a faster than 2:10 pace.

A few hundred meters later. Same thing. Average pace dropping to 2:25 in the course of three strokes. Again, I managed to get her back to 2:10 and 2:09.

This repeated a couple of times until I could announce the “less than one minute to go” call and then she started to pull 2:07 and faster. We ended up doing a 8:39. I had to support Anicka because she could hardly walk, and she had to lie down in the cooling down area.

I had a little chat with her after the cooling down. She was disappointed that she didn’t row a PB. I told her that she really rowed a very hard race and that she was very brave to pick it up back to 2:09 every time her pace dropped.

My own race

So after these pretty intense 27 minutes of coaching, it was time to prepare for my own race, a 1000m in the Masters C group. In the mean time, the boys from our club did really well:

It’s always cool to see kids winning medals.

My masters competitors started to enter the arena, and I spent an hour chatting to my friends.

I also learned about the guy rowing his warming up in front of his dog in the picture above. During the Para event earlier that day he had rowed a 3:07 over 1000m. Not bad for a blind guy.

From the hour of chatting with my friends/adversaries I had understood that 3:17 or faster was the norm, so that was my target pace. In the preparation workouts, I had targeted 3:18 and I hadn’t bothered to look up my PB on this distance. I was just going to go off at 1:38/39 and hold that pace.

Martin “the Turkey” Krocil kindly offered to coach me. In the picture you can see him regretting signing up for the longest three minutes in his life.

A race start also produces a slow pace for the first stroke, so I wasn’t shocked when I saw 2:20 on the monitor after the first pull. I did 10 strokes at “full” power, pulling 1:35-36 and then settled for 1:38 at 34spm.

That was the first 250m gone. A quick glance at the bottom half of the PM told me I was just slightly behind my friend Antonin (“Tonda”) and rowing in 5th place. That gave enough motivation for the next 10 strokes, during which I passed Tonda and worked myself up to a fourth place, 5m behind the guy on erg number 5, to my right (left for the reader) on the picture above. A third place in this heat with only Masters C rowers would mean a podium place and a medal!

So with 600m to go I tried to crank up the pace to 1:37 and pass the guy in front of me. The hope lasted for about 20 strokes. I managed to reduce the gap to 5 meters, but then he probably noticed and started to row away from me.

With 450m to go I was in trouble. I had a few strokes at 1:41 pace and I don’t really remember how I made it to 300m to go. This was really the hardest part of the race.

Three hundred meters to go. For some reason, my mind couldn’t come up with a better thought than “That’s one third of the total distance”, which really wasn’t that encouraging. Martin was coxing me very well, and that helped me get the counter down to 200m to go, by which time I dared to start counting 25 strokes to the end.

I managed to rate up to 37spm to keep the split at 1:39/1:40 and was really glad when everything was over and a 3:16 end time was on display. I think the monitor said 3:16.4, but the official end results say 3:16.8. Here is the result over all three heats of Masters racing:

So the “B” category was won in the incredible time of 2:49.2. Martin Krocil won the “D” category in a really intense fight with Milan Viktora, only passing him in the final 250m. Yours truly figures in the bottom half of the results, and a fourth (“potato colored medal”) place in the “C” category, which was won by Milan Lackovic in 3:03, the same guy who had done a 3:07 as a warming up in the disabled category. During the “disabled” heat, he had audio feedback on his pace, but now he was rowing without feedback and coached by his guide dog! A fantastic result.

And it was a Personal Best for me! I didn’t know my best time, but I was sure I hadn’t rowed faster than 3:17. Looking up my previous PB today, it turns out to be a 3:19.2 effort from the 2013/14 winter. I am sure I rowed that at home with a normal start. Given that the event race start always penalizes you by a fraction of a second, which is a pretty big deal over a short event, I am very happy with this 3:16.8 time!

I am also happy that I am less than 2 seconds behind Martin. A year ago, he was more than 10 seconds faster than I was on the 2k, and he’s a big guy. On the other hand, I did beat Milan Viktora b a lot over 2k a year ago, but I did hear that the VK Hodonin training group is working really well this winter.

After the race, I took fifteen minutes to shower and changes clothes, then hopped into the car and drove for 2 hours, in the dark, through snowy mountains and hills, with three sleeping girls, and it took another hour to drop them off at their homes. I was home by 9pm.

Buchlovice Hills

Here’s a video by one of those crazy motor cycle riders who are attracted by the Buchlovice hills (and also have a pretty high mortality rate at this part of the road):

Here’s a winter video which is quite close to yesterday’s conditions:

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0

myimage (3)

Feb 10 2019

A week of training

Thursday, January 31

Weight training. The usual drill. Still a heavy impact workout in terms of DOMS and not being able to do hard erg sessions in the days after. Especially the lunges with 25kg are pretty devastating.

Saturday, February 2

The schedule called for an hour of steady state, but I had also registed for a 500m online challenge. With a 1000m race scheduled a week later, I decided that I would do a 30 minute steady state, then a 500m at “1000m race pace”, then a 30 minute steady state.

I did the 30 minutes steady state.

I rowed the 500m at 1:39 pace.


Workout Summary - media/20190202-1511360o.csv
--|Total|-Total-|--Avg--|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
--|Dist-|-Time--|-Pace--|-Pwr-|SPM-|-HR--|-HR--|-DPS
--|00499|01:33.0|01:33.8|369.9|33.7|163.0|182.0|09.5
W-|00500|01:33.0|01:33.9|369.9|33.7|163.0|182.0|09.5
R-|00000|00:00.0|00:00.0|000.0|00.0|000.0|182.0|00.0
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|-Pwr-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
00|00089|00:13.0|01:12.7|365.2|32.4|125.2|127.0|12.7
01|00094|00:18.5|01:38.5|369.4|33.9|143.2|155.0|09.0
02|00093|00:18.1|01:38.0|372.8|32.6|168.5|173.0|09.4
03|00108|00:21.1|01:37.7|375.7|34.2|178.1|180.0|09.0
04|00116|00:23.1|01:39.4|365.4|34.8|181.8|182.0|08.7

It was a good preparation. It’s also interesting how I am reaching the red heart rate zone in 400m of rowing .

After that, I started the second 30 minute steady state, but I didn’t finish it. I stopped after 10 minutes. Fatigue from the weights session, plus the cross country skiing. Perhaps also being back in my erg cave after having done splendid outdoors activities for a few days.

Sunday, February 3

A workout done on the rowing club with our Masters group. The plan was 8x500m but I transformed it to a time based interval workout so we could do it together despite age and fitness differences, and I took the average pace of the Masters Ladies, so it became 8x2min, which is a bit more than 500m for us Masters Men.

Martin “the Turkey” Krocil was sitting on the erg to my left, and he took the first two intervals at his 1k pace. He regretted that for the six subsequent intervals. He didn’t stop talking about the session for 6 days …


Workout Summary - media/20190203-1021050o.csv
--|Total|-Total-|--Avg--|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
--|Dist-|-Time--|-Pace--|-Pwr-|SPM-|-HR--|-HR--|-DPS
--|06696|32:00.0|02:23.4|173.1|24.5|159.7|179.0|08.5
W-|04536|16:00.0|01:45.8|292.6|30.5|162.6|179.0|09.3
R-|02166|16:00.0|03:41.6|053.6|18.6|156.9|179.0|06.8
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|-Pwr-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
00|00584|02:00.0|01:42.8|313.6|31.6|149.7|174.0|09.2
01|00578|02:00.0|01:43.9|313.0|30.2|167.3|177.0|09.6
02|00574|02:00.0|01:44.5|304.0|30.4|166.7|177.0|09.4
03|00566|02:00.0|01:46.0|291.6|30.4|164.6|177.0|09.3
04|00567|02:00.0|01:45.9|292.0|30.2|164.2|179.0|09.4
05|00557|02:00.0|01:47.6|278.3|30.1|163.6|177.0|09.2
06|00553|02:00.0|01:48.5|270.1|30.3|161.8|177.0|09.1
07|00558|02:00.0|01:47.6|278.1|30.4|162.7|178.0|09.2

And here’s the chart:

I ended up at a 1:46 second average, and I am wondering how that relates to my current 2k form.

This session was also the first session that I shared with my new online “training group”. My old rowing buddy Arjan (we started rowing together in 1992) announced that he was in need of a training plan, and I quickly pulled him into rowing with data and rowsandall. So now we are training together, and I have additional motivation to finish my sessions and produce better numbers than Arjan.

Monday, February 4

The instructions: 3km warming up, then 20min/3min + 15min/3min + 20min at 20/21 SPM

The execution: 3km warming up, then 15min/3min + 20min/3min + 15min at 20/21 SPM

I had wrongly remembered the instructions and rowed 10 minutes less than planned. Still a good session. Too bad PainSled decided to boycot it and not record anything. I do have a screenshot, but why would I post a screenshot of 50 minutes of steady state rowing? Average heart rate was 165 BPM. Normal for me.

Tuesday, February 5

Same weights training as on January 31st. Five rounds of a pretty heavy circuit. This time it was complicated a bit by a guy who was combining weights training with heavy chatting/messenger/tweet/whatsapp social networking on his cellphone. So he would sit on a workout station being focused on his chat app, occupying the machine for minutes doing nothing. At one point I asked him if he could free up the machine, which he did eventually.

Not sure why you would pay gym membership to spend the time only training your thumbs.

The session duration was 70 minutes, as opposed to 60 minutes normally.

Wednesday, February 6

A home erg session. The training plan was 30×30″/30″, but I did only 20 intervals. It was the day after the weights training and I was tired. I was also conscious of my Saturday race.

With these winter erg races I am always hesitating between tapering and not tapering. On the one hand, the races are a podium where the Masters rowers in our region meet and a good results helps you get into the right crews in the OTW racing season. On the other hand, a serious taper will reduce intensity for three or more days in a period of the year when you want to build on volume.

So doing 20 instead of 30 intervals seemed a good compromise. I decided to go to the upper limit of the 32-34spm rate instructions and row “at 1k race pace”.

Happy to record 1:39.x or faster pace for all intervals. This really is a fun workout. Thirty seconds on and thirty seconds off. The on bit is short, but so is the off bit. I stopped at a point where it was still enjoyable. I am sure 10 more intervals would have been much harder, but still this is a doable training. And good race prep indeed.

I did a nice long 20 minute cooling down and that was it for the week. Thursday was too busy at work, and I also canceled the planned swimming workout on Friday morning. Too much work to do, and I also wasn’t sure slow swimming would anything to my race fitness.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: race prep, training review

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