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Training diary and random remarks around my rowing
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20x1HR

Dec 28 2015

Blowing the cobwebs off the lactate system

Quantified Training – the Theory

As I am slowly rereading the book by Olbrecht, the jigsaw pieces are starting to make sense and the picture emerges.

As with many books written by a person with a lot of field experience, the information density is high, and the author doesn’t take any shortcuts. That means the reader has to work hard. It also means that it doesn’t make sense to just copy a workout from a table in the book and think you are fine.

His basic message, as I understand it:

  • Understand what kind of athlete you are in terms of how the three energy systems (alactic anaerobic, lactic anaerobic, aerobic) are employed as a function of workout duration and intensity
  • Determine your strengths and weaknesses (in terms of the energy systems) , keeping the race distance in mind.
  • Design a periodized training plan that trains the different energy systems at the right time in the season, relative to the important events.
  • Measure how your fitness evolves and adjust the plan accordingly

It seems simple but there is a lot of details that you have to pay attention to. I like the data driven approach. I like how it is not a one for all recipe. I like how training changes from a rojabo black box to something that you can think about, design, test, and evaluate.

I also like how the approach is compatible with a 80/20 polarised training plan and can be just a refinement of the plan I designed in September.

I am at the end of a training block with pure focus on (in Olbrecht’s terms) endurance capacity building. I am an aerobic diesel, which means that I have quite low lactate values. My aerobic engine is ok, but my anaerobic/lactate producing system doesn’t seem to be running at it’s max power. So I am adding what Olbrecht calls Anaerobic Capacity workouts to my 20%.

One of the workouts he suggests is a 20x1min/1 min rest. Another thing that Olbrecht writes is that you have to be very careful when copying workouts. You  have to know yourself and understand which energy system dominates when you do the workout. (Just like yesterday’s 6km run with my daughter, at 6 min/km pace, was a very easy recovery run for me but a near threshold workout for her.)

Another remark he makes frequently is that for athletes with a good aerobic but weak lactate producing energy system, the same workout will result in lower lactate concentrations than if it was done by a sprinter type. That’s me. My 3mmol/L is the other guy’s 8 mmol/L.

Here’s a graph that shows what I think is going on in my body when doing one interval of this workout:

20x1_theory.png

The top graph shows the three energy systems and the bottom one shows lactate concentrations. Looking at the green line, the Anaerobic lactic energy system peaks after 20 seconds, then starts to drop slightly as my aerobic system takes over. This results in quite low lactate values. In subsequent intervals they will increase to about 3 mmol/L but that’s about it. I estimate that about 45% of the energy comes from the lactate producing energy system.

This is at 340W. If I would be able to row the exercise at higher power, this percentage would increase. It is also essential to have long enough rests to make sure that the subsequent intervals do not turn into an aerobic energy system exercise.

The workout – practice

So a 20x1min/1min rest seemed a promising workout to me. Now on to the execution. I couldn’t use RowPro today. It keeps crashing about 20 seconds after I start it up. I don’t know what’s going on. If this continues, an email will go out to the developers, but I don’t want to bother them in this time of the year. It does mean good-bye to colorful graphs, though.

The upside of this, for me, was that I could just program 1 min work / 1 min rest in the PM3 and be flexible. The instruction was “high intensity but submaximal” but to ensure kicking on the lactate system I would have to be above 300W. I also planned to do every 4th interval full out, so I wasn’t sure if I wouldn’t handle down before the 20th interval. Here are the results:

20x1.jpg
Interval details from the PM3
20x1HR.JPG
Heart Rate vs Time

I ended up doing something around 1:41-1:42 pace for the “regular” intervals and 1:36-1:37 for the fast ones. After 15 intervals I was having trouble to keep that pace, and you can see how the last 5 intervals are markedly slower.

It was fun to row (in a twisted, evil, painful way of course). I think I am going to repeat this workout next week.

Other “anaerobic capacity” workouts would be even shorter intervals, at higher power, with relatively long rest.

Nutrition

As I was the chef de cuisine during Christmas, I have to show some of the creations. My daughter took the pictures with her phone. She is not a professional food photographer, so you have to understand that it tasted even better than it looked.

Veal neck with vegetables, chantherelle
paté with fig/orange/ginger
haddock with vegetables
tuna and salmon roll fried in tempura dough
panna cotta with strawberry and mango

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 1 • Tags: anaerobic, concept2, erg, intervals, OTE, rowing, training

86

Dec 25 2015

Nostalgy

My first erg test was done on a Gjessing rowing ergometer, with Henk-Jan Zwolle supervising the test. First time I sat on such a machine.

Soon after that, our club, Roei- en Zeilvereniging Naarden (the rowing part later continued without the sailing, as Roeivereniging Naarden), collected money to buy a Concept2 ergometer for their juniors to train.

86

I have spent quite a lot of time looking at the PM1 screen.

And now a bunch of pictures from my current club’s Christmas party. We had 300m Concept2 relay races (5 teams of 7, mixed between 5 and 55 years of age).

 

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 1 • Tags: other

hm

Dec 25 2015

Half Marathon PB

Today was going to be the day. To reduce the pressure, I told myself that I was going to row a good half marathon (as opposed to setting a personal best). I would be happy with a well-executed row. I also decided to hold 1:59 until 6.5km to go, then accelerate slightly.

To increase the pressure, I wore club clothes. The long-legged uni, the club shirt with long sleeves, the club turtle-shell vest during the warming up.

Romana and Lenka were at the rowing club for their training. The boys were in the living room exploring the new family notebook computer.

I set up a few smart pace boats in RowPro, as well as my failed row of a few weeks back. Not sure what happened with the smart pace boats though. They were supposed to reflect my pacing strategy, but one of them held 1:49 for the entire row, and the other did the same at 1:55. Not sure that’s what I programmed.

My failed row passed me after a few kilometers but I happily kept rowing 1:59, looking at an average pace on the PM3 of 1:58.9. There would be the incidental 2:00 stroke, and the incidental 1:58 stroke. I counted down the kilometers.

About 30 minutes into the race, my son Robin was shouting something to me from the top of the stairs to the erg basement. I shouted back that I couldn’t hear him over the erg noise and the radio and asked him to come down to talk to me. He disappeared for a few minutes, then came back wearing warm shoes and a sweater. He needed the password for his account on the new laptop. I used a random generator to create their passwords so there was no way I would remember it. I told him to play on his brother’s account and read email after I completed my row. I think this is the little heart rate bump around 34 minutes.

Last time I was in trouble with 9km to go. This time I was rowing 100m behind my virtual self and within the course of 500m that distance dropped to 50m. I allowed the 1:58 strokes to come more frequently. Then, with 7km to go I passed him. That gave me the energy to start accelerating a bit and I started to row 1:58 strokes, with frequent excursions to 1:57.

With 6.5km to go I started to play a game of 1500s. I would row from 6500 to 5000 and check how far I was behind PB pacing plan. Then from 5000m down to 3500m, and form 3500m to 2km to go. The plan was to accelerate slowly, then do a crazy final 2k, but I decided to push the pace a bit more than the plan and soon the predicted end time was below 1h23. That gave me courage to push harder and get the predicted end time below my PB.

After 2km to go the grunting started and the pace became a bit more erratic, but I knew I could row a personal best by sticking to 1:57 pace.

I took up the pace a bit in the final 500m and finished in 1h22:38.7.

hm.jpg

hm2.jpg

912 nonathlon points so mission accomplished for this erg winter.

Workout Summary - Dec 25, 2015
--|Total|-Total-|--Avg--|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
--|Dist-|-Time--|-Pace--|Watts|SPM-|-HR--|-HR--|-DPS
--|21097|82:38.7|01:57.5|215.6|24.5|168.2|180.0|10.4
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|Watts|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-|Comments
01|01000|03:57.9|01:59.0|207.9|23.7|147.2|159.0|10.6|
02|01000|03:57.7|01:58.8|208.6|23.2|158.9|162.0|10.9|
03|01000|03:57.9|01:58.9|208.0|23.2|161.4|164.0|10.9|
04|01000|03:57.7|01:58.9|208.4|23.2|163.3|166.0|10.9|
05|01000|03:57.7|01:58.9|208.4|23.5|163.9|166.0|10.8|
06|01000|03:58.2|01:59.1|207.1|23.4|164.2|167.0|10.8|
07|01000|03:57.1|01:58.5|210.1|23.8|166.1|168.0|10.6|
08|01000|03:57.3|01:58.7|209.4|23.8|166.6|170.0|10.6|
09|01000|03:57.5|01:58.8|208.9|23.7|166.9|171.0|10.6|
10|01000|03:57.9|01:58.9|208.0|24.0|165.8|169.0|10.5|
11|01000|03:57.3|01:58.6|209.7|23.8|168.5|170.0|10.6|
12|01000|03:57.3|01:58.6|209.6|24.3|168.2|171.0|10.4|
13|01000|03:56.6|01:58.3|211.5|23.8|169.6|172.0|10.6|
14|01000|03:55.9|01:57.9|213.3|24.4|170.2|171.0|10.4|
15|01000|03:55.3|01:57.6|215.0|24.5|170.7|173.0|10.4|
16|01000|03:53.8|01:56.9|219.2|24.9|172.9|174.0|10.3|
17|01000|03:51.7|01:55.9|225.0|25.4|174.1|176.0|10.2|
18|01000|03:50.3|01:55.1|229.3|25.5|175.6|177.0|10.2|
19|01000|03:48.7|01:54.4|234.0|26.2|176.7|178.0|10.0|
20|01000|03:47.9|01:53.9|236.7|26.9|177.8|180.0|09.8|
21|01000|03:45.4|01:52.7|244.5|28.2|178.6|179.0|09.4|
22|00097|00:21.7|01:52.1|248.7|30.4|179.4|180.0|08.8|

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 4 • Tags: concept2, erg, Half Marathon, OTE, rowing, test, testing

30minwoensdag

Dec 24 2015

2 x 30 = $6.48

Tuesday

No training. I had a 3x20min on the program but decided to skip it. The body felt too tired and this is a light week so no big harm done.

Wednesday

Last day at work before the Christmas break. At home I did a 30 minute

row followed by a 30 minute strength training. I used the “heavier” bands and fewer repetitions.

As you can see from the graph, I spiced up my 30 minutes of light rowing with a few 10 stroke sprints:

30minwoensdag.jpg

Thursday (Christmas Eve)

In the morning, Romana and I went to a Christmas event at the Lodni Sporty rowing club. We parked the car a good distance from the club and walked along the lake. There was thick fog, visibility about 25 meters, and the water was mirror flat.

In the afternoon I did a 30 minutes easy row. I did a few 500s at slightly faster pace, to catch up with my pace boat.

30mindonderdag.jpg

These two rows brought me past the 200 km mark for the Concept2 holiday challenge. I have now rowed $6.48 in money raised by Concept2.

Considering my heavy travel program over the past month, I consider this a success.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: concept2, erg, OTE, rowing, steady state, training

figure_1

Dec 22 2015

Crap-shoot modeling

I can be a bit obsessed at times. Especially when I want to understand something intriguing like physiology and my lactate measurement results. So yesterday I read an interesting article by Moxnes and Sandbakk:

Moxnes and Sandbakk,  Theoretical Biology and Medical Modelling 2012, 9:7

Basically, they construct a mathematical model of the following energy pathways:

pathways.JPG
Figure 1: Main pathways of energy metabolism with indication of the three metabolic energy delivery systems. From Chapter 11 from “World Book of Swimming: From Science to Performance”. 

Here is one of the plots where they compare their model with data measured on a cross-country skier (Norwegian authors!) on a cross-country threadmill:

zandbak.JPG
Figure 2: Steady State concentrations of blood lactate as a function of the maximum aerobic power while threadmill roller skiing: model vs experimental data

This mathematical model is quite sophisticated and this physics guy will  need some more time to grasp all the details.

But physics guy turned manager sometimes has to prove to himself that he has not totally forgotten how to build a model. And to a physics guy the whole system looks simply like a lactate pump, pumping lactate into one container (the muscles) where it can accumulate. The muscle container is connected to a “blood” container by a diffusive wall, so lactate can move from one container to the other depending on the relative concentrations. Then there is another pump, which is the aerobic power pathway which extracts some of the lactate from the blood container. Add some realistic assumptions on how fast the different pumps switch on (the anaerobic, lactate producing one is faster in that respect than the aerobic, lactate consuming one). From Moxnes and Sandbakk I added that the efficiency of the aerobic (lactate disappearance) pump decreases as the aerobic power approaches the maximum aerobic power.

It didn’t take long to throw this into SciPy for some numerical calculations and now I could start comparing with my own experimental data. I could put in various power vs time profiles and thus model the entire test protocols including rests and the time lactate was measured after stopping the exercise.

First, there were a few parameters which I had to guess and could use to tune my model to fit the data. As the old saying goes, with four parameters I can fit an elephant, and with five I can make him wiggle his trunk.

elephant
Figure 3: Fitting an elephant with four (complex) parameters. After Mayer, Khaled, and Howard (Am. J. Phys. 78, 648 (2010).

So don’t be too surprised that I got my data to fit really well. It may look impressive to an outsider, but it really isn’t much more than a toy. (I may be a little too harsh to myself here. The model was quite insensitive to a few of the constants that I used. For example, for my maximum power I took 469W, the average I can old in a 1 minute test.

figure_2.png
Figure 4: Comparison of model and experimental data from different measurement protocols

So now that I had my constants fitted to make the model behave nicely, I could make a few plots:

figure_1.png
Figure 5: Blood Lactate concentration vs time at different power levels around “threshold”
figure_3.png
Figure 6: “Long step test” results as simulated by my model (10 minute of exercise at power, a 2 minute break to measure, then on to the next power level)

If the model correct in predicting my lactate levels, you can see that my steady state power of 200W is definitely below the 2.0 mmol/L level that my on-line training friends are using. That may be a good level for them to use, but for me it is too high.

Another thing that is interesting is that things quickly go south for me when I go above 205 W. As I am planning to do a half marathon SB/PB attempt on Christmas, I used my model to look what it would predict for lactate concentration during the row.

HMplans.JPG
Figure 7: Using the model to try to predict lactate for a half marathon ergometer row. Circles: Lactate concentration. Triangles: Erg power

The plot in figure 7 is a bit complex. Basically, I tried two strategies which both should bring me within a few seconds of my Personal Best of 1:22:47. Both are negative splitted, but while in the first (blue) strategy I start to increase the pace early on (after about 40% of the row is done, then at each halving of the remaining distance), the second (orange) strategy stays one second above the average pace for about an hour.

To me this seems quite relevant. Rowing for so long at threshold power, one has to be very careful to not go above it and end up with painful legs with another 40 minutes to go.

I would love to try my crap-shoot model on somebody else’s data set. Send me an email. I need a description of the measurement protocol (power vs time during exercise, rest duration (power during rest if active), and the blood lactate measured.

 

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 8 • Tags: lactate, model, other, physiology

mesoplan1

Dec 21 2015

Olbrecht Style Meso Cycle Plan

I tried to go through the recommendation from Olbrecht’s book to plan meso cycles based on my annual plan. Everything beyond January is just penciled in and will need to be refined based on test results and available time.

I started by putting the main events (business trips that I am aware of, vacation, and races). The event called “Racice” in week 4 of meso cycle IV of the Preparation phase is a week long stage at the 2k track in Racice that our club plans in preparation for the 6k race in Horin.

Then I planned the 6 week cycle IV leading to the 6k race in Horin, copying an example 6 week cycle from the book. Then I added the cycles II and III and tried to think about what type of training. It’s a bit a compromise between the test rows that I want to do and the ideal type of training. The gray volume bars are just notional now but I am thinking of it in terms of hours per week.

I still have to fill in the little triangles that indicate the intensity and volume of the individual “quality” trainings (i.e. everything else than extensive steady state La<2.0 training). I will do that only the coming meso cycle.

mesoplan1.jpg

Here’s a close-up of the first meso cycle.

mesoplan2.JPG

As you see, a Half Marathon attempt is planned for one of the Christmas days …

Final remark. The plan is not different from what I planned as a “typical” training week in this blog post. All it does is add some guidance for the total volume and for what type of quality sessions I am planning to do. As said, the overall plan still follows roughly what I have been doing intuitively for the past 2 years, but planning it out like this gives a nice feel for where the pain points are.

Training today consists of a bike ride to work and a bike ride home, 2×45 minutes in total of active recovery. Interestingly, even though I classified yesterday’s session as “needs to be done at higher intensity”, I had unusually “empty” legs this morning.

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 2 • Tags: training plan

6x1500ed

Dec 20 2015

6x1500m and year plan

We slept in late and I spent the morning fiddling with my annual training plan, and in the afternoon we had the Christmas party on the rowing club. So I had little time to train. Wanted to do an endurance session and decided to try one of the sessions from the Olbrecht book. It’s a swimming endurance session described as 6x500m at 20 seconds rest. The description also seems to indicate to swim it as 50m fast / 50m slow but I am not 100% sure about that. Anyway, I decided that a good erg equivalent would be a 6x1500m at 20 seconds rest, and to do every fourth 500m at slightly faster (“6k”) pace.

6x1500ed.jpg


Workout Summary - Dec 20, 2015
--|Total|-Total-|--Avg--|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
--|Dist-|-Time--|-Pace--|Watts|SPM-|-HR--|-HR--|-DPS
--|09000|34:31.6|01:55.1|229.6|24.9|165.4|184.0|10.5
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|Watts|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-|Comments
01|01500|05:47.6|01:55.9|225.0|24.0|153.9|162.0|10.8| fast/slow/slow
02|01500|05:46.6|01:55.5|227.0|24.4|163.2|169.0|10.6| s/f/s
03|01500|05:46.6|01:55.5|227.0|24.4|164.1|172.0|10.6| s/s/f
04|01500|05:50.5|01:56.8|219.5|24.1|166.1|171.0|10.6| s/s/s
05|01500|05:45.6|01:55.2|229.0|25.4|170.3|173.0|10.3| f/s/s
06|01500|05:34.7|01:51.6|252.0|27.2|173.9|184.0|09.9| s/f/f

I should have done this at a slightly faster pace. It felt like a black hole training. Pleasantly exhausting but not too hard. Still it’s a good session to add to the mix. Should be more like a threshold session but I should do it slightly faster. If I do it another time, I should do the slow bits at today’s average and the fast bits at 6k pace. Perhaps I should also do alternating 150m fast and slow.

Year plan

In the past years I have rowed according to an intuitive year plan which I didn’t write down. I would build up endurance during the fall (like this year), use the Christmas vacation for some SB/PB attempts, then work towards the shorter erg tests (5km, 2km, 1km, 500m) during the spring, then prepare for the head race, and subsequently dive into sprint season.

This year will be no different in terms of macro cycles, but I want to try to plan the meso cycles a bit more explicitly. The Olbrecht book has some templates, with the instruction to copy and enlarge them for use. Of course I will use excel instead.

So this morning I looked at the race calendar and tried to build up a logical year plan.

I will skip Masters Worlds in Copenhagen. Instead, my important sprint races will be the Czech Open Masters and Euromasters in Munich. The other important race will be the 6km in Horin in the Men’s LW category. This gives me a distance (“head race”) peak in April and a sprint race peak in July. If I manage to get into Henley Masters, I will row it as well.

The Slovak Championship and the regional races will be training races, with little taper.

yearplan.jpg
Draft Year Plan. Bigger version at the end of this post

This was easy to create. The hard part will be to plan the first few meso cycles. Looking forward to the challenge.

Romana and the girls want to row erg races on the 9th of January and the 30th of January, so I tentatively put them into the schedule. I have to make a confession. When I ignore my Junior/Young Senior career, I have never rowed an erg race. As a junior I dreaded the compulsory erg testing that we had to do with rowing association officials noting your time.

Looking at the results from the first round of the Czech Indoor Rowing cup, I guess I will be about 30 seconds behind the winner. But if I accompany Romana and the girls to the venue, I might just as well row the race, right?

The draft year plan in a bigger font:

yearplan1.jpg

yearplan2.jpg

 

By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 2 • Tags: concept2, endurance, erg, OTE, rowing, steady state, training, training plan

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