Aug 22 2016
Sunday – Rainy Thriller (Masters Mix 2x)
Just one race for us on this Sunday. The Masters mix 2x with my wife Romana.
It had rained all night and was still raining when it was time to launch. Actually, the light rain changed to hard rain, to very hard rain. Temperatures had dropped from 35C to 15C. The wind was now a strong cross/tail wind.
So, the Masters Mix 2x was about to start and the Trebon lake featured twelve very wet doubles rowing up and down to stay warm. I didn’t have any long sleeve clothes in my luggage so I really had to keep moving to stay warm.
Two heats. A combined A/B heat and a combined C/D/F heat. Four boats in our C category, two of which were dangerous. Melnik and Ostrava (with Mr Cernak, the guy who had beaten me in the single).
For the first time this weekend, I managed to not mess up the start and Melnik and us were leading by a length after 5 strokes. I “lowered” to 36/37spm.
By 200m to go we were half a length behind Melnik and the rest of the field was not in the race any more.
We started to push and managed to come level to them.
My legs started to hurt.
My daughter and her double partner Iva were screaming from the bank. (They were positioned half way between the boat area and the finish line. Their race was 20 minutes after ours, so in case we won, they would jump in the boat on the medal ceremony dock. They had to watch the race and decide whether to run 250m towards the finish or not.)
I heard Romana shout “go” to indicate that she was still able to accelerate.
I remembered Damir Martin and the Olympic final against Drysdale. I heard the race speaker commenting “an interesting battle between Brno and Melnik”, and I shifted to a higher stroke rate.
Beep-beep. At the finish line, I thought we had them but I wasn’t 100% sure. I saw the girls sprinting towards us. We quickly turned the boat, and while we were waiting for the official result, I lowered the gates (moving two C rings) for the girls race. Then we heard our names announced and we paddled to the medals dock, jumped out of the boat, got our medals, removed our bow number and put in the girls’ number, smiled to the spectators on the grand stand, and left the stage.
The girls paddled away in a boat a lot of water.
That’s when it stopped raining.
After that we waited for the girls to race. They got their revenge from the bad Saturday race and came in third place, beating crews that had beaten them on Saturday. We loaded the trailer and went for lunch. Then we drove home to Brno, where we had to take some back roads to reach the rowing club, because many roads were closed because of the Motor Grand Prix, and all the Valentino Rossi fans blocking the other roads. It’s not nice driving very narrow roads with a trailer, but we managed.
A nice end of the vacation. First day at work today.
Also, I need to make a plan for the coming season. I will do another sprint race coming weekend, but more important is a 6km head race in 6 weeks which I need to prepare for.
Aug 23 2016
The Dog Days of Summer
… winter is around the corner. At least in my mind.
It is still summer, and the weather is beautiful, but I am preparing a training plan for the 2016/17 season, which starts with a preparation for a Head Race in the first weekend of October, and after that it will be back to base building, and probably a lot of erging. I am not changing my plan radically from last year, just refined my planning spreadsheet a bit, and planned out the coming 7 weeks until that head race. This week is a freewheeling week, just doing the sessions that I like (and finally get the August CTC in), but after that I will be doing some lactate testing and then it will be steady state and threshold workouts in a 2×3 week mesocycle.
One or two erg races, one in January and maybe one in December. And then an important head race in the beginning of April.
So this week is free form. I have registered for just the Masters 1x in the local races in Břeclav coming weekend, but I will do the sessions that I like and let the race happen without any special preparation.
Today, I left work slightly early to head to the lake. The session I chose was an “intensive Steady State” from the book about Masters Rowing. It was:
4x(4’/3’/2’/1′)/3’Rest @ 20/22/24/26spm
Actually, “das Buch” calls this an extensive endurance session, but I wasn’t entirely sure if that was the right categorization. The plan was to do the session without a paying too much attention to the paces. Just hit the SPM and focus on technique. As I will explain below, I wasn’t entirely successful.
The other thing I wanted to do was play with my new SpeedCoach by running the workout in parallel in CrewNerd and in the SpeedCoach. In the SpeedCoach I programmed it as a 4×10’/3′ rest. In the SpeedCoach GPS 2, you can actually plan out the detailed workout as I did in CrewNerd, but on the water it turned out that I am too unfamiliar with the interface to manage that. Lesson learned. Program workouts on the shore, next time.
I set both devices to “auto/start” at factory settings, and started the workout with a 30 second count down. On both devices, the sessions started simultaneously, or at least the time difference was less than 0.2 seconds (estimated).
Using the power or rowsandall.com, I could compare the workout results from both tools. There was one caveat. It turned out I could pair my heart rate belt only to one device, and as soon as I started CrewNerd, the SpeedCoach automatically lost heart rate info.
Here is the comparison of the “raw” data:
The raw recorded data look a lot more noisy than what the CrewNerd display actually showed in the boat. On the CrewNerd display, the pace values were jumping around by +/- 5 seconds around the more stable value shown on the SpeedCoach. Rowed distance and time were equal on both devices (within 5m for distance). Using the power of rowsandall.com, I smoothed out the CrewNerd data a bit.
I think this shows that the smoothing function on rowsandall.com is very useful, especially if you smooth the data before exporting to sports sites such as SportTracks.mobi or Strava.com, and to the Concept2 logbook.
Here is the comparison plot for SPM:
On the water, I had the impression that the CrewNerd SPM was jumping around a bit more, and the SpeedCoach GPS seemed to react a bit faster to the stroke rate changes. The SpeedCoach display has a SPM resolution of 0.5 spm, so you can actually get values of 19.5 spm or 23.5 spm. Unfortunately, the export to FIT format rounds this to integer values, because of the way Cadence is defined in the FIT format, I guess.
Here is the colorful plot of the main workout:
Pie chart:
I wouldn’t call this a “extensive endurance” session. The way I did it today, it’s more a threshold session. Here is the workout summary:
Workout Summary - media/20160823-180537-2016-08-23-1723.CSV
--|Total|-Total-|--Avg--|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
--|Dist-|-Time--|-Pace--|SPM-|-HR--|-HR--|-DPS
--|08741|40:00.0|02:14.0|23.0|176.1|180.4|09.9
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
01|00867| 04:00 |02:18.2|19.5|154.0|160.0|11.1
02|00688| 03:00 |02:10.5|21.7|168.0|174.0|10.6
03|00477| 02:00 |02:05.3|24.1|178.0|181.0|09.9
04|00238| 01:00 |02:04.7|26.2|181.0|183.0|09.2
05|00839| 04:00 |02:22.5|21.3|176.0|190.0|09.9
06|00615| 03:00 |02:25.8|22.4|183.0|190.0|09.2
07|00442| 02:00 |02:14.9|23.2|181.0|184.0|09.6
08|00234| 01:00 |02:06.3|25.4|185.0|187.0|09.4
09|00873| 04:00 |02:17.4|20.8|167.0|175.0|10.5
10|00672| 03:00 |02:13.1|21.8|176.0|178.0|10.3
11|00467| 02:00 |02:08.6|24.0|180.0|182.0|09.7
12|00237| 01:00 |02:06.4|25.0|182.0|184.0|09.5
13|00780| 04:00 |02:33.7|20.0|166.0|171.0|09.8
14|00638| 03:00 |02:21.0|22.7|176.0|180.0|09.4
15|00442| 02:00 |02:15.4|23.6|181.0|182.0|09.4
16|00232| 01:00 |02:08.0|26.2|183.0|185.0|08.9
And the same data from the SpeedCoach:
Work Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-
01|02267| 600.0 | 2:12.3|21.7| 000 | 000 | 10.4 - tailwind
02|02127| 600.0 | 2:21.0|22.4| 000 | 000 | 9.5 - headwind
03|02244| 600.0 | 2:13.6|22.2| 000 | 000 | 10.1 - tailwind
04|02092| 600.0 | 2:23.4|22.1| 000 | 000 | 9.5 - headwind
Workout Summary
--|08730| 40:0.0| 2:17.4|22.1| 000 | 000 | 9.9
Looking at the totals, 10 meters difference in recorded distance. I have to look into why the average pace is so different. The correct average pace is 2:17.4 (SpeedCoach) and 2:17.3 (CrewNerd). I guess a bug fix is needed for my processing of the CrewNerd summary file.
Looking at the graph, you notice there is a lot of red in the second (head wind) interval. The reason is the following. During the first interval, I rowed behind a Lodni Sporty (that is the “evil” 🙂 club on our lake) quad. When I turned, they turned as well, and they passed me during the rest period. About a minute into my second interval, a coach launch speeded from the Lodni Sporty club towards the quad, creating an enormous wake in which I rowed my 20spm piece. By the time I had moved a bit to the right to be directly behind the launch and out of the wake, the quad (and the launch) suddenly slowed down.
I passed them and there was the following conversation between the Lodni Sporty coach on the launch and me:
Me: “What’s your name?”
Coach: “Who are you? I don’t have eyes in my back.”
Me: “Try to have a bit more consideration for other people trying to row a workout.”
Coach: “I told you I don’t have eyes in my back.”
Me: “You are supposed to look around. Like rowers do.”
Coach: Told me something I didn’t understand.
The English translation loses a bit of the sharpness. I used the informal (in French “tu”, in German “du”) form, even though this guy was evidently more than 20 years older than I. In the Czech culture, this is a very impolite thing to do without getting permission from the older person to use the informal forms. My questions were not so offensive, but using “tu/du” instead of “vous/Sie” was.
Anyway, apparently the guy was offended, because he threw me a nice big wake at the start of the third interval. For the fourth interval I took a course passing our club house, far away from his launch.
By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 2 • Tags: crewnerd, lake, NK speedcoach, OTW, rowing, single, threshold, training