Feb 10 2016
Lactic Acid once or twice?
Tuesday
Bike ride home from work (45 minutes), then 45 minutes of strength training. I have pretty low heart rates during the bike ride, but I still feel my hamstrings the next day. Interesting.
Wednesday
My next race is the Czech Long Distance Championships on April 9. It’s a 6km head race in Hořín, just north of Prague, and I will be starting as a lightweight in the open category. My training schedule is geared to that race. I am now in the second (heavy) week of a 4 week meso cycle, after which I start a 6 week meso cycle leading up to the race.
I am slowly starting to mix in sessions that Olbrecht calls “Aerobic Power”, aimed at improve the use of the Aerobic path way or, in other words, the percentage of VO2max that can be held during a hard long distance row. The guidelines are:
- Around the race distance
- Short rest (5 to 15 seconds) and rowed around race pace
- Results take long to materialize, so start at least 6 weeks before the (long distance) race
For rowing, I think hard distance workouts and things like 2x4000m or 2x3000m with 1 minute rest (for turning the boat) would qualify perfectly. Alternatively, time based intervals with short rests could be done, with longer rests in the beginning, and shorter rests closer to the race date. I have quite good results from doing a weekly 2x3000m OTW, with a 1min rest for turning in the weeks before a head race.
Today it was going to be a single 30 minute. And to make it more interesting, I was going to make it a PB attempt. A year ago, I managed a PB of 7986 meters, so this time I was going to attack the 8km barrier.
Still, the hamstrings were a bit tired. This is a heavy week. Well, so be it. The 30 minute trial is not a super important test for me, even though it is quite often used as a test of lactate threshold heart rate.
First, a 15 minute warming up:
Then on to the main event. I was hesitating between flat pacing at 1:52.5 and negative split, starting at 1:53.5. In the end I decided to flat pace (just as a year ago). I set up a pace boat in RowPro at 1:52.5 and also loaded my PB row of a year ago.
It is amazing how much time is left of a 30 minute row when it starts to hurt.
In the beginning I was pulling away from “2015 Sander” and the pace boat, rowing about a virtual length and a half in front of them. Then “2015 Sander” started to accelerate and took the lead. However, I knew that “2015 Sander” had a crisis in the third quarter of this row, so I let him go. He was never more than 10 meters ahead of me. In the mean time, as my average pace was 1:52.2, I allowed it to drift up a bit to 1:52.5, then tried to pull away from the pace boat.
In the final 10 minutes I had to revert to mental tricks to make time go fast. I alternated focus points:
- 1 minute sitting straight
- 1 minute long, strong pulls,
- 1 minute on rhythm
That helped and I needed it until 1 minute to go, seeing more 1:53 strokes than 1:52 strokes. Pace boat was 5 meter behind me, “2015 Sander” had dropped a few more meters and was 17 meters behind me.
Only in the last minute was I able to get the pace down and pull 1:51. No real sprinting.
With 2 seconds to go I passed the 8000m mark and couldn’t help but shout “Hey!”.
Workout Summary - Feb 10, 2016
--|Total|-Total-|--Avg--|-Avg-|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg
--|Dist-|-Time--|-Pace--|Watts|SPM-|-HR--|-HR--|-DPS
--|08007|30:00.0|01:52.4|246.5|26.8|176.8|183.0|10.0
Workout Details
#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|Watts|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-|Comments
01|01337|05:00.0|01:52.2|247.7|25.8|162.2|174.0|10.4|
02|01337|05:00.0|01:52.2|247.7|26.2|175.8|178.0|10.2|
03|01334|05:00.0|01:52.4|246.3|26.6|178.1|182.0|10.0|
04|01331|05:00.0|01:52.7|244.7|26.8|180.1|182.0|09.9|
05|01332|05:00.0|01:52.6|245.3|27.0|181.7|183.0|09.9|
06|01336|05:00.0|01:52.3|247.2|28.4|182.1|183.0|09.4|
That hurt! But it’s a new PB, and a >900 nonathlon points row.
I didn’t measure lactate, because I couldn’t imagine pricking my finger after such a hard row, but from the pain and from my lactate curves it must have been way above 10 mmol/L. Would be interesting to test it next time.
So, filled up with lactate I cooled down for 15 minutes.
Then a quick shower and prepare lunch. I am working from home today and lunch was leftovers and a glass of beer (because of the PB). The leftovers were potatoes, sauerkraut and a sauce based on duck stock and oranges. Quite tasty. We have quite good sauerkraut in Brno, the famous Tuřanské Zelí:
I was reading about the stuff during lunch. Turns out it is extremely healthy stuff:
- Source of Vitamins B, C and K
- Low in calories
- High in Calcium and Magnesium and a source of fiber, iron, copper, magnesium
- Full of beneficial bacteria
On top of that, it has a pH of 3 and is full of lactic acid. Not sure if that is good, when I already had my own produce in my muscles, but who cares. It tastes good, and seems to be excellent food for lightweights.
Final thought: I rowed 8km at an average pace that was identical to my 6k test in the fall. That doesn’t sound too bad, given that I am doing a 6k test next week.
Feb 11 2016
Take me to the river … No
Romana is still ill (she calls it recovering), so I rowed my training at 4pm at the rowing club, so I could help the girls with their training.
I also took a look into the boat house, because I knew my trailer was parked behind the parts for the new dock. Just wanted to make sure I had a plan for Friday – take boats to the river day. That’s when I discovered that the new dock parts are pretty heavy. You need at least six strong men to move one part, and there are many of them.
We’ll be building the dock next week, so I decided to wait another week. It would be hard to organize a group of six strong men at such short notice, even if a rowing club has high concentrations of strong men. Old strong men have day jobs and family commitments. Young strong men have an important erg race coming Saturday so will not be willing to help.
This was the moment where I should have used my brain and reorganized my micro cycle plan. I had a sprinty interval session planned for today, just because I wanted to spend Friday to Sunday fine tuning technique on the river …
After yesterday’s 30 minute intensive row, a light endurance session would have been ideal, and now that the OTW plans were canceled, I should have just done that.
Instead, I stuck to the plan …
Good thing about rowing in the erg room is that there are always rowers walking 0r standing behind the erg, and with me that has a very healthy effect on my splits. I needed that today …
Average pace of 1:40.2. Last week I did the same session with an average pace of 1:39.3.
I have been playing with free software called Golden Cheetah. It’s a desktop program to keep training logs and analyse the data, just like SportTracks, which I use as my central tool.
Golden Cheetah is very power oriented, so if you have many sessions where you don’t have power data (OTW rows, cycling, running), it’s going to be of less use for keeping and analysing all your data. I loaded all my painsled data plus some selected erg tests into it, just to play. One of the plots I did was the following:
So horizontally it shows the interval length in minutes on a log scale, and vertically (erg) power. The solid blue line is the best effort the program found in my training data. So, for example, at the edge of the “Z7” and “Z6” zones, you can see that I have done a full minute at just under 400W. This was from the 1 min on / 1 min off session on January 4. Actually, the entire “Z7” part of the curve is from that session. The red curve is my 2k erg test from November 15. The dashed blue line is a (pretty bad) fit. I guess that with more data the fit will become better and the whole thing could become a kind of a pace predictor. Reading about their model, I discovered that it’s a more sophisticated version of what I did in this blog post.
Nice, but I will stick with SportTracks and using excel to do pace predictions from my SB/PB rows.
When I drove home and switched on the car radio, they were playing “Take me to the river” by the Talking Heads. Not kidding!
By sanderroosendaal • Uncategorized • 0 • Tags: concept2, erg, OTE, rowing, sprintervals, training