Post
by jamesg » March 7th, 2009, 2:32 am
Travis, at age 62 it took me a year to get from 8½' to 7:10 for 2k.
However I could already row, having started 50 years before. If you do want to get fit, the first thing to do is learn to row - and the key to rowing is the stroke. Pretty obvious really, there's nothing else to do and nothing else will shift boats. So one at a time, let her go with no hurry to the next, long and relaxed strokes, where long is around 80% of your height. I pull 150cm overall, around 125 net and I'm 188cm (6'2). Short strokes (relative to your height) cannot be considered as rowing because they don't let you do any real work, however high the rating, so are useless from a fitness point of view.
Not knowing your height and weight, the only possible target index to suggest is Power/Weight ratio; if you aim at 2W/kg, and well above if athletically inclined, you'll get fit quick. Consider fit weight, not fat.
You should be sweating freely after about ten minutes, then keep going for another 20-30. Keep the rating down (so that you are forced to pull long hardish strokes), relax and use low drag, not more than 3.
If you use HR, use HR range, consider say 60-180 to be safe and stay within 65-80% (ie max 155-160). This will automatically update your power level as you get fitter, give you time to learn about your physiology and let you recover for tomorrow. Then once you're fit, you'll forget HR and work at a set pace or power.
08-1940, 179cm, 83kg.