Back to "Steamrollering" today OTErg, getting ready for a FM trial, which I think I will probably do to the "Steamfoller" playlist I have set up on my ipod touch. The playlist just gives me Elvis' "Steamroller Blues," over and over, a hundred times.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N91EOUunpTA
"Steamroller" goes along at about 22 spm, perhaps a bit above (22.5 spm).
Yep.
If I now back off to 22 spm and stay right on the beat, I pull 12.5 SPI and go 1:48, right on my FM target, with a UT2 HR, steady state.
Stroke feels great.
120 df.
It's still quite a challenge, though, technically.
To do this, my stroke needs to be pretty near perfect--great length, quickness, timing, sequencing, balance, footwork, posture, angles of leverage, finishes, recoveries, slide control, rhythmicity, consistency, etc.
Considering normal decline with age among veterans (of four seconds per 500m a decade), to pull along at 1:48 with a UT2 HR, I need to be two training bands (10 seconds per 500m) better in terms of technical effectiveness and efficiency while rowing than I was ten years ago, a technical improvement of a second per 500m a year for a complete decade, even though I started from the highest level of achievement imaginable (three WR 2Ks, etc.).
Given my FM pb of 1:54 ten years ago, all things equal, the prediction is that I would now pull a FM at 1:58.
My target is 1:48.
The 60s lwt FM WR is 2:00/2:48, a _dozen_ seconds per 500m slower.
I am now a 60s lwt.
This morning: 15K OTErg rowing to "Steamroller".
I'll be out OTW very early, too.
Then, it is over to Minneapolis for a couple of days with the wife to see my two youngest children, who are both in graduate school at the University of Minnesota, my second son in public policy, and my daughter, in public health.
Our best friends from back home in Urbana, Illinois, just left after a wonderful ten day stay with us here in Door County, so my wife and I are here by ourselves for the first time in a month.
My brother, his wife, and his daughter left just before our friends arrived. They were all here for three weeks in July.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)