will3 wrote: ↑July 25th, 2022, 5:36 am
I will try stacking weights on top of on water rowing on Wednesday and Saturday. However, my tuesday gym session is a club training session so will most likely have to keep it there.
Would:
M- Rest ; T- Workout 1 ; W- Hard rowing + Workout 2; Th - hard erging; F- UT2; Sat - Hard Rowing + Workout 3 ; Sunday - UT2
still work and be ok?
Also on water session especially during winter season are more on technique and SS rather than power or intervals.
Understand completely. My OTW club drives a lot interval work, starts and sprints into its 4 day/week summer competitive team plan. I like rowing with them, so I do too many hard days in summer with only adding 1 or 2 UT2 level workouts a week. The rest of the year I can focus on UT2 work with 1 or 2 days/week of harder work. Glad your coach is using OTW time for technique (critical) and SS.
Whatever plan you use will be substantially better than being a couch potato. The better plans just make you stronger vs. the same effort spent on a worse plan. Following any of the plans you've outlined (including the first one) will put you in the top 10% of your age level.
Given you have a team workout Tuesday I'd drop the gym work wed afternoon. Weight/strength training two days in a row is not good if it hits the same muscles. You will be hitting the same muscles Tuesday, then Wed morning rowing. Skip hitting them again on Wed afternoon. 3 hard days in a row (tues, wed, thurs) is a lot. Is the Thursday workout a team workout? If not consider dropping it or use Thursday for another long/very slow day rather than hard erging.
Your body will be under light stress with this plan. You should be fine, but monitor it. This is one of the things coaches do - why they ask you lifestyle questions sometimes. If you find you are dreading doing a non-team workout then skip it or lighten it up or cross train. Thoughts of skipping or cutting short training sessions, general fatigue, keep getting minor illnesses, inability to relax, poor-quality sleep are your warning signs that you've done a bit too much and need to back off. If you have other things going on that stress you (school workload, etc.) also back off your workouts - the workout stress and other stress just stack up. Keep things fun. Coaches often drop team training load end of the semester and finals week, you can do that too.
will3 wrote: ↑July 25th, 2022, 5:36 am
... when I was doing 4 * 2km intervals my heart rate was at 201. However, it can most likely go higher when doing shorter harder intervals.
4 x 2k is a great session to find max HR. Maybe showing up in the 2nd or 3rd interval.
A 200 HRmax gives you a target/guess heartrate of 0.7 x 200 = 140 for UT2 long sessions.
A 210 HRmax gives you a target/guess heartrate of 0.7 x 210 = 147 for UT2 long sessions.
There is no problem with doing UT2 slower than the max UT2 heartrate.
There is a problem if you do UT2 above your actual lactate threshold heartrate.
Currently you are doing steady state at "2:13 ish for an hour and heart rate capped at 165". Drop this to 2:25 and look for a heart rate cap around 140. Then adjust your split to keep your HR 135-140. Your split should be constant for the hour and your HR should also be constant. If your HR needs to go up to hold the split then your split was too fast. If you need to drop the split to keep your HR at the cap then next time start at the lower split. That heart rate drift (cardiac drift) is a sign you are getting out of the UT2 zone (or that you are overheating or that you are dehydrated).
UT2 (long/slow workouts) done correctly will feel odd, way too easy. You should be able to do this workout while chatting or watching TV. Getting this workout at a low enough effort level (according to research) will get you a stronger aerobic base faster than doing more. Maybe watch this video.
https://www.ted.com/talks/stephen_seile ... e_athletes If you feel you want more from your UT2 workout then lengthen it, do not increase the effort level.
edit: Maybe this will help. Member British national team. Access to full lactate testing. Max heartrate of 200. His coaches set his long slow workouts to 65% of 200 = 130 to 135. That was the right pace for him for UT2. He had been doing UT2 at a higher heart rate and it was not working well for him.
https://youtu.be/XWKMG__UVQo?t=85 (link should start video at 1:25 in, the take away here is what the coaches told him and the pace/hr he was working. Some of his other videos have content not backed by science, so take them for what they are). His 2K is 5:49.