Beginner: Best use of 4 hours
Beginner: Best use of 4 hours
First time poster - have been rowing for 3 months now and am looking for feedback on this plan.
Stats - 46 M, 5' 7'', 163lbs, in moderate/poor physical shape.
3 month Goal: lose 5 lbs, sub 8 min 2k, (currently pb is 8:13) and sub 21 min 5k (currently pb is 22:08).
I have about 4 hours a week to train, and am considering the following breakdown
3x 1 hour sessions steady state at UT2 intensity
1x 30 min session with hard longer intervals - say 10 min rows
1x 30 min session with speed intervals - 500m rows
2 rest days.
Does this sound reasonable? Any changes you would recommend? Thanks!
Stats - 46 M, 5' 7'', 163lbs, in moderate/poor physical shape.
3 month Goal: lose 5 lbs, sub 8 min 2k, (currently pb is 8:13) and sub 21 min 5k (currently pb is 22:08).
I have about 4 hours a week to train, and am considering the following breakdown
3x 1 hour sessions steady state at UT2 intensity
1x 30 min session with hard longer intervals - say 10 min rows
1x 30 min session with speed intervals - 500m rows
2 rest days.
Does this sound reasonable? Any changes you would recommend? Thanks!
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46M, 160lbs, 5'7'', 2k best - 8:13, 5k best - 21.44
46M, 160lbs, 5'7'', 2k best - 8:13, 5k best - 21.44
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- 10k Poster
- Posts: 1464
- Joined: January 20th, 2015, 4:26 pm
Re: Beginner: Best use of 4 hours
Your plan and numbers sound eerily like my own!
Three long steady state rows followed by a few high intensity interval sessions is a good way to mix things up. You will build your aerobic base while also keeping some speed work in the mix. It's a great combination.
My only suggestion would be to train and target for a specific distance or PB. Perhaps pick your 5 k goal and tailor your interval training towards that task. 1000k or even 1500k intervals might be a better fit for that distance.
Three long steady state rows followed by a few high intensity interval sessions is a good way to mix things up. You will build your aerobic base while also keeping some speed work in the mix. It's a great combination.
My only suggestion would be to train and target for a specific distance or PB. Perhaps pick your 5 k goal and tailor your interval training towards that task. 1000k or even 1500k intervals might be a better fit for that distance.
59yo male, 6ft, 153lbs
Re: Beginner: Best use of 4 hours
The only thing I'd say is that when you add a warm up and rests, what at first sounds like a 30 minute interval session can end up taking more like an hour.
If you can't afford more than 30 minutes, then the 30 minute sessions might be better completed as fast UT1 sessions as you might struggle to fit in enough intervals to be productive.
If you can't afford more than 30 minutes, then the 30 minute sessions might be better completed as fast UT1 sessions as you might struggle to fit in enough intervals to be productive.
Age 52....Weight 61 Kg....
Row 26 Aug 21 to Mar 22. Cycle Mar 22 to Jun 24. Now mixing the 2.
2K 8.02.3 (23 Oct 21)...7.37.0(15 Mar 22)
5K 22.14 (2 Oct 21)
Resting HR 45 (was 48 in 2021)....Max HR (Seen) 182 [185 cycling]
Row 26 Aug 21 to Mar 22. Cycle Mar 22 to Jun 24. Now mixing the 2.
2K 8.02.3 (23 Oct 21)...7.37.0(15 Mar 22)
5K 22.14 (2 Oct 21)
Resting HR 45 (was 48 in 2021)....Max HR (Seen) 182 [185 cycling]
Re: Beginner: Best use of 4 hours
You plan sound just about perfect. You could mix in some weights if you have access.
Re: Beginner: Best use of 4 hours
IMO you would be better off doing 3 10Ks per week at a higher intensity or pace than the 1 hour UT2 pace.
Rowing for 1 hour at low intensity makes you good at rowing for an hour at low intensity. It does little for your 2K and 5K rows.
It would be different if your were training for 8 hours or more per week, then you could throw in the low intensity stuff, but given your time constraints you're just wasting that time doing 3 hours of paddling.
Rowing for 1 hour at low intensity makes you good at rowing for an hour at low intensity. It does little for your 2K and 5K rows.
It would be different if your were training for 8 hours or more per week, then you could throw in the low intensity stuff, but given your time constraints you're just wasting that time doing 3 hours of paddling.
59m, 5'6" 160lbs, rowing and skiing (pseudo) on the Big Island of Hawaii.
Re: Beginner: Best use of 4 hours
Thats interesting - I thought I read that you need to build up your aerobic base with longer low intensity workouts.
kini62 wrote: ↑February 18th, 2022, 6:17 pmIMO you would be better off doing 3 10Ks per week at a higher intensity or pace than the 1 hour UT2 pace.
Rowing for 1 hour at low intensity makes you good at rowing for an hour at low intensity. It does little for your 2K and 5K rows.
It would be different if your were training for 8 hours or more per week, then you could throw in the low intensity stuff, but given your time constraints you're just wasting that time doing 3 hours of paddling.
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46M, 160lbs, 5'7'', 2k best - 8:13, 5k best - 21.44
46M, 160lbs, 5'7'', 2k best - 8:13, 5k best - 21.44
Re: Beginner: Best use of 4 hours
10ks will also build up your aerobic base just as well as an hour will but you'll build your "FTP" faster which is what you need to do for 2K and 5K rows.chan_va wrote: ↑February 18th, 2022, 6:22 pmThats interesting - I thought I read that you need to build up your aerobic base with longer low intensity workouts.
kini62 wrote: ↑February 18th, 2022, 6:17 pmIMO you would be better off doing 3 10Ks per week at a higher intensity or pace than the 1 hour UT2 pace.
Rowing for 1 hour at low intensity makes you good at rowing for an hour at low intensity. It does little for your 2K and 5K rows.
It would be different if your were training for 8 hours or more per week, then you could throw in the low intensity stuff, but given your time constraints you're just wasting that time doing 3 hours of paddling.
For 4 hours per week you can go pretty hard for every workout if you want even if you're not super fit at the moment. Just listen to your body, get a HR monitor and rest when you need to.
59m, 5'6" 160lbs, rowing and skiing (pseudo) on the Big Island of Hawaii.
Re: Beginner: Best use of 4 hours
Agree with you. His plan of "3 X 1 hour of SS plus 2 x Intervals" should give better results than a "2 X Threshold plus 2 X intervals".
When they tried it 4 hard workouts a week had worse results than 3 hard workouts a week.
Re: Beginner: Best use of 4 hours
Maybe to avoid boredom, you may need to cut the three hours solid.3x 1 hour sessions steady state at UT2 intensity
1x 30 min session with hard longer intervals - say 10 min rows
1x 30 min session with speed intervals - 500m rows
The effects are caused by the sine qua non stroke: long and hard. Ergdata supplies the information.
08-1940, 183cm, 83kg.
2024: stroke 5.5W-min@20-21. ½k 190W, 1k 145W, 2k 120W. Using Wods 4-5days/week. Fading fast.
2024: stroke 5.5W-min@20-21. ½k 190W, 1k 145W, 2k 120W. Using Wods 4-5days/week. Fading fast.
Re: Beginner: Best use of 4 hours
This is precissly how I would schedule 4 hours of training.
chop stuff and carry stuff
Re: Beginner: Best use of 4 hours
Thanks folks.
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46M, 160lbs, 5'7'', 2k best - 8:13, 5k best - 21.44
46M, 160lbs, 5'7'', 2k best - 8:13, 5k best - 21.44