just wanted to post what I got out of my first 10 months with a RowErg.
Note: I'm not a pro (or amateur) athlete/coach/nutritionist/doctor, just reporting what worked (or seemed to work) for me.
August 2021: I'm almost 48yo, 1m73, 83Kg (that's 5'7 and 183lbs) and haven't done *any* physical activity for at least 10 years. I bring my kids in the resort gym and I see a RowErg: we do 5min each on it and I tell myself that if there's a chance I pick up sport again, that's the RowErg. It's indoor + it's at home = no excuse. So September 2021 I buy one.
July 2022: I'm almost 49, still 1m73 (didn't measure but ...), but now 73Kg (161lbs). I've done 1M meters in 8 months and completed a full marathon (painfully, but I didn't prepare for it at all, so that's OK). My PBs are in the signature below: not shattering any records but that wasn't my goal
Some details of what I did:
- Get an HRM (Polar H9 for me) and use ErgData/ErgZone (I like ErgZone better, didn't check the recent ErgData release) with your Concept2 online log.
- I had no idea how to row so I started reading online stuff (concept2, forums etc), but the most helpful has probably been the youtube channel Dark Horse Rowing (https://www.youtube.com/c/DarkHorseRowing). If you read this, thanks Shane !
- The 1st month I have basically only used this beginner video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LperycNwlFw
- I tried to stick to 3 sessions per week, 20-30min each, progressively moving to intermediate and then advanced videos from the channel and then to 4 sessions per week.
- What I've done in the last months: 4 sessions per week
- 1st and 3rd are typically 3x (8min + 2min rest), where in the 8min the rate varies every 2min (like 20/24/20/24 or 28/26/24/28). 5-10min warm-up and cool-down before/after.
- 2nd and 4th are 60min sessions in which I try to stay in my UT2/UT1/AT zones (that makes 13.6-13.9 Km for me).
- Looking at how my weight went down over time I can really see the slope change as soon as I've introduced the 60min UT zone sessions.
- For fun, I tried an half-marathon keeping an eye on my heart rate and completed it really effortlessly (cool pace, 1h31:44).
- Encouraged by the HM, I tried a full marathon and well, that was another story: I completed it (3h31:31) but with pain and cramps. Guess a minimum of specific preparation & nutrition (before and during the race) is kind of necessary
- I'm an engineer, so I tend to be a measuring freak: I got a "smart" scale that logs weight and other stuff to your phone (Xiaomi Mi Body Composition Scale: it's cheap, looks nice, seems to work well). I know this is not not high-precision hardware but I can see the indicators evolving consistently: body fat % down, body muscle mass down, body muscle % up etc. It's kind of satisfactory
- Drink. A lot. Before the session (and maybe during the HM, surely during the FM).
- Sleep. I tend to sleep not enough: the session after a 4h night I do feel it. Even at my humble pace.
- Eating: I didn't change my habits too much. I've always avoided junk/bad food but I can eat quite a lot (I have a plancha and a pizza oven in the garden, they do get used regularly ).
- I tried RowerUp (https://rowerup.com/): it easily detected a few issues in my rowing: shins too much forward at the catch, torso not bending forward enough at catch, occasionally leaning back too much at stroke end, leg/torso separation not good during drive, ... yeah, there's room for improvement.
- I use some gloves: not sure they help too much with blisters but they help me a bit with sweaty hands. I was pondering having a handle with holes and a fan inside it to blow air on the hands.
- I have the vapor seat pad and the concept2 foam one: the vapor is cosmetic, the foam one I like it (except for ultra-intense stuff like the 1min, where I find it distracts/bothers me). Still, your ass will suffer. Just accept it.
- I like the concept2 online logbook and the fact they have rewards (even a silly pdf certificate), periodic challenges and charity events.
- When the session is not with a video, I listen to music: keeps the 60min sessions a bit more bearable
Definitely worth the money, anyway when/if you're tired of it you can sell it with very little economical loss.
And it made me feel less guilty when I purchased the pizza oven
MaX.