New rower here. I've got a lifetime total of around 16 hours on the machine, so yeah, quite new. I've spent a lot of this first time looking at videos and practicing the stroke, so I hope it's at least decent now. I did actually see an improvement in my times, which I think is from better form and not because I've gotten more fit.
Now then, what I'm trying to understand are calories burned as that's one of the main reasons for rowing. Having done a hard 30 minutes row, logbook shows 339 calories burned. It goes through logbook to Strava, which shows my average HR for this session as 153 and relative effort as 56.
Those numbers on their own doesn't mean anything to me, so I've also tried walking to have something to compare to. (Can't run.) For simply walking at a slow 10min/km pace for 30 minutes, Strava shows 220 calories burned, which I thought was surprisingly high compared to the effort. Can this be trusted, does it seem about right?
To check what it would take to match 30 minutes rowing I did another easy walk for 45 minutes, and that got me 334 calories burned with average HR of 120 and relative effort of 11.
The relative effort number from Strava really seems to match the effort I put in, as rowing was extremely hard, I was dripping with sweat and so on, but I only got a little warm from walking. How can it be then, or can it really be that those two efforts burn about the same amount of calories? It seems so counterintuitive to me, given how hard I was working for one, and how trivial the other was.
If this is about right then it seems I can burn more calories by simply walking a little everyday, as that is something I actually can do every day. After rowing I need a day, if not more to recover. Am I missing something here, or what is going on?
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