bloomp wrote:You still fail to address the fact that you have only trained in this manner for five years. That's the same amount of time I've been rowing. Your first 2k was what, 6:32? My first 2k was an 8:16. Now I've PR'd at 6:58. You are trying to knock 16 seconds off, yet my training has brought almost 80 seconds off my PR.
Yes, I am trying to knock 12 seconds off my pb, but against a pretty different background of achievement.
When I started training for effectiveness and efficiency back in 2003, I was a 52-year-old lwt and had just pulled three straight WR rows: 6:30, 6:29, 6:28.
No male WR-holder, 40 to 70, has ever improved at all; so this goal of getting better by three seconds per 500m in the 2K is ambitious.
Yes, I agree entirely that you should try to be in good physical shape in you want to do well in rowing.
You don't have to row to do this, though.
There are many ways of getting great physiological and full-body conditioning; so this consideration has no direct link to training for rowing, rather than training for some other power and endurance sport (e.g., swimming or cross-country skiing).
As I mentioned, when I first took up rowing, I jumped rope for an hour and then did 1000 sit ups _before_ I erged.
In the summers, I ran 10 miles rather than jumping rope.
I also like pull ups and did a couple of hundred of them a day--usually in sets of 20-30.
I have had a chinning bar on the door into my house/room since I was 10 years old or so.
I do a set of chins when I go in and out.
I did this for five years or so.
As you know, I also cross-train extensively, even now.
Makes you feel great.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)