I am not timing pieces, but sure, I am aware of my general level of effort (both subjectively, and using a heart rate monitor) as I am rowing certain paces and rates, steady state.rjw wrote:Based on your (repeated) statement that you don't erg by looking at the numbers, what do you base "when I sharpen this fall, I think I'll do 5K @ 1:43 at the beginning of each session, as a warm up" on?
As I mentioned, this morning, I was doing 1:55 pace with a heart rate in the 120s!
Again, that's five seconds per 500m better than I used to do.
1:55 is UT2 for a 6:40 2K.
My UT2 heart rate is 145 bpm.
I am rowing 1:48 with a heart rate of around 150 bpm.
My anaerobic threshold is 172 bpm.
To get good at rowing, there is no need to race anywhere.
You just need to row 1-2 hours a day, working hard on effectiveness and efficiency, taking good strokes, until rowing well becomes habitual, automatic, unconscious, inevitable.
Rowing is repetitive.
Stroke, stroke, stroke, stroke, stroke.
Steady state repetition doesn't have to be rigorously timed.
It is obvious what is happening--or not.
ranger