Greetings from the great blizzard of 2011.
It's coming down here in sheets. A foot or two of snow is supposed to fall in Ann Arbor over the next 24 hours.
Oh well.
Lots of digging to do tomorrow.
_Gorgeous_ "Steamroller" rowing now, right at 13 SPI (1:46 @ 22, 1:45 @ 23 spm, etc.), HR in the middle 150s, steady state.
This is perfect rowing for a lightweight of any age.
No skeletal-muscular or technical stress at all, just normal stroking.
I can do this sort of rowing for a FM, perhaps longer.
If I do, I will pb over 42K by eight seconds per 500m and equal, or better, the Open lwt FM WR.
The music is great.
It keeps me right on the beat.
The four big beats come on the leg drive, arm pull, prep position, and then the final descent to the catch.
I do the downbeats in the 4-beat measures on the arm pull, with the leg drive and back swing as accelerating, anticipatory upbeats.
The triple pulse (6/8 meter) that rides under the four big beats is right on the first three major gestures in the drive (quads, hams, abs) before the downbeat on the arm pull (delts and lats).
I am now learning little tricks to keep completely relaxed--occasional sweep-stroking, short-sliding, etc.
The variety helps.
This "Steamroller" rowing at 22 spm, together with my "Save a Horse, Ride a Cowboy" rowing at 26 spm, fixes the majority of my training for the rest of my life.
This is UT training, UT2 at 22 spm, UT1 at 26 spm.
119 df.
Amazingly, given my short little lightweight legs, at 13 SPI and 119 df., my drive time is only .5 seconds.
So I do this "Steamroller" rowing in a 4.4-to-1 ratio.
You can't get much more relaxed than that!
Between the (brief!) drives, there is plenty of time for lunch and a snooze.
When I do a FM trial, rowing to "Steamroller," I'll need to pack some sandwiches and grab a pillow.
During the 2.5 hour FM row, I'll only be working for a half hour.
I'll be resting for the other two hours.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)