MrFit,mrfit wrote:Sorry everyone for not posting yesterday's summary of the ranger-go-round. I was rather taken by all the news around Japan and did not pay much attention to the thread in my spare time.
The posting day started off at 2:39am in Ann Arbor with a prediction of 1:44 for the hour. Fitness is reported to be sky high and work on technique is reported to be complete but when this row will be attempted is unknown. When asked, ranger replied "Beats me". This was followed up by Ranger reporteing that attempts that this would be rather counter productitive at this point until he is habituated to his new technique. A bit later ranger noodled on why 27 spm is so ideal and thought biorhythms might explain it. Then it dawned on him to report that actually:
"Before the end of the indoor rowing season in April, I think I'll pull 27 spm/base pace/1:44/11.5 SPI for a HM."
This lowers the SPI demands, extends the time well past an hour and puts a time frame on his performances. For many readers this stirred some interest and before long the ranger-go-round was humming along with about 8 riders yesterday. It spun around and around. 13 SPI was noted as missing in his new goal and rangers reply was that this was only true for "full strokes".
At 5:27am, out of the blue, ranger predicted MIke VB will get worse and worse.
Ranger had some tangent about skating with Bonnie Blair and how his parents used to hold both hands when he learned to skate. Ranger made an observation that rowing well is much like tumbling in the demands it places on muscular-skeletal development. Then it seemed to make sense to ranger that he could have therefore been a great tumbler. (however the converse is not true according to ranger. Great gymnasts are too small).
Readers were again invited to test themselves with this protocol:
(1) 50 jackknives
(2) 25 extension press ups
(3) 30 pull ups
No one reported their results.
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I join leadville in thanking you for your daily summaries of our intrepid hero's postings. If you ever get stuck trying to decipher one of our hero's postings, I believe leadville still has a Ranger-speak decoder stored away in a closet somewhere. For example, we know that the phrases or words tomorrow, soon, at the end of the month, at the end of the season, etc. in Ranger-speak all have the same meaning: never in the more common English usage.