Thank you for the response. I shall flat foot away.kgallagher wrote:Back on Firday Dec. 12th I tweaked my back getting out of my car. As a result, I took that Sat. and Sun. off from the erg. That was challenging for me since my weekends are when I get a lot of meters in so that I can either take a day off or do lower meters during the week when I erg before work. I was nervous that for the first time since 2008 I wouldn't hit the 200k mark on the holiday challenge. On Monday Dec. 15, I decided to try erging again, but rowed a super light steady state piece (even lighter than my normal warm up pace). This actually helped my back feel better later in the day. I continued to do this every day and hit the 200k mark on Dec. 21. PHEW! Until today, I hadn't rowed since then. My back is still sore, but is doing better.
When I'm not erging, I tend to forget to check the forum. In doing so, I missed the Virtual New Year's Celebration. I celebrated New Years at 7:00 pm EST which was New Years in Ireland where my husband and my ancestors are from with Bushmills Irish Whiskey with gingerale out at our favorite Irish Pub. I celebrated
the clock striking midnight at home with my husband and child.
HAPPY NEW YEAR to all my Loonie friends and their families.
Yes, Danwho, I did row the Crash-Bs once. Way back in 1991 when I was a senior in college. (I'm flattered you remember.) I also rowed in a couple of CT Indoor Rowing Regattas around 2004-2006. I was toying with the idea of trying the Crash Bs again this year, and had started doing some training for it, but then I hurt my back. It still doesn't seem up to max pressure pieces, so I'm thinking it won't be likely this year. Good luck Barbara G and anyone else who decides to go for it. It is a fun experience.
As for asking technique questions, yes, this is the forum for that as well. I'm afraid I forget who asked the question about toes v. flat feet, but you asked a good question. People tend to go up on their toes partially because they are not flexible enough to get full reach with flat feet. However, sometimes this leads to bringing the shins beyond perpendicular which is wasted energy. You won't have good contact and force until your shins are back to perpendicular and your feet connected. It's not completely bad to go up on your toes (as long as your knees don't go past your ankles), but be sure to get the feet flat again as quickly as you can. Your lifting analogy is a good one. You definitely have more leverage lifting flat footed than on your toes. It ultimately is the same with rowing (erging). You definitely want to feel the connection through the footboards. Kudos on your personal best on your 2k. Keep it up!
Congrats on Baby Xander. What a cutie!
Thor MW