Hi Larry,LarryRow wrote:It's my dream to row in an old fart boat!I see that RowNewYork has some 4s, I think that would be fun. I wish I had some idea if there was an old fart standard in terms of erg score. I do love the machine too, though.
I always saw masters track as kind of demoralizing, mainly because there is nowhere to hide. They might as well announce that there is an old fart in lane 1. At least when you run in road races with 5,000 people, there are plenty of places to hide.
Do you know how master's running got started? Some guy's dog couldn't keep up with him when they ran together and the guy was too slow to run in open meets. So, he set up a master's mile, it was a huge success, and the rest is history.
Gotta go row. It sure is humid as heck in New York. Ugh.
Let me try to get you calibrated, as best I can. I am a certified, card carrying old fart. I started erging in 2010, and took a learn to row course in 2012. My best 2K (6:36) was in 2013, but I walk around generally in shape to pul around a 6:50 or so. I'm a couple inches shorter than you and a little bit heavier, so that's why I think you have better potential than I do. Plus you have a longer history of aerobic exercise.
My erg scores in competitions tend to be in the top 20%. I don't race big boats on the water, mainly because my travel schedule is pretty irregular and I don't want to "that guy" who is always missing practice. So, I row a single. With 3 years on the water, and a 6:50 erg, I am a middle of the pack rower in a single. At the Head of the Charles, I was 25th out of 60. In smaller comps, I tend to float a little closer to the top.
If you want to "fit in" with masters rowers between 50 and 60 and hold your head high, you probably want to on your way to sub-7, but it is by no means a requirement. People would much rather row with someone who is good to be around, reliable, takes coaching, a works their ass off than a jerk with a big erg.