you had me there until the last bit.
![Wink :wink:](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
I've been looking forward to the day I can disagree with you about something.
Please add electronics to the list.hamper your training if you spend too much time fussing
Hahaha, that's sounds familiar
Hi Max or others, can you elaborate on avoiding injury risk? My stroke rate is around 16-17 now with this recently discovered power pushoff+slow recovery row that’s closer to a 1:2 ratio. My usual workout is 5K and sometimes 10K, and I row three times a week. I mostly just do long steady rows (but find myself occasionally switching to my default 1:1 ratio meeker pushoff+quicker recovery for a minute or two if my legs start tiring in between) plus a sprint finish for the last lap. My HR averages around 150 bpm that’s probably 75-80% of my max (and would correspond to an easy run or a moderately hard bike ride for me).max_ratcliffe wrote: ↑February 18th, 2022, 8:06 amI think this might be a bit ambitious. The OP is tall enough but at 143lb is very much a lightweight. 12 is an big stroke and "starting there" before the body is accustomed to it could lead to injury.
What Max is alluding to is that when you're still fairly new to rowing a strong stroke, whilst being ideal, can be a vulnerable position for your lower back.arown wrote: ↑February 21st, 2022, 1:35 pmHi Max or others, can you elaborate on avoiding injury risk? My stroke rate is around 16-17 now with this recently discovered power pushoff+slow recovery row that’s closer to a 1:2 ratio. My usual workout is 5K and sometimes 10K, and I row three times a week. I mostly just do long steady rows (but find myself occasionally switching to my default 1:1 ratio meeker pushoff+quicker recovery for a minute or two if my legs start tiring in between) plus a sprint finish for the last lap. My HR averages around 150 bpm that’s probably 75-80% of my max (and would correspond to an easy run or a moderately hard bike ride for me).
Not being young anymore and having dealt with running injuries, I’m injury risk averse, so any tips on avoiding rowing injuries are welcome. My goals are cross training (to running), lower body strength, and endurance in that order.
Max, great points in this post! Something for all of us to keep in mind, no matter how much experience we have OTE/OTW.max_ratcliffe wrote: ↑February 21st, 2022, 5:52 pm
The cliche analogy is that as a runner, your engine will be easily able to overpower your chassis. Your body won't be accustomed to taking the load through the back but you are fit enough to do lots of work. If anything you may be slightly more at risk of injury in the early days/weeks than a sedentary person who can only pull a few strokes before fatigue makes them stop.
So make sure that you temper James's good advice about a strong stroke with commonsense. Make sure that the drag isn't too high on your machine (that increases the force at the catch) and make sure your feet aren't too high (high feet make it harder to get into a good catch position as the lumbar spine might want to flex).
There is some debate about stroke rate. Good technique can help guard against injury and a lower rate should mean that you have more time to get your body into a strong position even though the force may be higher. I breathe in on the recovery, which seems a bit unnatural but it allows for a partial valsalver, so an increased intra abdominal pressure which can protect against back and rib injuries. We wouldn't deadlift without a good lungful of air so I try not to take the catch empty.
Some short breaks in a long steady piece are also aroused to help. So I usually break an hour into 3x20' 1'r for example. The minute break allows a quick drink and reset of the lower back. The hr does of course go down in that minute, but it can't have much effect on training response imo.
Rowing in particular and exercise in general is the best and maybe only way to cure/avoid a bad back, often caused by inactivity, cars and desks.Hi Max or others, can you elaborate on avoiding injury risk? My stroke rate is around 16-17 now with this recently discovered power pushoff+slow recovery row that’s closer to a 1:2 ratio.
Many theories on how to train. Most elite rowers are now using a combination of very long/very slow sessions mixed with two or three harder sessions a week. (They are also training 15 to 20 hours/week, likely you will not do that.) If all of your rows are hard, and you are doing many a week (and people propose that here on the forums and in the wider training community), likely you will get poor long term results. Suggest you listen to a view vids, form a training plan for long slow vs hard, and then make your choice on how to do the hard rows.
I apologize for my lack of knowledge, but it's always been my understanding that the opposite is true. Aerobic fitness would be developed faster than strength.Dangerscouse wrote: ↑February 18th, 2022, 2:05 amTake comfort in that strength is quicker to build than aerobic fitness, so you're in a decent place to get better quicker
If you're not training for racing, just make sure your stroke is effective, then use it. The effect of a stroke is to move a boat. Somewhere between 9 and 11 meters per stroke is normal at low rates, as shown by C2 PM.Hi folks, another related question: what fraction of my training should I do at the harder ~15SR/1:2 drive-to-recovery-time ratio compared to my easier ~24SR/1:1?
No need to apologise. If you've got base fitness, sharpening it up isn't that bad, but if you're starting from very little the body will respond seemingly fairly quickly as you'll see improvements, but to a meaningful sense it takes a long time. It's possibly more or less comparable with newbie gains, and seeing how they drop off all too quickly is due to a lack of aerobic fitness.ukaserex wrote: ↑February 28th, 2022, 9:52 amI apologize for my lack of knowledge, but it's always been my understanding that the opposite is true. Aerobic fitness would be developed faster than strength.
Can you elaborate on what you mean by this? Seems to me that strength improvements take months, aerobic capacity & endurance can be improved within weeks. Maybe I'm mistaken? Or, could it be one way with rowing, and the other way with other sports?