Hi friends!
Just yesterday discovered this thread, so registered for the forum to join in on the fun
. The many pages were fun to read through, as it reflects partially my journey as well (more on that below).
Stats - 37, male, 175lb.
Fitness background
As a teenager I did martial arts, then in my young adult years I didn't do much exercise. Upon turning 33 I started noticing my weight creep upwards and decided my metabolism wouldn't let me get away with eating whatever/whenever (not much junk food - but a fair bit of sugar) - so in conjunction with minding my diet I decided to also do some exercise - and got into crossfit because it seemed hard (and oh boy, it was hard). I had also heard about crossfit having a bad reputation on form for many basic things (like... pull-ups are brought up a lot), so I went in somewhat hesitantly - hoping to keep my wits about me to not hurt myself. A bit later I switched to a different crossfit gym which had A TON of focus on technique - including rowing technique. They don't let you sign up for regular classes until you do a three-class series of "basics" where you (and potentially up to two other people) have a dedicated coach with you full time just going over techniques of all the common movements. T'was way better all around, though more expensive. This anecdotal evidence suggests that not all crossfit gyms are negligent on technique, though I realize most are. Life became complicated, which made me exercise quite a lot in the first year of getting into crossfit - a total of 113 workouts (exercising is HARD, but not too complicated; life is often COMPLICATED, but rarely very hard - so working the body is a good way to escape the mind). Following year life became easier and my workout frequency dropped by half or so, then in the following year the pandemic shut things down.
This summer I decided to get back into exercising. Watched a copious amount of rowing videos on youtube, got a rower (more on that below), and over the first month, built up to 4k. Then on 9/14 decided to attempt going through BPP, sequentially through all workouts not minding the weeks.
Equipment story
So initially I wasn't 100% sure if I would get myself motivated to get into it for real, so had a notification from craigslist for the search, and grabbed a rower with 2.6 million km and a PM3 monitor.
Since I
did indeed get into using the rower, I wanted to upgrade to PM5 to connect my phone - and instead of spending $160 I bought another used rower (with 1.5 million km) with PM5
and just sold the "old" one, effectively upgrading for $35.
Also, scheduled an sculling lesson for December with a local rowing club.
About a week ago got a heart rate monitor as well (refurbished from ebay for $50), and discovered my heart rate creeps up into 170s during my workouts (178 is the highest I've seen so far).
Since I had my craigslist notification going, few days ago a listing for the dynamic model popped up - and I spent a ton of time reading about them. Given it was listed for about $100 less than Model D's are usually listed, decided to go meet the seller and just try it. It felt weird, so I haggled a bit and bought it for $600. It had only 171k km logged on the monitor, I figured even if I don't like it I can sell it again for the same price
. Turns out I
do like it, so now the model d with the PM5 is for sale, haha.
Progress in BPP:
Numbers and averages keep me motivated - so I was working towards having 52 workouts done (that would make my annual average once a week
), how many meters per day have I rowed on average, how many meters per workout on average... Things like that. I have a spreadsheet that keeps track of things like that... Then also working on things like "how many days can I row in a sequence without taking a day off?".
Today I'll do the first workout of Week 12 of BPP. That's my 2nd 10k ever, first time on the dynamic rower. That means if I hustle and not skip too many days, I might be done with (the first of possibly many
) full row-through of the BPP structure sometime in January. My birthday is at the end of January, so my tentative goal is to get through it before then, haha.
Question about heart rate and "steady state" sessions:
I find myself comfortable at stroke rates in low 20s, and since I like numbers I usually look at a similar session from the past and try to match the previous pace. Since getting the heart rate monitor I've kept an eye on my heart rate too, though didn't really know what to make of it. I'm lazy and haven't been doing much warm-up, just a dozen squats and pushups, so I start the sessions somewhere in 80-90bpm - and then over the course of the session it just climbs up into 160s-170s.
Reading this thread, I've realized I might be going much too fast on these long sessions. It feels like quite a workout, trying to go as fast as possible to do sustained for the distance... Are there any dangers I should be aware of in keeping the heart rate so high for extended periods of time? Would there be benefits that I'm just completely missing out on?
Here's the 25min row (first time on the dynamic rower, actually) demonstrating pretty much my typical heart rate graph -
https://log.concept2.com/profile/1744461/log/69285594
PS:
How do I make my log public? I've seen other folks link to theirs, but if I go to mine -
https://log.concept2.com/profile/1744461/log - without being logged in it shows "access denied".