Dangerscouse wrote: ↑November 25th, 2022, 2:52 pm
There's quite a few notable points in this. A PB; a solid mindset; rowing very close to max for significant amount of time. All great markers of progress in a holistic way, rather than just the numbers on the screen.
I've always responded better to more holistic approaches to things, my aim with rowing was to change my shape - I'd turned 40, stopped swimming during the pandemic (and moved house away from a handy pool) my waistline was going up and I was starting to sleep badly again.
The benchmark times are just nice ways for me to visibly see the progress that the erg is having - by being able to row harder I'll develop more muscle, by rowing longer I'll burn more calories - both achieve my aim ultimately.
For context the 5k I just completed, matched my flat-out pace for 4mins back at the end of June on my first erg session. I did 5mins warm up & then 5mins flat out, but I was done after 4 and pace started to drop. My sprint at the end of the 5k, while not my fastest, was 10s/500 faster and rating 3 strokes higher.
I've made huge progress in my inefficient - just row what I feel like when I feel like approach - and luckily, I'm really enjoying it without any pressure of achieving XYZ target.
I'd never have thought within 5 months I'd have been able to complete a Half Marathon, and even funnier I'm disappointed in the time I set as I know I could have done better, but I played it safe.
MPx wrote: ↑November 25th, 2022, 2:55 pm
Yes, sounds like you're there - I'd guess 190 would be a useful max to work off. What's your resting HR?
Pretty high - lowest I've managed to (manually) check it at is 70 - so it's probably a little lower while asleep - but starting an erg session it'll typically be 72-80.
I often just sit on the erg once strapped in and breathe deeply and steadily for a bit before I start, as I can normally tell by my hr whether it's a "good" day or bad one and plan accordingly.