EastClintwood wrote: ↑December 19th, 2022, 8:29 am
2k+25, wow that seems quite slow.
Wouldn't probably feel like a workout at all.
I want to give a short example what could expect, if trained "slow enough" as I am a newbee.
I started erging in January this year, bought a HR monitor very early.
My beginner status was very fit, as I trained 3 days/week in the gym doing very hard sessions for strength and also metcon/cardio, but only bodyweight interval trainings.
This 30min session is from the very start, 26th of February and was a "normal" session:
Code: Select all
Time Meters Pace Watts Cal/Hr S/M
30:00.0 7,502m 1:59.9 203 997 19 164
6:00.0 1,485m 2:01.2 197 976 20 156
12:00.0 1,495m 2:00.4 201 990 19 161
18:00.0 1,504m 1:59.6 204 1002 19 164
24:00.0 1,503m 1:59.7 204 1001 20 167
30:00.0 1,515m 1:58.8 209 1018 20 176
This 30min session was a recent one, 29th of November (now I call it a shorter, more intense one
):
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Time Meters Pace Watts Cal/Hr S/M HR
30:00.0 7,877m 1:54.2 235 1107 20 159
5:00.0 1,286m 1:56.6 221 1059 20 146
10:00.0 1,360m 1:50.2 261 1197 21 162
15:00.0 1,343m 1:51.6 251 1164 20 164
20:00.0 1,289m 1:56.3 222 1064 20 155
25:00.0 1,289m 1:56.3 222 1064 20 163
30:00.0 1,310m 1:54.5 233 1102 20 166
9 month difference, where I had 2 month break and needed 2 more month to get back. 5 month net training and see the pace/wattage compared to the lower HR.
Significant higher power at significant lower HR.
I write that to give you an idea of what to expect, when not only training "hard" 3 days/week.
I thought I was already very fit - placed in ranking above 90% at the start. Now the results are way better, only because of the long and slow seasons. And I also feel advantages in my gym sessions as well.