I thought I'd put a post up about my journey so far - wasn't quite sure where to put it, so thought here's as good as anywhere
Little background to start:
I started indoor rowing at the end of June because I'd turned 40, I wanted an exercise that I could do through winter inside & I'd started to notice that middle aged spread was a very real thing as I had to buy new clothes. My weight was up to 14st9 (205lbs/93kg)- from being low/mid 13st range ~185lbs/84kg (when at my more preferred weight) and I could see it was going to keep rising if I didn't make some changes.
With Covid and a house move I wasn't doing the same exercise as I had been; the swimming pools closed and travel to mountains was restricted, but my activity hadn't gone to zero, so my fitness was still ok - but not great.
My first row was a just over 10min row where I went a touch over 2k; my warm up is included in that time/distance.... I remember that it absolutely ruined me; but 3 days later I was back on the machine having another go.
Since then, I've got into a loose routine where I try to row 3x a week; typically 3 medium effort sessions, I throw the odd hard TT in there just to test myself and/or do easy session or skip things if I'm just not feeling it.
For me now an easy session would be 45mins at a low pace (~75%mhr), medium would be faster, but still low pace and about an hour (~85% mhr); hard sessions could be set distance/time time trials or up to 1.5hr or ~95%mhr).
There has not been a single interval session performed - but some of the TT's have been equally as brutal as that first row was.
My sister commented when she saw in in mid December that I looked a lot "broader and more triangular" in shape; implying that some of the spread round the waist had started to shift around the place a bit.
As a general statement, my fitness is a lot better, my rows are a little faster at each effort bounding, and on a walk I've done a lot over the past couple of years, I ploughed up a hill with ease that had normally required "effort" (either a breather or significant reduction in pace).
I weighed myself today, it's long enough post Christmas that I've started to work off the excesses, and I was surprised to see that I was 13st11 (193lbs/87.5kg); I've dropped back down a belt hole as well, I'm also sleeping better again too.
The weight loss isn't the driving factor for me rowing, but the shape change as a result - a better muscle/fat ratio - was one of my target aims.
So while it's a post to celebrate my progress, it's also hopefully a note to show that even with medium effort/frequency the impact to the body through rowing can be significant in a relatively short time if you can stick at it - and you don't have to be a superhuman - in order to start to make those changes too
