HornetMaX wrote: ↑September 8th, 2023, 4:22 am
From my experience (and what I've read around, including other sports like running), yes definitely.
The increase in HR for a given pace due to heavy heat may be so high that you could go beyond what you can usually sustain for that distance.
Side notes:
- drinking helps. I can't imagine doing an HM without drinking (1.5L for me). For me (at least): no drinking during HM = much higher HR (I verified this at least twice).
- Ventilation: the Wahoo headwind is stupid expensive, but surprisingly good (lot of air, small footprint)
I'm glad it's not just me then! I did my (gently paced) HM devoid of water breaks, and it was about the limit of what I felt comfortable with. Anything longer and I'd have to spend 100 metres crawling with one hand whilst taking a drink! I know it's fine to stop for a drink, but psychologically I need to keep the metres moving to satisfy the old OCD lol.
Dangerscouse wrote: ↑September 8th, 2023, 12:30 pm
You do adapt to it, to some extent, but I do struggle when it's notably hotter. It was 27c this morning in my erg room, and when the sweat is dripping off you, there's definitely a mental component to battle through too.
I say about adapting to it as I've done hot dynamic Pilates once a week for 10 years (it's not hot yoga) but that was circa 35c when it was a full room, so I'd be starting to sweat before the class had started on occasions!
If I had a break for a few weeks, due to injury, I'd struggle with the heat on my first one or two classes, but I would adapt to it.
I never stop for a drink for a continuous piece unless it's longer than 32k, but that might very well be detrimental. I have drank a bit of water occasionally during intervals, but as they're so horrible whatever you do, it's hard to tell if water has had any benefit.
I've always tolerated heat poorly - even sat doing nothing on a sun lounger in 30 degree + heat, my HR will be sitting above 100 bpm consistently. I've never considered adapting to it, and I take my hat off to you for doing something as horrible sounding as 'hot yoga'! A sauna is literally the worst place for me to be!
Speaking of HR, I finally bit the bullet and got a Polar H10. I'm using the Polar H10 ECG Analysis 3rd Party app which gives a ton of useful metrics. Something that's surprised me though is how slow I have to go to keep my HR in the 'hold a conversation' zone of 135 - 145 ish bpm - we're talking around 2:19 / 500 m! Am I ruining all my hard work by doing this? By hard work, I mean all my SS's that I've been rowing at near maximum ever since I started, even though I know I shouldn't have...! Or am I safe to be strict about it, so long as I'm putting the hard work into my weekly intervals? It just feels wrong to row so placidly for so long, even though I know the evidence is saying I'm at just the right pace...
I did a 7 x 500 m yesterday and saw my HR hit 187 near the end of the last interval, against my theoretical maximum of '220 - age' of 185. So I'm not skimping where it counts, but is this enough to maintain/improve on what I've done so far?
DavidA wrote: ↑September 8th, 2023, 3:07 pm
Absolutely. Heat, and high humidity, has a big effect on my abilities.
David
Again, good to know it's not just me suffering. Thankfully it's cooled down a bit now!
Also apologies for not replying sooner to everyone - I had a whole message typed out a few days ago and Internet went down at the critical moment...