Rower is mostly posterior based.HornetMaX wrote: ↑October 2nd, 2023, 8:45 amHi all,
I finally managed to buy a 2nd hand SkiErg, now sitting right next to a RowErg in my garage.
For the time being, I use the SkiErg only as warm-up & cool-down in 3 out of 4 of my weekly rowing sessions, typically 10min warm-up and 10min cool-down. Only other workouts I've tried on the SikErg are a 20min steady and a 5x (2min fast, 1min slow), where "fast" and "slow" are relative to my ridiculous level on the SkiErg.
What I can say after 1 month:
- There's no chain, maintenance is even lower than the (already very low) RowErg. Love no-maintenance machines.
- Very pleased by how complementary it is with respect to the RowErg: upper body + abs + calves. After only 1 month (56Km at a snail avg pace of 2:32/500m) I now have abs muscles I didn't have before. To the point it feels weird/unusual when I'm sitting in from of my PC.
- Overall, I think it's kind of a better machine for general public: mainly, less problems than a RowErg (sitting & back pain), less legs-oriented.
- I'm pretty lost on the proper technique. There're videos from people that seem to be knowledgeable (i.e. not your random YT fitness influencer / crossfit guru) but the variance in what they label as "proper technique" is huge. How much do you hinge/lean forward, where do your hands end at the end of the drive (at your pockets/hips ? just pull straight vertically, don't curl back ?) ... maybe it depends on what you use it for (e.g. just as a fitness machine or as a functional complement to actual skiing). Don't know.
- I cannot reach the same level of power/pace I can do on the rower. Not by a mile (or two). Don't know if it's me (as in my technique sucks), or me (as in I'm all legs and that's OK on the RowErg but a tragedy on the SkiErg) or just me (as in I need more time to get better on the SkiErg).
- Random questions:
- Gloves or not ?
- No shoes = bad ? Or it doesn't matter ?
Skierg is mostly anterior based.
Skierg, think doing crunches.
Bend at the hips not really the waist.
Drive is started with the hips.
Slight bend in the knees
Keep arms at about a 90 degree bend until you've completed your "crunch"
Then there are several ways to finish the stroke- one like in the videos posted which are more like real cross country skiers and the other which is what most crossfitters use and what I typically use- which is to finish the stroke by trying to drive the handles straight into the floor. For me it produces the most power.
I'm within 0-12 secs or so of my erg pace depending on the distance.
Use whatever technique that works best for you. After all it's just exercise, you're not actually skiing or training to ski.