Imali wrote: ↑July 5th, 2024, 5:04 am
I bought the machine primarily to cross train and help build a strong base to improve my very recreational running....
What's the best strategy for effective cardio base and endurance training using the RowErg with consideration of below?
Male, 39, 6ft 2, 83 kg, MHR 194, RHR 63 (+/- 3)
- Current Avg Rowing Stats: 6000m sessions, 30:48 mins, 2:34 min/500, 26 s/m, 96W
- Heart Rate: AvgHR 136, AvgMHR 148, Effort 7 (Feel harder in relation to HR!
Your DF is good, could be lower, don't get much higher.
You are monitoring heart rate. good. Is the MHR set on the rower? Following assumes 194 is correct MEASURED max HR, if not do some intense intervals on the rower and see where you end up. Also, assume you have a HR belt, only a few wrist based optical HR sensors work for rowing. IF using a wrist based optical HR sensor (e.g. garmin watch) check your HR over short rowing intervals. If your HR is flat over end of interval and rest period and start of next interval it's not working correctly and you need a belt. If HR tracks up and down correctly for all intervals you're good.
For cardio base row at 70% of your rowing MHR, so try for 194 * .7 = 135. Try to keep Max HR = average HR, do not peak above 135 (148 max above is not good for base, you're working too hard). Monitor your splits while rowing. You want to keep splits roughly the same for 45 minutes. If starting at HR=135 leads to steadily worsening splits over 45 mins to keep HR under 135 then start with a lower HR. Work up to 135 for 45 minutes. Then play with increasing duration while keeping MHR=average HR < 135. Cross check that you are not working too hard by trying to recite a paragraph. If you can't speak conversationally then you are working too hard for base whatever your HR says. Note also that initially your cardio system will not be the limiting factor, instead your limit will be the capability of rowing specific muscles. So row at very low heart rate until you get your muscles balanced to rowing. Note also, get good form so you don't hurt your back, elbows, wrists as you add long rows. You can easily build up to 5 to 10 hours of base rowing/week, but you cannot jump into that without hurting something.
You are cross training, not just rowing. During base building you want one or two days of hard workouts along with three to four cardio/base only days. For your hard days can mix rowing intervals or hard/long rows with >> 135 HR into your current set of hard workouts which likely will include hard runs and some strength training (typically lifting weights). Put all your hard workouts (running and rowing and lifting) in the SAME one or two days. Your pure base workout days are the rowing cardio described above mixed with long/slow low effort runs, cycling etc.