Rockin Roland wrote:Byron, I understand that your son in stroke seat is a very raw beginner. Firstly, why is he in stroke seat? Rowing a head race with that sort of technique is very hard on him and the rest of the crew.
His biggest problem is that he is barely using his legs. Severe bum shoot followed by a violent heave with the arms is leading to very little propulsion of the quad through the water. Consequently there is very little run on the boat. You were having trouble following him and not surprisingly were out of timing with the stroke.
Since we're on the topic of rowing technique, Citroen's photo on the erg also shows some rowing flaws. Way too much lunging forward and hunching over at the catch. If you did that in a boat you would miss about a third of your stroke by getting only fresh air with the blade hence resulting in a inefficient stroke.
A set of slides under your erg would fix that and also help you sit up in a much stronger position at the catch.
Hi Roland,
Those are helpful comments. Thanks.
Yes, my son was a raw beginner. The other scullers besides me had just finished a learn-to-row course, which was mostly sweep rowing, so they had not spent much time sculling. At the time I had a sore back and a dislocated rib and couldn't do much layback or take a long stroke. I've gotten my back and rib fixed in the meantime.
In the meantime several of us have taken more sculling lessons including a sculling course for a small group of us that met six days a week for eight weeks. It was taught by a fabulous coach, so now at least I know what I should be doing. Doing it is another matter.
Maybe next summer I'll get another video and post it.
By the way, last October at the Head of the Grand I got in a quad with a couple of ringers: stroke seat was an expert sculler and a coach. Seat three was another coach who was an outstanding collegiate rower and still active in coaching. I was seat two. Dang, it's fun to be in a boat where the rowers in front of you are doing everything right. We had an absolute beginner as bow seat, who caught a bunch of boat-stopping crabs as we rowed to the starting line. Luckily for us, we had an excellent coxswain/coach who managed to cure his case of crabs by the time we got to the start. We did the entire race with no crabs. It was bow seat's first regatta and he had a nice experience and he'll be back for more, I am sure.
About slides: I never realized how much I liked them until I lent them to a friend with back problems. They helped the friend with back problems so he bought his own. Was I ever anxious to get them back.
While I'm rambling and this is the OTW thread, I'll mention that the river finally froze over about a week ago. For my last row I took out a rec. boat and was breaking through thin sheets of ice. I'm not going to use my beautiful wooden Staempfli as an ice breaker. Once in a while I would slide up onto a thicker piece of ice. If you get stuck on a piece of ice, the drill is this: you bang the blades of the oars up and down, but not so hard that you're abusing the oars, until they break through the ice. It's like that drill where you sit at the catch and raise and lower the blades in and out of the water. Once you break through the ice, you take a stroke. I also carried a hammer so I could lean over and smash the ice if I couldn't break through the ice with the blades. OK, maybe that indicates compulsive behavior: time to go indoors and get on the C2. But you know the difference between OTW and erging so maybe it doesn't sound completely crazy to you.
Byron