New Personal Best! Brag About That New Pb!
Thanks Bryan! Honestly... I'm not a big fan of distance ANYTHING... I'm a sprinter at heart. I tried the 10K once and decided I wouldn't do it again for a while, but then I got so close to 100,000m that I just couldn't pass up getting it in before the start of the new season. Who needs outside competition when you've got a competitive streak like I do!
You're on my team, aren't you? (Prairieland Strokers) I noticed because you're 32 (I'll be 32 on Saturday) and you have the same last name as some good friends of ours.
Here's to another great rowing season!
Brittany
You're on my team, aren't you? (Prairieland Strokers) I noticed because you're 32 (I'll be 32 on Saturday) and you have the same last name as some good friends of ours.
Here's to another great rowing season!
Brittany
My first half marathon in 1.43.27 (= 2.27 / 500m)
500M averages per 4200m
2.29,
2.28 ,
2.25,
2.23,
2.19
Plus a 2.30 minute break after an hour to change shirts, relieve my but and have a drink. For some reason I cannot drink while rowing. How do other people do that?
500M averages per 4200m
2.29,
2.28 ,
2.25,
2.23,
2.19
Plus a 2.30 minute break after an hour to change shirts, relieve my but and have a drink. For some reason I cannot drink while rowing. How do other people do that?
1969; 183cm; 90kg; Rowing PB’s 2008; 500-1:32 1000-3:19 2000-7:14 5000-19:23 10000-40:29 HM-1:28:46. Recent SB’s not worth mentioning yet :-)
I'm thinking about doing a marathon and I've been trying to figure that out. My plan is to get a camel back, put it on something about head level, and every so often reach over and grab the tube. Drink while I take a couple of easy strokes.Gerhard wrote: For some reason I cannot drink while rowing. How do other people do that?
I normally erg first think in the morning after drinking a couple of cups of green or white tea. This has worked fine for half marathons. I did two 30K's this way, but that is about the limit of what I can handle without food or water. Last week, I did another two thirty K's. Before the rows I ate a cliff bar. During the rows I put a bottle of water on the ground and after 10K started drinking a few sips every 2.5K. I miss a couple of strokes and it seems to cost me about 10 seconds per drink. For the six drinks (~16oz) for the last 30K I did I figure I lost about a minute or about 1 second off the pace. I think the camel back method will cost me much less. Did the 30K's at a 2:02.1 and 2:02.5.
For calories, I haven't decided whether to use a dilute sports drink, something like GU, or eat Cliff bars. If I go the cliff bar route I will break them up in small pieces before hand and pop one piece in my mouth every 3K or so starting at 10K and stopping at about 35K. With the water I will probably take my last drink with 7K or 5K to go.
Yesterday I started a 35K. I was experimenting with drink more per water break but taking less breaks. I stopped after 15K because my wife who had gone swimming came back because the pool was closed. She wanted to go for a tandem ride. So we took the tandem out for almost an hour. Just 12 miles but 1500' of climbing, 13 mph average, 48 mph max.
Want to do a couple of 35K's before I do the full marathon. I plan on doing it with no breaks at a 2:02 pace. If it goes OK I may try to do it a bit faster in the following weeks.
My rationale was that giving up a couple minutes taking quick breaks to drink was a better option than risking not finishing because of dehydration.Gerhard wrote: For some reason I cannot drink while rowing. How do other people do that?
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Intriguing idea. An issue you may have is that the camelbak hose may not be long enough to cover your full stroke length. It would not be fun if you pulled the camelbak off of it's perch. One crazy idea that I might try myself, is rather than putting the camelbak on a shelf of some kind, suspending it by strings from the ceiling so you have more slack available.Nosmo wrote: I'm thinking about doing a marathon and I've been trying to figure that out. My plan is to get a camel back, put it on something about head level, and every so often reach over and grab the tube. Drink while I take a couple of easy strokes.
My plan would be then to grab the hose on a recovery, grab a drink while taking a couple strokes, then just spit the hose out. If everything were measured properly, you wouldn't even have to worry about the bite valve touching the ground. If such a setup worked well enough, I might even use it for shorter pieces.
I got my 2k under 8 minutes!!
8.37.5 -> 7.57.9
Splits were 1.55 / 2.00 / 2.02 / 2.00, so I took off too fast and died a couple of times during the final 1200 meters. But I'm happy
8.37.5 -> 7.57.9
Splits were 1.55 / 2.00 / 2.02 / 2.00, so I took off too fast and died a couple of times during the final 1200 meters. But I'm happy
1969; 183cm; 90kg; Rowing PB’s 2008; 500-1:32 1000-3:19 2000-7:14 5000-19:23 10000-40:29 HM-1:28:46. Recent SB’s not worth mentioning yet :-)
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Have you tried the common OTW technique of starting with short strokes? a typical start is 1/2 slide, 3/4 slide, 3/4 slide, full slide hard, 6 more full slide hard drives, then settle. In a boat, the idea is to overcome the initial inertia of the stationary boat with extra hard strokes and then settle to normal race rate and pace when it is up to speed. To some extent the same principle applies to the stationary wheel of an indoor rowing machine. I don't see much point to it for long races, but for the 500m it might help. That set of 10 first strokes would just about take care of the first 100m.SwimmerTurnedRower wrote:New personal best in the 500 after two 25 minute pieces and a 500 before.
1:29.8
Still can't figure out how to get a fast start. My slowest 100 is always my first.
Bob S.
You've done quite a lot of rowing in your first month.Gerhard wrote:I got my 2k under 8 minutes!!
8.37.5 -> 7.57.9
Splits were 1.55 / 2.00 / 2.02 / 2.00, so I took off too fast and died a couple of times during the final 1200 meters. But I'm happy
Huge improvement, well done!
Now go for 7:30
yr 1966, 1,87 m, 8? kg
[img]http://www.c2ctc.com/sigs/img1201739576.png[/img]
Be Water, My Friend!
[img]http://www.c2ctc.com/sigs/img1201739576.png[/img]
Be Water, My Friend!
- Hennie Martini
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Thank you all for keeping me motivated. Two more PB's over the last two days:
30m: 6580 -> 6870
10k: 46.30 -> 44.44
Maybe it's time to concetrate on technique, power and endurance, without the distraction of trying to beat PB's. It's fun though
30m: 6580 -> 6870
10k: 46.30 -> 44.44
Maybe it's time to concetrate on technique, power and endurance, without the distraction of trying to beat PB's. It's fun though
1969; 183cm; 90kg; Rowing PB’s 2008; 500-1:32 1000-3:19 2000-7:14 5000-19:23 10000-40:29 HM-1:28:46. Recent SB’s not worth mentioning yet :-)
I row about 5 times a week, averaging about 40k per week. Very happy with the progress and I certainly hope to beat 7.30 sometime this year. However, I realize that 7.57 and 7.30 are worlds apart!ancho wrote:You've done quite a lot of rowing in your first month.Gerhard wrote:I got my 2k under 8 minutes!!
8.37.5 -> 7.57.9
Splits were 1.55 / 2.00 / 2.02 / 2.00, so I took off too fast and died a couple of times during the final 1200 meters. But I'm happy
Huge improvement, well done!
Now go for 7:30
I don't mind to suffer every now and then, but the last 1000 meters of my 2k were absolutely killing. The only thing that got me going was the little indicator value on the PM3 saying "keep up this pace and you'll break 8 minutes". Some say sport is healthy. My 2k wasn't .
1969; 183cm; 90kg; Rowing PB’s 2008; 500-1:32 1000-3:19 2000-7:14 5000-19:23 10000-40:29 HM-1:28:46. Recent SB’s not worth mentioning yet :-)