PaulH wrote:Here's what I suspect is puzzling many people, ranger. A marathon at your chosen pace should take less time than you say you're currently spending in training each day. Your stroke is set, and as you've said many times a FM is basically a UT row, which you're capable of doing now. So why not do one, right now? Sure, it won't be the very best time you could do, as I'm sure there are matters of strategy etc. to tweak, but then doing a FM would be a great way to tease out some of those improvements ready for an all-out assault in a week or two.
Sure, my stroke is set, but it is still a pretty new acquisition.
As someone mentioned, I only lowered the drag to 119 df. on December 1st.
And it was still a month or so longer until I learned to relax my shoulders and abs at the catch and my shoulders in the middle of the drive when I swing my back.
Then it has only been a couple of weeks since I lowered the drag to where I have it now, 108 df.
If you have a sky-high aerobic capacity, as I do, the whole secret to fast distance rowing is the combination of effectiveness and efficiency you can achieve with your technique.
But full mastery of a technique takes some time.
You need to educate your muscles to do it automatically, unconsciously, easiily, habitually, etc.
I think another month or so rowing at 108 df. will do the trick.
108 df. is not _that_ much different from 119 df.
But there are some differences.
I am playing with them now.
One difference that I noticed today is that I can really accelerate the chain into the finish at 108 df.
Great stuff.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)