Wednesday: 14K steady state

A nice morning.  But darker and darker every day.  I hate the days getting shorter in the fall.

Plan:

  1. 4 x ~3000m / 1′ rest
  2. rate: 20
  3. pace: 2:30 ish
  4. heart rate cap: 75% HRR (150)

Data from RIM.

Screen Shot 2015-10-22 at 11.55.46 AM Screen Shot 2015-10-22 at 11.56.15 AM

|Dist_|Time_|_Pace__|_SPM__|avg HR|max HR|DPS_|Remarks
|01099|06:05|02:46.1| 20.3 | 114 | 134 |08.9|
|02856|13:39|02:23.4| 20.6 | 143 | 154 |10.1|
|00045|01:43|19:04.4| 21.0 | 148 | 152 |01.2|
|02949|14:19|02:25.6| 20.2 | 146 | 155 |10.2|
|00050|01:00|10:00.0| 20.2 | 147 | 150 |02.5|
|02946|15:08|02:34.1| 20.3 | 149 | 155 |09.6|
|00053|00:18|02:49.8| 20.9 | 140 | 151 |08.4|
|03994|19:57|02:29.8| 21.1 | 149 | 157 |09.5|

dist_____|_time_____|_pace____|_HR__|_SPM__|_DPS_|_comment
1099_____|_06:05____|_2:46.1__|_114_|_20.3_|_8.9_|_warmup
12745____|_1:03:03____|_2:28.4__|_147_|_20.6_|_9.8_|_Main set
0148_____|_03:01____|_10:11.5_|_147_|_20.7_|_2.4_|_rest meters
13992____|_12:09____|_2:34.7__|_144_|_20.3_|_9.5_|_Total

A fine and uneventful row until almost the end of the third piece.  I was rowing along and heard a bump from the bow, then a bigger bump from the impeller, and finally a serious thud from the fin as a branch floating just below the surface dragged along the bottom of my boat.  A few little branches were above the surface to one side, but the main branch was about 3 inches in diameter and right at the surface.  I never saw it coming and hit it at steady state speed.

I finished the third and fourth pieces and wondered if I had gotten away without damage.  The Speed coach was still reading right and I didn’t sink and the boat tracked OK.  But when I lifted the boat out of the water, I heard a big watery whoosh as the gallon or so of water that had collected in the stern compartment rolled to the back of the boat.  I modified my grip to try to balance the boat, and then the water rolled to the bow end of the compartment and the boat tipped precariously in that direction.  Eventually, I managed to get the boat supported with two hands and my head in a reasonably stable configuration and slowly made my way to put it back on the rack.

On the rack, I lifted the stern end on a couple of blocks of wood and the water started to dribble out of the drain hole at the bow end of the compartment.  I went to the stern and inspected the damage.  The fin had pushed up and back in the fin box and sheared the caulking.  From the vertical and horizontal play in the fin, it was obvious that it had also caused the fin box to delaminate from the inside surface of the hull at the stern end.  I believe at this point, I did some swearing.

I packed myself up and left the boat to drain while I formulated my plan.

Tuesday: 2 x 2500 / 5′ rest – I really just didn’t want to do it

Weather:  Cloudy, cool, around 48F.  Moderate wind 5 to 10 mph from the SW.  This was a headwind going up river.

My original plan was to do 5 x 2K / 5′ rest.  While I drove to the river, I decided to change that to 4 x 2500 for a couple of reasons.  I was running a bit late and I wanted to save the 5′ rest time and end up back at the right end of the river at the end of the last rep.  I wanted to keep working on steering and 2.5km includes both the s-turn and the bridge in the rep.

So, my modified plan was

  1. 4 x 2500 / 5′ rest
  2. pace: faster than 2:15
  3. rate:  target r28 or higher (this was the highest priority for me.  I would really like to get my race rate up to 29 or 30, and right now it is more like 27)

So, I did a very quick warmup and then dove straight into my first rep.  I had a tail wind and I was holding 2:10 or better without a lot of trouble.  I steered around the Brandeis boats, and in the s-turn, I passed the coach from LaSall College who was doing steady state.  I was happy with the line I took through the turn and the bridge was good too.

But it felt like so much work!  I was tired and I wasn’t having much fun.  After I finished, the dude from Lasall eventually rowed up and we had a nice chat about the HOCR.  He rowed in the Master 4s with the Riverside Boat Club.  I decided that I better get going on my next rep, so I started up and when the Speedcoach clicked over to 4000m, I took up the rate and discovered just how much headwind there was.  It was a lot of work to get the split down below 2:20.  I was still not having much fun.  I threaded the needle through the bridge and then passed my friend Bruce going the other direction in front of the watch factory.  I did the s-turn just right and then slowly, inexorably counted down the meters to the end of the piece.  My heart rate was reasonable, and I was not in any way in distress, but gosh it was kind of miserable.

It was also getting a bit late.  I realized that I would end up being a bit late for my first meeting if the traffic was bad, but I decided to go do the next rep anyway.  At least I did for the first 250 meters.  At that point, I just didn’t want to do it any more.  So I stopped.  Then I turned around and rowed back  to the dock and called it a day.

This is basically something that I don’t do.  I will fail on reps, miss targets, steer into weeds and cheat on rests, but I don’t think I can remember another time where I just quit on a workout.  Thinking through it, it seems pretty clear what happened.  I have been focused with singular intensity on the HOCR.  Knowing that I would be rowing in that event was an incredible tool to stick with really hard workouts.  And I felt like I did my best in the day.  I have another event coming up, but it certainly is not anything like the HOCR.  I certainly want to do my best, but I think I don’t have the drive to push the high intensity as hard as I was, at least for a week or so.

I think it is probably a good idea to give myself a break.  Congratulate myself for a good run up to last weekend and focus on maintaining and building my base for now.  I will probably pull back to one or two high intensity sessions per week until the race on Nov 7th.  After that, I will be putting a new training plan into place and focusing on my next set of goals.

Screen Shot 2015-10-20 at 7.10.40 PM Screen Shot 2015-10-20 at 7.10.25 PM

Start_|_Dist_|_Split_|_Pace_|_Strks__|_Rate_|_DPS_|_AvgHR_|_Remarks
00020_|_0980_|_05:19_|_2:42.7_|_101___|_19.0_|_09.7_|_116___|_w
01000_|_2500_|_10:45_|_2:09.1_|_297___|_27.6_|_08.4_|_162___|_m
03500_|_0500_|_03:11_|_3:11.3_|_057___|_17.9_|_08.8_|_128___|_r
04000_|_2500_|_11:36_|_2:19.1_|_315___|_27.2_|_07.9_|_168___|_m
06500_|_2340_|_14:01_|_2:59.7_|_277___|_19.8_|_08.4_|_132___|_c

Dist__|_Time__|_Pace___|_Strks_|_SPM__|_DPS__|_AvgHR_|_Remarks
00980_|_05:19_|_2:42.7_|_101___|_19.0_|_09.7_|_116___|_warmup
05000_|_22:21_|_2:14.1_|_612___|_27.4_|_08.2_|_165___|_Main set
00500_|_03:11_|_3:11.3_|_057___|_17.9_|_08.8_|_128___|_rest meters
02340_|_14:01_|_2:59.7_|_277___|_19.8_|_08.4_|_132___|_cool down
08820_|_44:52_|_2:32.6_|_1047___|_23.3_|_08.4_|_146___|_Total

Tomorrow:  Steady State.  4x3k/1′ rest r20, HR cap 150

4 x20′ / 1′ rest @ 185W w/ lactate

It was freezing this morning.  About 28F, so I decided to erg instead of rowing outside.

Plan called for steady state. So…

  1. 4 x 20’/1′
  2. ramp pace over first 10 minutes (5′ @ 2:15, 5′ @ 2:10, then 2:04 the rest of the way)
  3. lactate test at 60 minutes.

4x20 Screen Shot 2015-10-19 at 4.24.26 PM

So, in a nutshell, here is a real life example of how uncorrelated HR and lactate can be under different circumstances.

lac and HR

So compare yesterday and today.  power within 2 watts.  Same exact warmup process. Lactate reading was 0.3 higher today, but HR was 16 beats higher.  Thats more than 12% of HRR different.

I was in a different place, at a different time of day, and the room was definitely a bit warmer.  I had good airflow in both cases.

The conclusion that I am drawing is that I will continue to use 60′ lactate readings as a measure of intensity.  2.3 is above the high end of what I really want to see, but I don’t want to change training intensity based on a single reading above the limit.  So, I think I will hold at 185W, and continue to test.  If I read above 2.0 for the next workout, then I will drop 5W.

Tomorrow:  Back on the water for a 5x2K / 5′ rest at head race pace and r28.

Sunday: 3 x 20′ / 1′ rest

I had intended to take today as a rest day, but I was feeling antsy.  So, I decided  to do a recovery/endurance session and keep it really tame.

Plan:

  1. 3 x 20′ / 1′ rest
  2. slow start: 5′ at 2:15, 5′ @ 2:10
  3. rest of the workout at 2:04 and r18
  4. Measure lactate at end of workout.

Screen Shot 2015-10-18 at 4.53.51 PM Screen Shot 2015-10-18 at 4.54.14 PM

Workout Summary – Oct 18, 2015
–_|_Total_|_-Total-_|_–Avg–_|_-Avg-_|_Avg-_|_-Avg-_|_–Avg–_|_-Avg_|_-Avg
–_|_Dist-_|_-Time–_|_-Pace–_|_Watts_|_SPM-_|_-HR–_|_-%HRR–_|_-DPS_|_-SPI
–_|_14432_|_60:00.0_|_02:04.7_|_180.4_|_17.9_|_126.8_|_ 58.7% _|_13.5_|_10.1
Workout Details
#-_|_SDist_|_-Split-_|_-SPace-_|_Watts_|_SPM-_|_AvgHR_|_Avg%HRR_|_DPS-_|_-SPI

01_|_01131_|_05:00.0_|_02:12.6_|_150.0_|_16.4_|_105.0_|_ 43.3% _|_13.8_|_09.1
02_|_01167_|_05:00.0_|_02:08.5_|_164.8_|_17.2_|_118.3_|_ 52.7% _|_13.6_|_09.6
03_|_02424_|_10:00.0_|_02:03.8_|_184.7_|_18.5_|_128.2_|_ 59.7% _|_13.1_|_10.0
04_|_04855_|_20:00.0_|_02:03.6_|_185.5_|_18.1_|_127.8_|_ 59.4% _|_13.4_|_10.2
05_|_04855_|_20:00.0_|_02:03.6_|_185.4_|_17.9_|_132.1_|_ 62.5% _|_13.6_|_10.4

Lactate reading at the end: 2.0.  I have done this exact session the last three Sundays. Each Sunday has been the day after a race, so my level of fatigue should be roughly similar.   Here are the lactate measurements

  • October 4th: 3.2 (182W)
  • October 11th: 2.2 (184W)
  • October 18th: 2.0 (185W)

Looks like progress to me.  It is really strange to me how long my HR needs to be to keep below 2.0mmol/l lactate, but I like the trend that I am seeing.  So, I’m going to keep inching the power up a watt at a time and measuring lactates at the 60 minute mark.

Tomorrow:  It looks like it is going to be about 30 degrees in the morning and I don’t really feel like freezing my ass off.  So, I think I will go erg at work.  Probably a 4 x 20′ endurance session.

Head of the Charles Videos

Complete with telemetry.  Data collected by RIM.  Exported as TCX.  Imported into Dashware and merged with the GoPro video.

First part from before the start, through the BU bridge, around the magazine beach turn and into the powerhouse stretch

Second part through the powerhouse stretch around the weeks turn, through the anderson bridge and into the big turn.

Third part, through the rest of the big turn, through the Eliot Bridge and around the turn to the finish.

Head of the Charles !!!!!

Holy Shit!  Nothing compares to this regatta!  The organization is amazing.  The competition incredible.  The course challenging.  The scenery beautiful.  The people friendly.  It absolutely should be on every rowers bucket list!

The weather was challenging.  It was sunny and 47F, but windy as hell.  The wind was from the West blowing 15mph gusting to 25.  The course curves all over, but that is generally a head wind.

Screen Shot 2015-10-17 at 7.03.34 PM

Before the race, the water in the basin was terrible.  Lots of waves, and great gust of wind.  It made warming up basically impossible.  We all just huddled in a clump as close to the Cambridge shore as they would let us until the called us to the start chute.

Over a period of about 10 minutes I listened to them start all the Grand Master (50+) singles, and they eventually called me up.  “Mr. Smith, on the paddle please”. “Firm it up Mr. Smith”.  Mr. Smith, ROW!” and I was on the course.  And greeted with huge gusts of wind right away.  The wind funneled through the BU bridge and tried to toss my oars around.  I felt like I was not making much progress, but I noticed that my gap to the guys behind me was actually getting a bit bigger.  That calmed me down a bit and I emerged from the bridge and began battling around the Magazine Beach turn.

With the waves and the wind, I didn’t feel to comfortable hugging the buoy line, so I hung off of it, probably a bit too far, maybe 60 feet or so.

I passed boat number 34 about 5 minutes into the race, in front of Riverside Boat Club. Then I was into the Powerhouse stretch.  By the sixth minute I had passed another boat, and I was chasing down a third.  He was to my starboard and it looked like he was going to the Cambridge side arch of the bridge.  I was lined up to the cambridge side of the center arch.  Then the guy turned pretty sharply to use the center arch and cut across my bow, maybe about 2 boat lengths ahead of me and settled in along the boston side buoy line.

This turn of events motivated a higher level of effort.  I think he was bow number 33, but I can’t quite make out the number  in the video.  Coming out the cambridge side arch was another sculler, but I was much more focused on #33.  We were barely oars length apart as we cruised up the straight bit between the two bridges, and I crawled up on him.  I drifted away from him, and then realized that I couldn’t do that and make the center arch, so I turned back to my line.  Hell, I was the overtaking boat.  I deserve the line I want.  So I went straight for the arch.  We were side by side going under the bridge and we clashed oars twice.  Not badly, just a couple of clicks and then I put a bit more distance on him and pulled away.

Then we approached the “Weeks turn” (dramatic music plays in background).  The Weeks turn is a 90 degree turn under a foot bridge.  The tricky part is keeping a straight line for about 2/3 of the distance from the Western Street Bridge to Weeks, and then turn for the center arch.  I thought I did it just right, but looking at the GpS data, I drifted a bit toward the cambridge side during my 40 strokes, and so my turn was sharper than it needed to be, and I did it about 5 strokes too soon.  So, I hit the arch in the right place, but my line was not pointed right at the Anderson bridge, and I needed to do a bit more steering through the Weeks to Anderson stretch, and I swung way wider through this bit than I should have.  It probably cost 5 seconds or so compared to a course along the red buoy line.

As I approached the Anderson Bridge, there was a sculler crawling up on me.  It was obvious that he was faster than I was, and so I did my best to figure out what line he wanted and let him have it.  This bit of the course is quite broad and you want to take a straight line from Anderson to the apex of the big curve around to the CBC boathouse and the Eliot Street bridge.  Looking at the map, I think I steered this part right and managed to stay clear of the fast guy as he passed me.  (He ended up finishing 7th!)

Around the big turn, I stayed a bit too far away from the buoy line because of the wind and my lack of confidence steering a tight line.  This probably cost me another 5 or 10 seconds.  But I ended up on the right place for the Eliot street bridge and managed the cross over to the other side of the river for the final turn with no real drama.  I might point out that my heart rate was going a mile a minute, and I was feeling pretty awful, but I knew that the end was just a kilometer away and nothing was stopping me now.

Even better, when I came out from under the bridge, I spotted a sculler a few boat lengths ahead of me, and as we went around the turn, I heard an announce call out his name and number.  It was Heri from Quinsigamond, who I’ve rowed with a few times before.  I decided to see if I could catch him at the finish.  I nudged the rate up a little and concentrated on trying to keep my rowing clean and I could see that I was pulling up to him.  Strange to say, but I was wishing that the finish line was further away.  Over the last 50m or so we were stroke for stroke, side by side.  I think I ran out of race course before I caught him, but it was an awesome way to finish the race.

Here is the line that I steered.

First part of the race, through the first mile and a bit.

Screen Shot 2015-10-18 at 10.36.38 AM

Ideally, a little closer to the cambridge shore through te big turn, and a bit straighter from RBC to the bridge.

Second part, last 2 miles

Screen Shot 2015-10-18 at 10.35.30 AM

Steering error through the Weeks bridge.  Drifted to far to cambridge side and started turn too soon.  Should have kept turning under the bridge, but drifted again toward cambridge side and rowed a big arc to the anderson bridge, vs straight line.  These two errors probably cost about 5 to 10 seconds.  Out of Anderson a good line, but too wide through the big turn, costs another 10 seconds or so.  Then a good line through Eliot and around the final turn.

Split data:  Keep in mind that there was a 15 mph head wind with gusts to 25.  So the splits were slow.  The winner of my event both last year and this year was Greg Benning.  Last year his time was 18:15.  This year 19:25.  Same guy came in second both years and his times were similarly slower.  As I figure it, the head wind was about a 7 to 8 second tax on pace on average over the whole course, and a lot of the time it was a cross wind.  During gusts when I was pointing to the west, I was way slower than 2:30.

Screen Shot 2015-10-17 at 6.48.33 PM Screen Shot 2015-10-17 at 6.48.20 PM

Start_|_Dist_|_Split_|_Pace_|_Strks__|_Rate_|_DPS_|_AvgHR_|_Remarks
00020_|_0120_|_01:24_|_5:50.0_|_019___|_13.6_|_06.3_|_121___|_w
00140_|_4760_|_22:18_|_2:20.5_|_602___|_27.0_|_07.9_|_176___|_Race!
04900_|_4620_|_29:15_|_3:09.9_|_497___|_17.0_|_09.3_|_133___|_c

So, the pace was slow.  I was happy with my stroke rate for the amount of wind.  I managed to hold a 27 in rougher conditions.  I still need to work on efficiency so I can get that up closer to 30.  The HR is crazy high!  The closest thing that I’ve seen to this was a 5km piece on Quinsigamond when it was really hot.  I’ve never had my HR this high for that long in a race.  Part of it might have been race nerves, but I think I just pushed it really hard.  Right to the edge of what I could do, and I’m happy with that.  I feel like I gave it my best possible effort for where my fitness is now.  I also think the taper worked well.

Results:  I finished 24th of 59.  14.59% off the winners time.  I would have finished 26th, but two guys with raw times faster than mine were penalized, dropping the behind me, so good for me rowing clean!  My official splits are right in line with my overall results.  My first split was 28th fastest, second was 27th, third was 27th, and fourth was 24th.  So, a reasonably strong finish.  My broad objective was to finish in the middle third, and I was around the 40th percentile.  Throw in the fact that I rowed with no penalties, and I didn’t run into anything, I think I have to consider it a brilliant outing.

So, I’m still mulling over the conclusions to draw from this.  First, I can’t wait to do it again, and I’m a bit bummed that I will have to wait through the lottery for multiple years to get another crack at it. Second, I am sure that I can do better.  The improvement comes in three areas.

  1.  Fitness:  Based on the lactate testing that I have been doing over the past few weeks, my aerobic base is no where as good as it was in the winter of 2013-2014.  If I can design a training plan that includes more base work and be very diligent about getting my work in at 2.0mmol/l, I am certain that I can get 2 or 3 seconds per 500 faster.  That will be the goal for next summer.
  2. Steering:  The key to this is learning the art of steering with one of those ridiculous mirrors.  I will start with it next spring and make it a project.  The other part is to continue to practice the course.  I think I will continue to make weekly trips to the Charles next summer, even if I don’t make the draw.  If I can master the Weeks bridge, I’ll get another 5 to 10 seconds.  If I can run the buoy line on Magazine beach and the big turn, another 10.
  3. Technique:  Always needs attention.  Improving my finishes and trying to miss less water at the catch.  I think I should seek out some coaching in the spring to work on the mechanics of my stroke.  Not sure how much this will yield.

Put this together, I think it could be 30 seconds off my time, which would get me in the top 20.  I don’t see a practical way to get fast enough to earn a guaranteed entry.  I’d need to get more than a minute off my time to do that.  I guess I am consigned to the lottery.

I’ll post some videos after they finish rendering and uploading.

Friday: Rowing the HOCR course

Weather:  Sunny, nice temp, around 60.  Quite windy, about 15 mph gusting to 20 from the West.

Plan:  Row the course a stately pace, count strokes to critical turns and follow the planned line through the most challenging parts of the course (Weeks, Anderson  and Eliot).  Return down river in the travel lane.

Screen Shot 2015-10-16 at 8.07.19 PM Screen Shot 2015-10-16 at 8.07.05 PM

Well, it didn’t work out that way.  It was like merging on to a super highway.  There were so many boats!  I was almost always two abreast with another boat, and close on the tail of a boat, with yet another boat crawling up my stern.  And since most of these boats were eights, fours and quads, I felt the need to push the pace a bit more than I originally intended.  It was also generally into the teeth of the head wind.

I must admit though, that nerves and adrenaline played a part.  Finally, in the critical bits, like counting the strokes from the Western Ave bridge to my turn toward the weeks footbridge, I wanted to do that stuff with close to race pressure so that I would have a better feel for trying to get my points and find my line.  At any rate, I probably pushed a touch harder than I should have, but it was a lovely row.

tart_|_Dist_|_Split_|_Pace_|_Strks__|_Rate_|_DPS_|_AvgHR_|_Remarks
00020_|_0440_|_02:27_|_2:47.3_|_044___|_17.9_|_10.0_|_133___|_w
00460_|_3480_|_17:00_|_2:26.6_|_365___|_21.5_|_09.5_|_165___|_m
03940_|_7180_|_39:07_|_2:43.4_|_737___|_18.8_|_09.7_|_142___|_c

Dist__|_Time__|_Pace___|_Strks_|_SPM__|_DPS__|_AvgHR_|_Remarks
00440_|_02:27_|_2:47.3_|_044___|_17.9_|_10.0_|_133___|_warmup
03480_|_17:00_|_2:26.6_|_365___|_21.5_|_09.5_|_165___|_Main set
07180_|_39:07_|_2:43.4_|_737___|_18.8_|_09.7_|_142___|_cool down
11100_|_58:35_|_2:38.3_|_1146___|_19.6_|_09.7_|_149___|_Total

The rules for practice day are to launch from your launching site and proceed up river along the course to the end, then go all the way back to the start, and then follow the rest of the course back to your launching dock.  So I did the last 3.5km of the course, and the paddled to the start and then did the first 1km of the course.  This was the fiestiest traffic of the bunch.  I was sandwiched between 2 eights, and there were a other boats along side as we squeezed through the BU bridge.  I was glad to peel off to the dock.  I’d had enough of rush hour traffic.

After my row, I drove over the the finish area and picked up my registration packet.  I guess I am now official.

Forecast for tomorrow morning is 47F, wind building from W 10 mph at 9am to 12mph at 10am.

I’m bow number 36 in event #4 (Grand Master Men’s 1x).  Live stream is at this link:

http://www.hocr.org/the-regatta/live-webcast/

Thursday: Last day of Taper

Weather:  Perfect.  Flat calm, mist on the water.  Sunny.

Plan:  The taper plan called for a single high intensity interval, but I decided to deviate from that.  I wanted a bit more steering practice and a bit more rowing at something closer to head race pace.  High intensity intervals for me are around a 2:00 pace, while head racing is closer to 2:10.  So, I elected to do 3 intervals at that pace.

Screen Shot 2015-10-15 at 9.43.55 AM Screen Shot 2015-10-15 at 9.43.42 AM

First interval was down river through the bridge.  Second river was upriver through the bridge.  Third interval was around the s-turn.  The rest of the row was SBR, slow roll ups and attempts at rowing “clean” (no touching the water on recovery).

Start_|_Dist_|_Split_|_Pace_|_Strks__|_Rate_|_DPS_|_AvgHR_|_Remarks
00020_|_2120_|_11:07_|_2:37.2_|_207___|_18.6_|_10.2_|_132___|_w
02140_|_0500_|_02:06_|_2:05.8_|_056___|_26.7_|_08.9_|_162___|_m
02640_|_0860_|_04:44_|_2:45.3_|_091___|_19.2_|_09.5_|_134___|_r
03500_|_0500_|_02:04_|_2:03.8_|_059___|_28.6_|_08.5_|_167___|_m
04000_|_0500_|_02:48_|_2:47.6_|_057___|_20.4_|_08.8_|_148___|_r
04500_|_0500_|_02:06_|_2:06.4_|_061___|_29.0_|_08.2_|_168___|_m
05000_|_1340_|_11:37_|_4:20.1_|_233___|_20.1_|_05.8_|_141___|_c

Dist__|_Time__|_Pace___|_Strks_|_SPM__|_DPS__|_AvgHR_|_Remarks
02120_|_11:07_|_2:37.2_|_207___|_18.6_|_10.2_|_132___|_warmup
01500_|_06:16_|_2:05.3_|_176___|_28.1_|_08.5_|_166___|_Main set
01360_|_07:32_|_2:46.1_|_148___|_19.7_|_09.2_|_139___|_rest meters
01340_|_11:37_|_4:20.1_|_233___|_20.1_|_05.8_|_141___|_cool down
06320_|_36:32_|_2:53.4_|_764___|_20.9_|_08.3_|_142___|_Total

HOCR Steering Notes

I’ve read and watched a bunch of different descriptions of the best line to take through the course.  I decided to try to put it all on a map so I can try to memorize it.  The key thing for me was to try to understand roughly how many stroke it is between different points in the race and where I need to take steering actions.  Apparently the turn for the Weeks bridge is a big one that you can mess up by going too soon or too late.

Screen Shot 2015-10-14 at 4.14.54 PM

Wednesday: 2 x 500 – Taper

Back to lovely weather.  Sunny, mid 50s, SW wind 5-9 mph.  Enough wind to noticeably impact splits and make the boat feel heavy when heading up river, but no chop.

Plan:

  1.  Warmup with pick drill, SBR, slow roll ups and a few 20 stroke bursts at head race pace an rate.
  2. 2 x 500 / 500m rest at ~ 2:00 pace and ~28-30 rate.
  3. Both intervals through the bridge to force me to pay attention and steer at full pressure.
  4. Do the s-turn at head race pressure for more steering practice.
  5. Cool down with SBR, slow roll ups and “rowing clean”

Screen Shot 2015-10-14 at 11.27.19 AM Screen Shot 2015-10-14 at 11.27.07 AM

Start_|_Dist_|_Split_|_Pace_|_Strks__|_Rate_|_DPS_|_AvgHR_|_Remarks
00020_|_3980_|_21:21_|_2:40.9_|_429___|_20.1_|_09.3_|_130___|_w
04000_|_0500_|_02:03_|_2:03.0_|_059___|_28.8_|_08.5_|_165___|_m
04500_|_0500_|_03:08_|_3:08.1_|_058___|_18.5_|_08.6_|_132___|_r
05000_|_0500_|_01:58_|_1:58.5_|_059___|_29.9_|_08.5_|_165___|_m
05500_|_0200_|_01:24_|_3:31.0_|_023___|_16.4_|_08.7_|_136___|_r
05700_|_0160_|_00:40_|_2:06.2_|_019___|_28.2_|_08.4_|_147___|_m
05860_|_0540_|_03:03_|_2:49.4_|_062___|_20.3_|_08.7_|_143___|_r
06400_|_0500_|_02:06_|_2:05.8_|_061___|_29.1_|_08.2_|_167___|_m
06900_|_2000_|_11:10_|_2:47.5_|_230___|_20.6_|_08.7_|_142___|_c

Dist__|_Time__|_Pace___|_Strks_|_SPM__|_DPS__|_AvgHR_|_Remarks
03980_|_21:21_|_2:40.9_|_429___|_20.1_|_09.3_|_130___|_warmup
01660_|_06:48_|_2:02.8_|_198___|_29.1_|_08.4_|_164___|_Main set
01240_|_07:35_|_3:03.6_|_143___|_18.8_|_08.7_|_137___|_rest meters
02000_|_11:10_|_2:47.5_|_230___|_20.6_|_08.7_|_142___|_cool down
08880_|_46:54_|_2:38.4_|_1000___|_21.3_|_08.9_|_139___|_Total

Happy with the workout.  The first 500, I cut too close to the shoal on the western side of the channel and my oar blade hit the sand bar at the catch.  A bit of a fright, but I managed to recover without losing a lot of pace.  The second 500 was quick because of the tail wind and I had no steering issues.  Good line up and no pace impact.

I finished the second 500 on the far side of the bridge, so I started a power 20 just before the bridge on the way back and carried it through, just to keep myself on my toes.  Then, when I was a 100m before the s-turn, I brought it back up to pace.  I hit the right line going into the turn, but I let myself run out a bit wide coming out of the initial turn.  You can see the rate popping up as I try to get back on line, then drop back down once I have my point to the exit of the turn.  Coming out of the turn, I ran into a gust of wind and pushed it to keep the pace on target.  I’ll have to be careful to do a better job rolling with the punches in the race to avoid burning myself out in the turns.

Tomorrow:  1 x 500, last day of taper, then load up my boat.  Drop off is on Friday, when I will do a low impact paddle of the course in the afternoon.  Then its race day.