14K of bliss (rate ladders and a hardish 1K)

The weather was just about perfect.  Not a cloud in the sky.  The temperature started around 50F, and by the time I finished, it was around 60F.  Tee shirt weather!

There was a light, but building breeze from the west.  This averaged around 5mph from the West, which was a head wind heading upstream.

My plan was to do the same workout as Monday.  Rate Ladders.

  • 3′ @ 18
  • 2′ @ 20
  • 1′ @ 22

The length of the river is not precisely right for these ladders, so I just turn around and get going in the other direction.

I am not happy with my boat speed, but I’m not quite sure what’s wrong.  I guess I will just keep working on stroke technique.  Breaking down the stroke into phases:

  • Recovery to Catch:  Inconsistent in terms of my body position and reach.  For some sections of my row today, I felt like I was doing really well getting my body over before I broke my knees and then smoothly moving to the catch position.  I got that “glimpse out of the corner of my eye” feeling on some strokes.
  • Drive:  I was working on building power through the stroke, so easing into the stroke a little bit.  I was also trying to row lighter at r20 and r22.
  • Finish: Very messy.  I am still a little crowded at the finish, mainly due to being about 10 pounds heavier than I should be.  I was working on tapping down early enough and then feathering, but on many strokes, I was getting hung up trying to extract the oars cleanly.

I think I need to add some drills to try to work on specific parts of the stroke.  The good thing is that the boat is setting reasonably well.

My workout took an unexpected turn on my first trip back up the river.  I was coming through the s-turn and I saw the Brandeis boats lining up to go up river as well.  Before I got to where they were, a pair of fours took off side by side with much splashing and squawking from the cox boxes.  Behind them, two pairs (W2-) were turning around and lining up.  I paddled around to the far side of these boats and then took off when they did.  I wasn’t sure exactly what they were working on, but I decided that my plan was to get ahead of them and stay there.  It turned out it wasn’t that hard to do.  They were rating around a 26, and I was rating between 24 and 26 and opening up some distance with them.  Over about 1100m, I managed to put 100m between us.  Pride compels me to point out that the GPS derived pace over this piece was impacted by both current and head wind.  That felt good.  Then it was back to the regular workout.

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Tomorrow:  I think I will do a split session.  About 20 minutes of drills, then some 2′ intervals and then another 20 minutes of drills.

 

 

Monday:14K OTW rate ladders

Partly cloud.  Temps started in the mid-40s but climbed rapidly.  By the time I finished, it was nearly 60F.  Winds were light at first, but built through the session and for most of the time, the wind was out of the west at about 10mph with gusts to 15mph.  It was a nasty headwind going up river.

The plan was steady state rate ladders.  3′ @ 18, 2′ @ 20, 1′ @ 22 over and over again.  Breaks at the ends of the river, but just long enough to turn the boat around.  I am still not happy with my boat speed, but I am setting the boat OK.  The main issue is not being able to really get out over the footstretcher without hitting the stops on the slide.  My finishes are still rough, but improving.

Today, rowing into the headwind was very heavy work. You can see the 20 second difference in pace and higher heart rates.  The good thing about the river was that even with the wind, there was basically no chop.  It just felt like I was dragging a bucket!

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I worked a little bit harder than I should have for an ideal endurance session, but only a little bit.

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Tomorrow:  I have an early meeting, so I plan to do a session around noontime.  I’m thinking that I might take a shot at this month’s CTC.

 

 

Friday: OTW – 1x – 4 x ( 7 x 1′ / 1′ rest) x 3′ rest

Cool, cloudy, Wind was flukey, from the WSW.  Generally about 5mph, but with gusts up to 10mph.

I was originally intending to just do a steady state session, but I was in the mood to try to work on full pressure and rate technique.  I wasn’t in the mood to kill myself, so I decided to do 1 minute intervals at about 26 t0 28 spm.  I can do about 7 of these in in a row on my river, and then I would need to turn around.  I took a bit more rest on the turn arounds.

It was basically a head wind rowing downriver (1st and 3rd set) and a tail wind rowing upriver (2nd and 4th).  Since this is GPS based data, the upriver paces were probably about a couple seconds slower than actual.  And the downriver ones a couple seconds faster, basically enough to counteract the wind.

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I moved the footstretcher one notch to the bow and I was much more comfortable at the finish.  My blade work was really mess though.  I guess that would be expected for my second real outing in this boat.  The slide doesn’t really have quite enough travel to the stern to me.  Whenever I really got out to full extension at the catch, I was running into the stops on the slide.  Things did get better as I went along and in the last set of intervals, I was getting good clearance on recovery and felt a lot smoother with the application of power during the drive.

This weekend, my focus is on yard work.  Time to get all the flower beds in shape for the summer. So basically 4 hours of low intensity exercise per day.  I might wear a HR strap to get an idea of what kind of aerobic benefit it has.

Monday: 14K Steady State OTW

Rowing out of Boating in Boston in Newton.  In a borrowed boat.  An older Peinert Elite, which was a delight to row.  Light, responsive, stiff and as near as I can tell, a bit easier to set than my Fluid.

Conditions were cool, drizzly, and completely overcast.  There was a light (1-5mph) wind from the ESE, which was a cross head wind going downriver and tail wind coming back up river.  The river level was high, but the current seemed pretty weak.

The goal today was to get used to the boat, and work on technique.  I tried to respect a HR cap around 155, at the upper end of my endurance zone.  I also tried to keep the stroke rate below 20 so I could work on careful recoveries.

The boat was rigged for someone with slightly longer legs than I have, so it was challenging to finish cleanly, I didn’t have much clearance for my hands and I kept bumping into my stomach.  The temporary solution is to move the footstretcher one click to the bow.  The better, more permanent solution would be to lose 10 pounds!

Actually, I was not unhappy with the setup of the boat.  It was good to  try  to get control of the finishes like this and I also spent a lot of strokes trying to be very careful about blade depth.  Overall, it was a good outing and I was happy that I had not regressed further from the long layoff.

More importantly, it was amazing to be back on my stretch of the river.  There were two boats from Brandeis out with a launch.  The ducks and geese were watching suspiciously and I counted about 5 swans, all at a respectful distance.  It really is a beautiful section of the Charles to row on.

From my launch point, I rowed downriver.  There is about 1000m of twists and turns, culminating in a cut through an island to the beginning of the “good rowing”.  From there, there is a nice wide, straight 1000m section.  Then into an S-turn that spans about 300 meters.  Then another straight section around 800m long.  This one runs in front of the old watch factory in Waltham that is now condos.  Past the watch factory, you squeeze through the eastern arch of stone bridge and then 600 or so meters across the basin to the Moody street Dam and Bridge in downtown Waltham.  All together it is almost exactly 4000 meters from where I launch to the end.

Today, when I cam back upstream, I followed the same path for about 2500m, and then cut over into a long cove.  This cove is always some of the nice rowing.  It i s sheltered on 3 sides and very straight.  Later in the season it gets weed choked, but in  the spring, it is clear water nearly to the end.  Today, I rowed until the speedcoach clicked over 7000m.

Then back down stream all the way to the dam, and then a final leg back home.  On this leg, coming out of the s-turn, I decided to see how things worked at a little higher rate.  It pushed it up to a 24 and focused on trying to keep my finishes clean.  It worked out pretty well, but after about 800m or so, my hands were hurting, and when I took a bad stroke, I decided to call it quits there.  I rowed with square blades for about 1000m, and then tried to row the last 300m or so to the dock as cleanly as I possibly could.  This was entirely for vanity’s sake since I knew the guy who I was borrowing the boat from would be hot seating in after me and I wanted to look my best.

He met me at the dock, we swapped oars, chatted a bit, and then he set out for his row.  I’m sure there is no way he can know how grateful I am.  Getting back in a single on this peaceful river was so incredibly invigorating.

From there I rushed to the airport, zipped through security and had a quick shower in the American Airlines club and got on my plane.  I’m on my way to LA, returning tomorrow evening.  But, I have to say, I am feeling happier than I have in weeks.

=========WORK DATA=================

Total Time     : 75:2

Total Distance : 14109 m

Average Pace   : 2:39.2

Average HR     : 147 Beats/min

Average SPM    : 19.5 /min

Max HR         : 169 Beats/min

Max SPM        : 33.8 /min

===================================

Workout Summary – 2016-05-02-0628.CSV

–|Total|-Total-|–Avg–|Avg-|-Avg-|-Max-|-Avg

–|Dist-|-Time–|-Pace–|SPM-|-HR–|-HR–|-DPS

–|14109|75:02.0|02:39.2|19.5|147.0|169.0|09.7

Workout Details

#-|SDist|-Split-|-SPace-|SPM-|AvgHR|MaxHR|DPS-

01|14109| 1:15:02 |02:39.1|19.5|147.0|169.0|09.7