Tuesday: May CTC

I had a meeting at 8am, so no time for OTW or even a workout before work.  I had a hole in my schedule around lunchtime, so I ducked into the gym to take a crack at the May CTC.

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Being simple minded, I decided to just use 1 minute rests, and target faster than 1:45 for the long intervals and 1:40 for the short intervals.

I was doing the session on slides.

First up was a fletcher warmup.

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Then into the main event.  I felt a little panicky after the first rep, but then settled into a reasonable groove.  I was disappointed to see the wahoo tickr having the same problem with tracking my HR in the later reps.  I has happy that I survived the session.  It was very hard.

So, 13:40.8, an average pace of 1:42.6.  The pace for the long intervals was 1:43.6.  The pace for the short intervals was 1:38.9, so I beat my totally arbitrary targets. (and I felt good about that)

I think in peak form, I could probably maybe do this at 1:40, but for where I am right now, I am pretty pleased.

Tomorrow:  OTW, Steady state.  Probably rate ladders again.

Thursday: 3 x 20′ / 1′ L4

Wednesday:  after getting home around 12:30, I skipped the gym in the morning.  I was hoping to sneak in a workout later in the day, but things got pretty hectic and it was 6:30PM by the time I looked at my watch.  So, it turned into a rest day.  But, I was due.  I had managed to get sessions in every day for the past 7 days.

Today:  In the gym, normal steady state session.  On slides.  Repeating sequences of 4/3/2/1 at 18/19/20/21 spm.  On a static erg, I do these at 10W * stroke rate.  On slides, I scale back by 10 watts, so 18spm is 170W, and so on.

My legs were hurting a bit from my 10K run on Tuesday.  But it didn’t seem to effect anything.

Tomorrow:  OTW, steady state and technique.

2015/2016 Season Retrospective

I have no idea why Concept2 runs the season from May 1st to April 30th, but that’s what they do.  And with the end of another season, its the time for a look back.

I have some mixed feelings about the season.  I couldn’t be happier about my OTW results from last summer and fall.  However, after a very promising start to the indoor season, the wheels really came off in February, and I never really got back to where I wanted to be.  So, I am going into this OTW season with a lower state of fitness than last year.

For the full year, my total meters are almost identical to last year.  But with a higher amount of erg meters and less OTW meters.  You can blame the unplanned rapid rearrangement of my boat by a tree for that.Screen Shot 2016-05-02 at 11.21.41 AM

But under the hood, there is an important difference in the way that these two seasons ended.

Last year I finished strong with big meters in March and April.  This year, not so much.  So, I am leaving this season in a lower state of fitness than last.

A closer look at this season on a weekly level shows how spotty things have been since January.

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Why?  In a word, life happened.  A couple of bouts of manflu, a promotion, some vacation, and a ton of business travel have disrupted my training plans.  I don’t see this as a failure, because I wouldn’t change any of the choices I made, but I do need to think through realistic competitive goals and a reasonable, flexible training plan to get me to achieve them.

I am just about 1% lower total meters and 1% lower total training time for 2015/2016.  My average distance for days rowed is up slightly, which is driven by more erg sessions and fewer OTW sessions (erg sessions tend to be about 20% more meters)

Bt I don’t want that to diminish the good stuff from this season.  I was really happy with how the OTW season went.

Festival Sprints:  1K and 2K sprints. Tough racing in lousy conditions.  Improved on last years results, but not as much as I wanted to.

Cromwell cup:  1k sprint in amazing conditions on a fun course.  Finished second by a fraction of a second in my age bracket in a great race.  Thrilled with the outcome.  The guy that beat me ended up finishing 6th in the nationals.

Masters National Head Race Championships: A 6K head race.  In Lowell on the Merrimac in lousy conditions with a small field.  Finished third, about where I should have, but I was hoping to do better.

Quinsigamond Snake Race: a 4K head race.  Picture perfect conditions.  It was a small field so all the singles were raced in a single flight.  I placed second.  More importantly, I had a duel on my hands for nearly the whole race.  The guy that started one or two places ahead of me was just a hair slower than I was and over the first 1K of the race I slowly closed the gap and we raced side by side for the next 2000 meters.  I’d push, then he’d push, it was back and forth.  In the last 1000 meters, I finally managed to achieve some separation, but it was the most exciting head race experience I have ever had. (tiring too)

Head of the Charles:  A 5K head race.  The big one!  I started 36th in a field of 59 boats in my age class.  It was generally head wind conditions and pretty nasty through the first 1000m.  There were parts of the race where I gave away time by not steering the best line, but looking at the heart rate, I certainly put everything I had into the race.  I’ll remember the last 1000m for the rest of my life.  I was chasing down the guy in front of me and hearing the announcing calling out my name and bow number as I was surging.  We hit the finish line at nearly the same instant (I think he had me by a bow ball), but the feeling of achievement was so intense.

Merrimack Chase:  This was a 4K head race at the beginning of November.  It was windy, but not nearly as cold as past years.  The conditions were choppy through the first 1000m but got a lot better.  I had bow #1 of my class so I had no one to chase.  I managed to put in a good race and won my age bracket.  A great way to finish off the season.

I finished the OTW season is really good shape for middle distance rowing, and started to use a new training plan based on block periodization.  I started with working on endurance and through November and December, I was hitting targets and even setting some new personal bests.

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I set PBs for the 5000m, 60′ and Half Marathon.  In some cases improving PBs that were 3 or more years old.

So, I might have to set more modest goals for the coming season.  Maybe reduce the number of races I enter, and try to improve technique and diet to compensate for lower training volumes.  I also need to do more research for the optimal approach when time is limited.  There is a lot of contradictory advice out there to be sorted through.

Anyway, it was an exciting and rewarding year.  And there are some new challenges to keep me interested in this coming season.

 

 

 

Sunday: 4 x 20′ / 1′ L4

Nice and easy.  8 x 4’/3’/2’/1′

At home.  Static erg around 5 in the afternoon.  Cool and rainy outside with all the windows open.

 

Tomorrow:  I am flying off to LA for a quick one day trip.  Before I leave though, I have offered the use of a beautiful old Peinert single by a very nice gentleman that also rows out of the same facility that I do.  It will be my first outing of the season in a single.  I plan on a very easy technique oriented session.  Mostly I’m looking forward to being on the water.

 

 

Saturday: 4 x 2K / 4′ rest

At home.  Static erg.  Over cooked the first rep and never really recovered.  Hung in there at progressively slower paces, and finished the set, but at very high heart rates and by digging very deep.

Glad I finished.  Depressed I was that slow.

No rowing on the lake this weekend because of some big collegiate racing going on.  Today it was the NERC, which is the New England championships.  Tomorrow is the Women’s Eastern Sprints, which is for bigger schools.  We lend out our boathouse to some crews and there are tents set up all around so it’s impossible to get to our boats.

Tomorrow:  Recovery row.  Something easy.

Friday: 3 x 20′ L4

Another day, another L4.  Dentist appointment in the morning, so no chance to work out then.  By 4:30 in the afternoon, things were simmering down in the office, and I snuck off to the gym.

Today was a 60′ L4 on slides.  I’m just messing around with different stroke sequences.  Today it was:

4’@ 18 / 3’@ 19 / 2′ @ 20 / 2’@21 / 2’@20 / 3’@19 / 4’@ 18

Basically rowing over a big hill.  Then I did it again.  For the third one, I just did 2 repeats of 4/3/2/1, but I really amped up the power for the last 2 minutes while trying to hold the stroke rate.  This is kind of useful on slides because you need to maintain good stroke mechanics even when you are pulling really hard.  You need to focus on a nice smooth recovery or else the erg gets all kinds of upset with you.

As usual for me right now, the HR was a bit too high.  I’m not overly concerned for a number of reasons.  I’d appreciate feedback on this because my understanding of this stuff is far from complete.

At very low intensities, essentially all the energy comes from the metabolism of fat.  This form of metabolism does not generate any pyruvate, which ends up being lactate.  As intensity increases, this form of metabolism cannot supply enough energy and carbohydrates begin to be used.  This metabolic pathway generates lactate.  This is illustrated as the “crossover concept”, introduced in the mid 90’s in a paper by Brooks and Mercier

Screen Shot 2016-04-30 at 11.57.18 AMLactate is a useful form of energy which is also metabolized in exercise, so at a certain intensity, the production of lactate is balanced with the consumption of lactate.  This results in a stable lactate level that is used to determine the appropriate intensity for maximally effective endurance training.  The level can vary by athlete and fitness state, but is usually between 1.5mmol/l and 2.5mmol/l of lactate.  Exercising above this intensity leads to the incremental accumulation of lactate in the muscles and eventually to exhaustion.  Way above the limit rapidly increases lactate levels  (like a sprint) , a little above the limit results in a slow climb (like a 60′ time trial)

The fundamental theory behind polarized training is that the different energy pathways can be developed independently.  That you increase the ability to metabolize fat by exercising at levels that lean most heavily on that energy system.  That exercising at a intensity where you are at that lactate stasis level will eventually lead to improvement in the steady state power required to be at stasis.  Of course, to succeed in competition, you also need to develop your ability to tolerate high lactate levels, the maximum amount of power you can product, and the neuromuscular coordination to perform at high output levels.  That is why you do the hard part of polarized training.

So, why not just go hard all the time?  Three reasons.  First, it does nothing to help develop your ability to metabolize fat.  Two, it does nothing to develop your ability to metabolize lactate.  Third, it leaves you too depleted to go really hard when you are working on lactate tolerance and power.

So what’s up with how I’m training right now.  I’ve put myself into a holding pattern.  I have no boat, and I am rowing on the water only about once a week.  My job is requiring a lot of travel and a lot more hours than it was before so my ability to maintain a structured training plan is compromised, as is total amount of time I can devote to training.  So, I am focusing on trying to maintain my base aerobic fitness and push a little bit harder than I normally would because I am not putting a lot of energy into high impact sessions.

I am conflicted about this.  I think I would probably be better off if I turned the intensity down on these sessions and made a point of including one sprinty session a week, and I might do that, but for some reason that really isn’t making feel all that happy.  My highest priority is doing whatever I need to do to get my ass onto the erg as often as I can and less about what I do once I am there.

Anyway, back to the workout.  Basically the same deal as the usual.

Now it’s Saturday and I’m trying to figure out when to squeeze in a workout.

 

 

Thursday: 4 x 20′ L4

With my work schedule and stress I am finding that I have no appetite for intense erg sessions.  When I go to the gym, I really want to just relax and space out doing some endurance training.

I found myself in the gym a bit earlier than usual, around 6:30, so I decided to do 80 minutes today.  I decided to start harder and get easier as I went along, but I got tired faster than the intensity dropped so my heart rate ended up higher than I was hoping to see, especially in the last 20 minutes.

On slides.  18spm –> 170 ….21spm –> 200W

 

Wednesday: 30′ L4 – Flying blind!

I arrived home from Denver around 1AM, so I slept in to 7:30 instead of getting up to workout.  By the end of the day, I was a nervous wreck.  Lot’s of work tension these days.  So, I decided to do a quick 30 minute session to just calm myself down a little.

The session was 5 x 6′ L4 sequences (on slides)

2′ @ 22, 2′ @ 20, 2′ @ 18 at just under 10W x stroke rate, so 170W at r18, 190W at r20 and 210W at r22.

Everything was going fine until I was starting the 4th interval, when the batteries in the PM5 died in dramatic fashion.  By dramatic fashion, I mean that entirely theatrically.  It died and came back to life at least 3 times.  Each time it totally reset the session.  Ultimately with around 8 minutes to go, it died entirely and I was rowing completely blind.  As you can see from the HR plot, I seem to need the feedback because my HR went through the roof as I pushed harder and harder while counting strokes to try to hit the rate.

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I really needed this workout.  I felt much more relaxed afterwards.

 

Monday: 4×20 L4

I decided to work from home today.  I caught a evening flight from Boston to Denver, and I wanted to get a bit of extra sleep and avoid driving.

I finished up my meetings in the early afternoon, and decided to do a nice easy endurance session.  I had a little extra time, so I thought 80 minutes of work time would be a good idea.

I started really easy

  • alternating 18 and 19 spm (10W x stroke rate) in 2 minute chunks for the first 20 minutes.
  • (18,19,20,19,18 in 2 minute chunks) x 2 for the second.
  • (4′ @ 18, 3′ @ 19, 2′ @20, 1’@ 21) x 2 for the third
  • (3′ @ 18, 3′ @ 19, 3′ @ 20, 1′ @ 21) x 2 for the fourth.

This worked out really well with me slowly pushing up the heart rate and hitting the top of the UT1 band in the last minute of the 80 minute session.  I felt very fresh after I was done.

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Tomorrow:  I have found a crossfit box about half a mile from my hotel.  I’m thinking that I might take another shot at the CTC.