Some Zippity Doo Dah But Mostly Easy

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The 12 intervals of 30 seconds each were the Zippity Doo Dah part and the rest was easy or super easy.

Today’s rowing session was chosen because it is supposed to help increase a person’s VO2 max, if it is done twice a week on non-consecutive days.   It was a set of twelve 30 second intervals with 2 1/2 minutes rest after each interval.

The workout suggestion was found on a website called Healthy Living (healthyliving.azcentral.com) and was found on THIS PAGE (<-click to get to that page).  It’s a big page, so if you don’t want to bother going to that page, the relevant part of that page where I got the idea for today’s workout was: “VO2 Workout: According to Bicycling.com, sprinting all out for 30 seconds in the red line zone followed by 2 1/2 minutes of easy recovery can improve VO2 max by 3 percent in just four weeks. Do the intervals 12 times per workout, and work out no more than twice a week on nonconsecutive days.”

The website’s definition for the term “red line zone,” is 90% to 100% of maximum heart rate.  But it’s not possible to get heart rate up to maximum or even 90% maximum in a mere 30 seconds, so I just rowed as hard as I could for each 30 second interval.  Except the first one… during which I had to take my hand off the rowing machine handle for a bit, to make an adjustment.

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Most of the intervals spiked up to over 1,500 calories per hour for their brief duration.

Thirty seconds passes very quickly and you can row very hard for 30 seconds.  Most of the 30 second intervals were done at a calories-per-hour rate of between 1,500 and 1,800 calories per hour.

The rowing session was scheduled and done online, but nobody noticed it in time to join, so I had the fun all to myself and rowed alone.

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Happy rowing with a nice measure of zip, to you.

Turin Silver Skiffs Inspiration

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When I searched for images related to today’s inspirational video of the Turin Silver Skiffs 2012, this image showing literal silver skiffs was among the results. It is jewelry from a British website site called Fay Page. The photo is found on a page showing solid silver rowing boats which are made in Scilly, which is a place in England, NOT in Italy (where Turin is located).  You would have to ask the people who design the search engine’s artificial “intelligence” why this jewelry is logically related to the Turin Silver Skiffs sculling race.

The inspiration for today’s workout was a youtube video which I’ve resorted to a few times before but which I’ve not gotten tired of yet.  It is called Turin silver skiffs 2012 and the actual rowing in the video is around 10K. The guy who is wearing the GoPro camera and doing the actual rowing is a young British rower.

Before starting the video and rowing along with it, I chose a custom RowPro session of 11K distance. Then I started the video.  The actual race doesn’t start until a couple minutes into the video, but I started about 40 seconds ahead of the actual race start, since I would be rowing about 1,000 meters further.   The guy who is rowing has to row against the current and much slower than me for the first half of the race course. Then he turns around and rows with the current and has a pace much faster than mine for the second half. I chose paces which resulted in me finishing the 11K at about the same time as he finished 10K.

When people race together online using RowPro and the digitalrowing.com Oarbits server, they usually follow the race with a 9 minute warm down but 4 minutes seemed more than enough to warm down after today’s 11K which was done at less than a race pace.

A minor software glitch showed up when RowPro generated the main session report.  It’s visible on the line for the 16th split.

Though today would have normally been a day for strength-training, I skipped it today and will try to make a spreadsheet for the results of the new strength-training program, before doing the next session, so they can be displayed in this blog.

Here are screenshots from today’s indoor rowing:

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Happy and refreshing rowing to you.

Happy Mothers Day 2017

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The above photo was found on a website/blog called Fit and Fabulous After Forty and was chosen for today because today is Mother’s Day! and its an appropriate-for-the-day picture of a mother and a child rowing side by side on Concept 2 rowing machines.

The photo came up when I searched images for the terms mother rowing and is located in an article where the author writes about her experience of participating in a marathon row. It can be found at THIS LINK.

Today’s rowing session for me was 30 minutes online in a group of 7 people including myself.

One of the other rowers asked if anyone planned to row exactly 7,000 meters in 30 minutes and I volunteered to do that pace, which was 2:08.5/500m.

I maintained an average pace of 2:08.5 for the first 28 minutes, but he rowed a bit faster.  So when the time counted down to 2 minutes remaining, I sprinted a bit.

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Happy rowing, however short or long you stay on the machine.