Rowing With The Crickets

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Buddy Holly in the foreground and The Crickets in the background.

Today’s musical accompaniment for indoor rowing included a Buddy Holly song from the 1950s.  The band was called “The Crickets” and the particular song being performed when the image above was originally formed was called Peggy Sue. Buddy Holly does some interesting, innovative things with the vocals when he sings this particular song.

One of the things that impresses me the most about Buddy Holly is that he looked like a total nerd or geek (although I don’t think either of those words existed in the 1950s), but his singing and musical talent are top notch.  For those of you who are too young to know anything about Buddy Holly, he was a pioneer in American popular music and he died at the very young age of 22.  Cause of death:  airplane crash when he was a passenger in an airplane which was flying in bad weather that required flying by instruments but the pilot was not certified as qualified for instrument flight. The photo below shows a signpost near where Buddy Holly died when the airplane crashed.

signpost-near-where-buddy-holly-died

Today’s indoor rowing accompaniment to the Buddy Holly song and other 1950s music was mainly a 30 minute piece with a target pace of 2:10/500 meters. I’m taking a break from the series of 5,000 meter season bests, because I don’t want to overdo it with the 5K season best efforts.  The effort level for the 5Ks has risen to the level that I should probably do no more than from one to three per week at the most recent effort level.  But if the 5K pace raises very much at all, I’ll have to limit them to no more than one per week.

Today’s main rowing piece was preceded and followed by 10 minutes of warmup and down.

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Warmup was 10 minutes. This was the warmup finish screen.
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Finish screen view for the 30 minute portion.
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RowPro session report
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RowPro graphs
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This is how the graphs are displayed in the Concept 2 online logbook.
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Warmdown was 10 minutes. This was the warmdown finish screen.

Happy rowing to musical accompaniment to you.

Doing 5K To 50s Music

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The Vikings of ancient history did a lot of rowing so this music selection among today’s musical accompaniment was particularly appropriate because of the name of the singing group.

Today’s indoor rowing session was another incremental increase in average pace for the 5K.  Yesterday’s was done at an average pace of 2:06.5/500 meters which was a power level of about 174 Watts. Today’s 5K was done at a pace of 2:06/500 m for the first 4,500 meters and then the pace was increased a bit for the final 500 meters, to bring its average pace to 2:04.9/500m which was a power level of about 180.7 Watts. That difference in pace of less than 2 seconds/500 meters and in power of about 7 Watts more was enough of a difference that I’m categorizing today’s rowing session as “Medium” instead of “Easy”.  Purely subjective, but if you look back through each of the recent, incrementally faster 5,000 meter pieces I’ve done, you can easily see that the heart rate is definitely increasing with each increase in pace for the 5K.

The rowing was fun and the music was too.  I seem to have run out of Appalachian music to listen to on youtube.  And some of the previous music I’d enjoyed, which included “psy trance” and “shuffle dance” “house” music… had grown repetitive and boring.  So today’s choice of music was from the decade of 1950s anno Domini and the playlist included such musical hits of that era as “The Del Vikings singing Whispering Bells“.  There are literally hundreds of ear-pleasing songs and melodies from that nostalgic era, so I may be listening to 1950’s music for a while.

If you are among those who have been keeping up with this blog for a while, you may have noticed that the rowing sessions that are classified as “mentally absorbing” burn more calories per hour than the ones that are classified as “boring”…  It’s true.  The harder you row or work at anything, the more mental focus it requires. The more mental focus required for the rowing… the more fun it becomes, in a jalepeńo-pepper-strangely-pleasant-pain sort of fashion.

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5K finish screen
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RowPro’s session report
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RowPro’s manner of graphing the session.
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Concept2.com’s online logbook manner of graphing the session.
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Warmdown finish screen.

Happy rowing and pleasant nostalgia to you.

 

Climbing Another Rung Up The 5K Season Best Ladder

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The above image is from ebay but it does show a ladder and rungs and someone having fun climbing. A rope ladder is especially fun, rung by rung, since the ladder swings and moves in immediate response to each move made by the person climbing it.

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The rope ladder for sale on ebay looks like so much fun that for a few moments I considered ordering one. But it only has five rungs, so the fun would be of very short duration.

The “ladder” I’m currently climbing is a bit of fun for a similar reason, because each subsequent 5K in this series of 5,000 meter season bests is slightly faster than and directly related to the average pace of the previous 5K.

Today’s target pace for the 5K was 2:08/500 meters, which was 1/10 second faster than the overall average pace for yesterday’s 5K.  That target pace was maintained through the first 4,500 meters and then the final 500 meters was done a bit faster.

The overall effort for today’s indoor rowing is still being classified as “easy” because that’s how it felt and also because of where HR was during the first 4,500 meters. The classification of “easy” or “medium” or “medium hard” etc is subjective and relative to how I remember feeling in other comparable rowing sessions of various effort levels.

The resulting overall average pace of today’s 5K was 2:06.5 so I don’t know yet if tomorrow’s target pace for the first 4,500 will be 2:06 or 2:07.  If I use a pace boat generated by RowPro 5 for the Mac, the pace for the pace boat has to be an even number of seconds, so it would have to be either 2:06 or 2:07.  I’ll choose one or the other or just skip the pace boat and aim for 2:06.5 exactly by trying to keep the average pace 2:06.5 where it is displayed in the field for average pace on the rowing machine’s monitor.

The most important thing about today’s rowing session is that is was not boring.  It was, generally, fun.

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5K finish screen
AAa-Aug-3rd-2017-latest-5K-SB-rpt
session report
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rowpro graphs
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Concept 2 online log’s way of showing the graph.
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warm down finish screen

Happy and generally fun rowing to you.

Add Another Season Best To The Series

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The above images of people focusing on their indoor rowing effort were found on a website called “Breaking Muscle,” in an article on their website called “The 17 Commandments of Rowing-My Journey From Hate to Happiness“.  The author’s first experience with rowing was unpleasant and as a result he “hated” it.  But – he was trying to compete, the very first time he rowed.  It would have been frustrating to a lot of people, I imagine.

My first experience at rowing was the opposite of his experience – it was very pleasant.  So pleasant, that I “fell in love” with it after that first half hour experience.  But I wasn’t competing, during my first experience.  I was doing the opposite – because I realized that I might not be doing it right, I rowed extremely easy, trying to row so gently as to not perspire at all, just to get the feel of it.  The next day, I ordered a Concept 2 rowing machine.

Today’s 5,000 meters was easy, really.  I’m taking my time to the approach of an all-out effort at a 5,000 meter season best.  The effort of today’s 5K raised just a little sweat, but nowhere near enough to saturate a sweatband.

Today’s 5K was done at the average pace of about 2:10 for the first 4,500 meters, then worked harder for the next 300 meters and sprinted almost all-out for the last 200 meters.

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5K finish screen
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warm down finish screen

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Happy and relaxed rowing to you.

 

How People Used To Have Fun Together

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The above screenshot is from one of the youtube video recordings I watched while doing today’s rowing.  It shows people having fun together, the way they used to do so before the days of internet and other modern technology. The above video is appropriately called “Oldtime Dance Party…

Today’s main rowing was only 2.0242914979757% of all the meters rowed today.  The “main” event was to sprint 200 meters from a standing start, for my contribution to RowPro Team’s entry in the c2ctc.com August 2017 challenge.

The remaining 9,680 meters was easy rowing for warmup and warm down, which I won’t bother showing in this blog post.

If the plots for HR look strange in two of the below graphs of HR with stroke rate and pace, that’s because the HR signal wasn’t showing at the start of the 200 meter sprint.  It took about 9 seconds for the heart strap sensor to start transmitting HR signal.

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Happy sprinting to you.

Change Of Plans

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Speaking of rowing plans – this website in the UK might be of interest to anyone who lives nearby in the UK. They also will coach and advise people who are anywhere in the world. Their contact information and prices can be found on their website at Fitness Matters Indoor Rowing. (Rowing is a more well known and popular activity in England, than in most of the US)

Today’s indoor rowing was going to be a final try, on the last day of the month, for a better time in the C2CTC July 2017 intervals challenge.  But when I looked and saw how the others on the RowPro team had done and discovered that there was no point in working for a better time because it would not change my position in the team standings … unless I could do something impossibly faster… I changed today’s plans and decided to do another 5K instead, to beat yesterday’s 5K time and then enter the result into the Concept 2 World Rankings for the current (2018) season.

So far, all of the 5Ks which I’ve ranked this season have been easy.  But… I’ve only done 3 and each subsequent 5K will be a little harder.

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Happy rowing to you.

Beating Yesterday’s 5,000 Meters

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Today’s indoor rowing was done to the accompaniment of Appalachian music and Appalachian flatfoot dancing.  The above screenshot is of one of the youtube videos, called “Flatfooting to “Lady of the Lake“”.  It shows one of the two fiddlers and it also shows the dance floor, which is a square of plywood upon which the Lady of the Lake dances later in the video.

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The music and dancing was quite good, if you like Appalachian music and dancing. I like it a lot…

The rowing session today was 5,000 meters, during which I rowed the first 4500 meters at a pace that was about the same as the overall average of yesterday’s 5K.  For the last 500 meters, the pace was increased a bit. So… yes, I did do today’s 5K in less time than yesterday’s.

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Happy rowing and …. if you are so inclined… happy flatfoot dancing to you.

 

 

5000 Meters To Beat Tomorrow

 

i-can't-even-walkToday was another day with musical accompaniment.  The choice today was among results which came up when Appalachian Gospel was searched for on youtube.  One of the groups included was the one pictured above.  In the recording associated with the above screenshot, they were singing “I Can’t Even Walk“.

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This was a 5K worth watching, though it wasn’t rowing. Love the focused-on-the-race looks on their faces.

Today was almost a non-rowing day, due to problems with an essential major appliance, the refrigerator.  After a few hours of two-minds/one-flesh brainstorming, Diane and I decided to risk the price of a service call and call a repairman instead of giving up on the less-than-a-decade-old current model.

Then… I thought about not rowing and decided that a little bit was better than nothing and settled on doing 5K.  Did it with a very slow start and gradually increasing pace until reaching 4,500 meters and then used the remaining 500 meters as a warm down.  It resulted in a time that should be easy to beat tomorrow, if I want to feel good tomorrow about beating myself. 🙂

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Feeling good and focusing on happiness now that their race is over.

Today’s data is below:

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Happy little bit or a lot of rowing to you.

Rowing A Valley

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A screenshot of one of the bluegrass videos which played during today’s rowing. It is called Appalachian Mountain Bluegrass Dulcimer.

For today’s music, I looked for 1950s Bluegrass playlists on youtube and found quite a few.  They were good background music to most of the rowing, though I found myself tuning them out and sort of not hearing them when I was doing the fastest pace intervals.

The rowing was 10,845 meters divided into 18 intervals of alternating distance and time. Though the total distance rowed today was less than yesterday, more calories were burned.

The approach to the intervals was to start out with the highest effort for the 250 meter interval and then to lower the effort by slowing the pace by 5 seconds/500 meters for the next, a 500 meter interval and then by another 5 seconds for the next, a 750 meter interval and by an additional 5 seconds for the middle interval which was a 1K.

So those effort levels were about 307 watts, 265 watts, 232 watts and 207 watts for the 1,000 meter interval in the middle.  Then the power increased the same way from the 1K to each following interval with power highest for the final 250 meter interval.

The graph of Pace for each of those intervals resembled a valley:

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It was harder to go DOWN into that valley than to climb up out of it, because of the way the rest intervals were arranged, with the shortest rest after the first and hardest interval.  It was fun.

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Happy, healthy and fun rowing to you.

 

Rowing With Hank Williams

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Today for rowing accompaniment I tried youtube again.  The “shuffle dancing” and its music have grown boring.  Tried some other genres, then looked for a playlist of “country music”.  Youtube tends to serve up the most current “country music” and what I heard on those playlists just sounded wrong.  So then I searched for “country western music” and finally settled on a selection that consisted of a couple dozen or more of Hank Williams’ hit songs.

The first one on the list was a song called I Saw the Light, which is one of my decades-old favorites.  It also happens to have been written by Hank Williams himself.

As for rowing, the session today was 10,867 meters divided into 18 intervals.  The first and last intervals served as warmup and warm down.

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Happy rowing to the music or whatever accompaniment you like.