Today’s indoor rowing started with a 20 minute session that included twelve 30 second intervals. It was recorded as a screen recording and uploaded to YouTube as a replacement for the similar one recorded on Dec 31, 2017, which supposedly had copyrighted material (the music that was playing for me in the background). The recording of this session has music playing in the background, that was supposed to have no copyright. But YouTube claimed that a few minutes of the music was copyrighted. So… I deleted that video from YouTube and there is no link for it.
The next rowing session was 30 minutes with 5×4 minute intervals with one minute rest after each interval. That video made it to YouTube without any copyright claims for any of the background music. It’s YouTube link is: Indoor Rowing Workout 30 Minutes With 5×4 Minute Intervals .
After both those rowing sessions were done, there was as 15 minute warmdown.
Today’s indoor rowing consisted of two pieces. The first was a 25 minute session which included some intervals. Specifically, it was 4×4 min r 1 min, with 3 minutes at the beginning and end, for warmup/down. The 25 minute session was recorded as a screen recording with ambient sounds of the room, plus some brief words from me at the beginning. Those brief words were somewhat incorrect, however, because though I intended for the session to be 5×4 min r 1 min, I didn’t allow enough total time when I setup the RowPro session for 25 minutes. It should have been 30 minutes or longer, to include all 5 intervals. As a result, if you watch and listen to the screen recording on YouTube, you will hear me announce that it will be 5 intervals but you will only see four intervals. Also, you will hear a timer beep during the last 3 minutes of warm down, which has to be ignored because there isn’t enough time to do the 5th interval for which the Gymboss interval timer had been programmed to announce with its beeps.
The 25 minute session was deleted from YouTube by me, because of the “copyrighted content” claims made against it. Instead of that one, you can watch this one which is titled Indoor Rowing Workout 30 Minutes With 5×4 Minute Intervals which I did and recorded on January 4, 2018.
NOTE REGARDING VIDEO POSTED TO YOUTUBE JANUARY 3 (25 minute session mentioned above): after posting it to YouTube, I noticed that it had been tagged as “containing copyrighted material” which turned out to be some of the music that was playing over the speakers in the room. YouTube said that because of that, there would be Ads placed on the video and the advertising profits from the videos thus being monetized would go to whoever had claimed copyright rights. So I used YouTube’s tools to “remove” the copyrighted tracks. After taking a long time to re-process and “edit” the video, YouTube announced that it hadn’t been able to remove the song and gave the option of leaving it as is and having ads displayed, or muting the song. So… rather than have ads plastered over it while someone is trying to watch it during their rowing, I chose the “mute” option. The worst case is that there will be blank areas of audio. In the future, I will only have sounds playing from the speakers that are not copyrighted!
ADDITIONAL NOTE REGARDING THIS VIDEO WHICH WAS POSTED TO YOUTUBE: After YouTube “edited” the sound track of the video, the sound track was ruined and the relevant signals (interval timer beeps) are either removed or re-positioned. So … I will put other videos up to replace these, when I can. After those videos are up, I will delete these videos from YouTube. Once that is done, I will also delete the links to them. It has been educational, to learn about how the music industry is listening to the sound tracks of all videos posted in public places on the internet and making copyright claims so that they have the right (and so that they are the only ones who have the right) to “monetize” the video by placing whatever advertisements they like on the video. Screen recordings of indoor rowing sessions aren’t nearly as helpful or relevant if the actual sounds, including the signals from any interval timer used, are audible.
Don’t get me wrong, with regard to anything I’ve said above about copyrighted music. Whoever owns the copyrights should get appropriate payment – but if I’d known that the muted audio of the music I played was recognizable and would in essence make the videos I posted the “property” of copyright holders, with regard to plastering advertisements on them, I would have rowed without any music playing over the speakers.
Here are the screenshots etc for today’s 25 minute piece:
After the 25 minute piece, I rowed for another 40 minutes for the sake of BURNING MORE CALORIES! for the sake of one of the Concept 2 challenges in which I’m enrolled this month. That particular challenge is called The Big Burn and the challenge is to burn at least 20,000 calories while rowing this month.
The second session today was also uploaded to YouTube and it should not have to have its sound track muted or mutilated to remove “copyrighted material,” because the only sounds coming from the speakers during the 40 minutes were “white noise” type sounds of ocean surf. As far as I know, the composer & creator of those sounds (God) has not filed a copyright. The title of the YouTube video version is “Indoor Rowing 40 Minutes For Target Heart Rate” and you can find it on YouTube by clicking that link.
Here are the screenshots etc for the 4o minute session:
Today’s indoor rowing was several pieces, but the main and most fun piece was 40 minutes which included eight 1 minute intervals. A screen recording of the session was uploaded to YouTube with the title “Indoor Rowing 40 Minute Session With 8 One Minute Intervals” Note: This video was deleted from YouTube. A similar one was uploaded to YouTube on Jan 7th, 2018 and you can find it at THIS LINK (see note regarding the YouTube problem, below)
NOTE REGARDING VIDEO POSTED TO YOUTUBE JANUARY 1 (40 minute session mentioned above): after posting it to YouTube, I noticed that it had been tagged as “containing copyrighted material” which turned out to be some of the music that was playing over the speakers in the room. YouTube said that because of that, there would be Ads placed on the video and the advertising profits from the videos thus being monetized would go to whoever had claimed copyright rights. So I used YouTube’s tools to “remove” the copyrighted tracks. After taking a long time to re-process and “edit” the video, YouTube announced that it hadn’t been able to remove the song and gave the option of leaving it as is and having ads displayed, or muting the song. So… rather than have ads plastered over it while someone is trying to watch it during their rowing, I chose the “mute” option. The worst case is that there will be blank areas of audio. In the future, I will only have sounds playing from the speakers that are not copyrighted!
ADDITIONAL NOTE REGARDING THIS VIDEO WHICH WAS POSTED TO YOUTUBE: After YouTube “edited” the sound track of the video, the sound track was ruined and the relevant signals (interval timer beeps) are either removed or re-positioned. So … I will put other videos up to replace these, when I can. After those videos are up, I will delete these videos from YouTube. Once that is done, I will also delete the links to them. It has been educational, to learn about how the music industry is listening to the sound tracks of all videos posted in public places on the internet and making copyright claims so that they have the right (and so that they are the only ones who have the right) to “monetize” the video by placing whatever advertisements they like on the video. Screen recordings of indoor rowing sessions aren’t nearly as helpful or relevant if the actual sounds, including the signals from any interval timer used, are audible.
For today’s 40 minutes, I rowed “like a turtle” and for the intervals within the 40 minutes, I rowed “like a sprinting turtle.” In other words, I deliberately took it easy, based on the advice of a cardiologist, Dr. Joel Kahn, whose book, The Whole Heart Solution, I’m reading. Based on studies done with competitive endurance runners, it seems that those who frequently push themselves long and hard are as likely to die of premature heart attack, as are potato couch (sedentary) people. Bummer. The most enjoyable rowing is to row hard and race, but apparently “a little dab will do,” of the high intensity, fast rowing or running. So… I just had one little dab, of around 80% full-intensity rowing today, during the second-to-last (7th) of today’s 8 intervals.
All in all, it was a quite enjoyable balance of restraint and relaxation of restraint.
Today’s main indoor rowing was a 20 minute session which was recorded as a screen recording, with sound.
On YouTube it is titled “Indoor Rowing 20 Minutes and Twelve 30 second intervals“. You can find it by searching YouTube for that title or by clicking the link in the previous sentence. Note: This video will eventually be deleted from YouTube, when I can replace it with something that has not had its sound track muted and mutilated by YouTube (see note regarding the YouTube problem, below)
NOTE REGARDING VIDEO POSTED TO YOUTUBE DECEMBER 31: (20 minute session mentioned above): after posting it to YouTube, I noticed that it had been tagged as “containing copyrighted material” which turned out to be some of the music that was playing over the speakers in the room. YouTube said that because of that, there would be Ads placed on the video and the advertising profits from the videos thus being monetized would go to whoever had claimed copyright rights. So I used YouTube’s tools to “remove” the copyrighted tracks. After taking a long time to re-process and “edit” the video, YouTube announced that it hadn’t been able to remove the song and gave the option of leaving it as is and having ads displayed, or muting the song. So… rather than have ads plastered over it while someone is trying to watch it during their rowing, I chose the “mute” option. The worst case is that there will be blank areas of audio. In the future, I will only have sounds playing from the speakers that are not copyrighted!
ADDITIONAL NOTE REGARDING THIS VIDEO WHICH WAS POSTED TO YOUTUBE: After YouTube “edited” the sound track of the video, the sound track was ruined and the relevant signals (interval timer beeps) are either removed or re-positioned. So … I will put other videos up to replace these, when I can. After those videos are up, I will delete these videos from YouTube. Once that is done, I will also delete the links to them. It has been educational, to learn about how the music industry is listening to the sound tracks of all videos posted in public places on the internet and making copyright claims so that they have the right (and so that they are the only ones who have the right) to “monetize” the video by placing whatever advertisements they like on the video. Screen recordings of indoor rowing sessions aren’t nearly as helpful or relevant if the actual sounds, including the signals from any interval timer used, are audible.
On the sound track, there are a few words from me at the beginning and three words from me at the end. In between, there is the screen recording view of the RowPro display during the rowing session. I used an early model Gymboss interval timer, for the purpose of including intervals within the 20 minute session, sort of Tabata-style but more restrained on my part.
You don’t have to restrain yourself during the intervals, though, and can go full, all-out Tabata if you like. 🙂
There were twelve 30 second intervals during the 20 minutes. The first interval began a little more than a minute after the actual rowing started and if you play the YouTube recording, you can hear the beginning of that interval and each of the 12 intervals announced with a five second beep-beep-beep-beep-beep. Five beeps at the beginning and five more at the end of each 30 second interval. There is one minute for active rest between each of the 30 second intervals.
If you’re wondering what the word “irregularities” in today’s title is referring to, it was nothing to do with irregularities that are supposedly cured with laxatives – it was irregularities of the heart. I may perhaps have gotten a little bit carried a way when I threw most of my restraint and caution to the wind during the 12th and last interval today. Maybe that was a mistake, I don’t know, but at any rate… the heart threw a bit of a “tissy fit” (or would it be “hissy fit”?) – and became so irregular that I could feel it and the HR display went blank, about 25 seconds before the end of the session. It seems to have returned to normal, but maybe I should have a heart-to-heart talk with it and see if I can find out what’s bugging it. Did it want to row harder? Did it want to row longer? There are other possibilities, of course, but – if it wants to row harder or longer, I’d be happy to oblige. (Humor.)
Seriously, today’s rowing time was way too short, but I’m keeping it short until next year. Next year will begin tomorrow and then I will start working on the Concept 2 challenges for January 2018, which for me will be the Virtual Team Challenge and the January Revolution “Big Burn”. You can read about each of them, if you’re interested, on the page that will open if you click the blue link in the previous sentence.
There was a little more rowing done today than the 20 minute session recorded and uploaded to YouTube. The first time I started rowing, RowPro 5 for the Mac crashed after about 5 minutes. It didn’t exactly crash during the rowing, but the avatar of me rowing and the boat movement froze. All the data continued to be displayed, but I stopped the session because when the top half of the RowPro screen froze, that ruined the recording for YouTube. I’m not bothering to included data for that in today’s blog, nor for the 5 minute warm down session I did after today’s main piece of rowing.
Here’s the stuff relating to today’s main 20 minute session:
Today’s indoor rowing session was put off until it was getting too late to row, because I was engaged in a long telephone conversation. So – rather than totally abstain from any rowing at all today, I changed into rowing clothes and did some extremely slow rowing, while continuing with the phone conversation. Also, I experimented with using a GoPro camera to record the rowing, while having the camera situated on a short tripod and located on the shelf in a closet which was behind the rowing machine.
The result of the GoPro experiment was to learn that its videos of indoor rowing would be of no use to anyone else, because the most important thing for anyone else to relate to in such a video would be what is displayed on the RowPro screen, and it is too far away and unclear to be of any use to anyone who might be looking for a video to “row along with.”
So I didn’t bother to upload the video to YouTube. The next time I try making a YouTube video, it will be with a screen recording while having the screen displaying two windows: The RowPro graphics and the YouTube video I will be watching and using to time the session’s included intervals.
Today’s rowing was 7K. The first half was at an extremely slow pace, because I was simultaneously having a phone conversation and for part of that time was holding the phone with one hand. The second half of today’s 7K was done with an effort that kept heart rate at around 130 BPM.
Today’s indoor rowing session was limited to 30 minutes. But the time involved was quite a bit longer than a half hour, because I tried to use a GoPro camera to record the session. It is the earliest/oldest model of GoPro that I could find, for the sake of getting the cheapest one. So the time above and beyond the 30 minutes for today’s rowing session was spent with learning how to use it, trying it a little bit and then setting it up. Also, I typed a “script,” of what to day at the beginning of the recording.
I have a hunch that the GoPro video I was trying to make wouldn’t have been very usable for the intended purpose.
My intended purpose in making a video recording of an indoor rowing session is so that anyone else who has access to the internet and does indoor rowing – might find it useful as something to “row along with” during one or more of their rowing sessions.
For such a video to be useful to row along with, I think it needs to clearly show the screen for the rowing session. If they can see the screen and what was happening moment by moment, then someone else who watches the video can set up their rowing session for a relevant (though not necessarily same) time or distance and they can “row along,” in a fashion similar to what people find helpful for inspiration when they row online with other people.
So what I did was: set up the GoPro video camera on a tripod and position it as near as possible to the two monitors that I watch while rowing. One of the monitors displays RowPro 5 for the Mac and the other monitor is a small TV connected to an Apple TV which is usually used for displaying YouTube videos.
Before the 30 minute rowing session was finished, the GoPro camera quit recording. At least- it lost its connection to my iPhone. It looked like the battery died. I guess you get what you pay for, and if you want a GoPro camera that will record for 30 minutes or more, maybe you need one of the later, more expensive ones. But I will try it again, because its also possible that the battery just needs to be conditioned. If its a lithium battery, they need to be fully charged and then discharged three times, to be conditioned enough to last an optimal amount of time.
Today’s indoor rowing session was the second experiment in making a screen recording and uploading it to YouTube. Today’s video recording has a sound track which consists of a few spontaneous unrehearsed words at the beginning and then, after the start, there are the sounds of the room and also you can hear the sounds of the YouTube videos I watched.
The title of today’s rowing session screen recording on YouTube is “8K Indoor Rowing 136 Watts Average Pace with Intervals” . Note: This video will eventually be deleted from YouTube, when I can replace it with something that has not had its sound track muted and mutilated by YouTube (see note regarding the YouTube problem, below)
NOTE REGARDING VIDEO POSTED TO YOUTUBE DECEMBER 28: (8K session mentioned above): after posting it to YouTube, I noticed that it had been tagged as “containing copyrighted material” which turned out to be some of the music that was playing over the speakers in the room. YouTube said that because of that, there would be Ads placed on the video and the advertising profits from the videos thus being monetized would go to whoever had claimed copyright rights. So I used YouTube’s tools to “remove” the copyrighted tracks. After taking a long time to re-process and “edit” the video, YouTube announced that it hadn’t been able to remove the song and gave the option of leaving it as is and having ads displayed, or muting the song. So… rather than have ads plastered over it while someone is trying to watch it during their rowing, I chose the “mute” option. The worst case is that there will be blank areas of audio. In the future, I will only have sounds playing from the speakers that are not copyrighted!
ADDITIONAL NOTE REGARDING THIS VIDEO WHICH WAS POSTED TO YOUTUBE: After YouTube “edited” the sound track of the video, the sound track was ruined and the relevant signals (interval timer beeps) are either removed or re-positioned. So … I will put other videos up to replace these, when I can. After those videos are up, I will delete these videos from YouTube. Once that is done, I will also delete the links to them. It has been educational, to learn about how the music industry is listening to the sound tracks of all videos posted in public places on the internet and making copyright claims so that they have the right (and so that they are the only ones who have the right) to “monetize” the video by placing whatever advertisements they like on the video. Screen recordings of indoor rowing sessions aren’t nearly as helpful or relevant if the actual sounds, including the signals from any interval timer used, are audible.
The “136 Watts” is the average of the entire rowing session. The instantaneous effort level was sometimes much lower than 136 Watts and other times much higher. You can see the instantaneous Watts effort level displayed in big blue numbers in the center of the bottom right pane of the RowPro window. The big red numbers in the bottom right of that same pane are an instantaneous reading of heart rate.
One of these days, I might try recording the session using a GoPro camera mounted either on my head or on a tripod. Or both…. to see which one works better. But until then, there’s only the screen recording which shows only one of the two monitors.
All of the 8K was rowed at an easy pace except for the intervals. The first 8 intervals were done at a moderate pace and the 9th & last interval was done at a hard pace. RowPro 5 For The Mac is what was used to display everything on the screen, once the rowing started.
The music was provided by another YouTube video and its name and link are on the second-to-last line near the bottom of this blog post.
The music which played during the first 27+ minutes of this rowing session comes from the YouTube video called HOCR Rowing Power Workout.
Today’s rowing session was recorded and uploaded to YouTube as an experiment. The recording was made using Quicktime to make a “screen recording”. There is no sound, so you can supply your own music if you want sound accompaniment.
I was going to record the ambient room sound, which would have included about 27 minutes of music from the YouTube video HOCR Rowing Power Workout, which is what I watched and what supplied the timing for the nine intervals. But the Mac Mini didn’t have a port for a non-powered microphone, so as a result it is a silent film and you will have to supply your own music. 🙂
The rowing session I did today and which has been uploaded to YouTube is titled “10K Indoor Rowing 92 Watts Average Pace With Intervals“. If you click the link, you can watch it and row along with it, if that floats your boat.
There are 8 intervals which I did at a moderate pace and the last interval was done at a hard pace. “Moderate” and “hard” are subjective, relative terms and they might be something quite different for you.
So if you want to row an easy 10K with a few intervals, you might want to try rowing along. Diane thinks it will be among the most boring videos on YouTube and I’m sure it would be, for many people. But there are a small number of people in the world who do indoor rowing. And of that small number of people, some of them might possibly want to row 10K as a very easy pace, with a few intervals thrown in. 🙂
How do you row and chat via text message at the same time? Its a lot easier on an indoor rowing machine, than in a boat on the water. To do it, you remove your dominant hand from the handle and use the other hand to row with, while holding the handle in the center instead of on one side of the handle. It slows everything down, but you don’t have to totally stop.
That’s what I did today, several times while rowing. It only made the 10K session about 10 minutes longer than it would have been if all rowing had been done two-handed.
Today’s session was 10K with first and last parts as warmup/down and the middle part done while watching HOCR Rowing Power Workout and doing the intervals it includes.
Today I thought I’d be sociable and do some online rowing. So I logged in to Oarbits via RowPro 5 For The Mac to see if anyone was online and available in the general chat room. There were two rowers logged in, so I asked them if they were going to be rowing soon. Depending on what followed, maybe I could row with one or both of them. My question to them is visible in the above screenshot. But I guess neither of them was present at the keyboard of their respective computers, even though they were logged in to Oarbits with their RowPro programs. There was no reaction to my question.
So I found rowing satisfaction by rowing 8K offline and doing intervals in synch with the intervals in the youtube video HOCR Rowing Power Workout.