Training With RowPro
Training With RowPro
Training With RowPro
Digital Rowing Inc. 60 State Street, Suite 700 Boston, MA 02109 USA www.digitalrowing.com [email protected] 2013 Digital Rowing Inc. All rights reserved. The authorized user of a valid copy of RowPro software may reproduce this publication for the purpose of learning to use RowPro software. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted for commercial purposes. Digital Rowing, RowPro, the Digital Rowing logo and the RowPro logo are trademarks of Digital Rowing Inc. Concept2 is a trademark of Concept2 Inc. D002-V004-RHE / 10-20-13
Option 1. No plan You settle on a pattern of workouts you want to do without using a training plan created by a professional.
Benets Youre 100% in control of the rowing you do you choose. You can just do the workouts you like best.
But Youre likely to plateau quickly and not improve much further. Youre likely to be doing more work and getting less benet. It can be harder to stay motivated over the long term.
2. Ready-made plan You get a plan out of a book or by downloading it. The plan is ready-made, i.e. it is not tailored to you.
Likely to be free and readily available. In principle better than rowing without a plan.
Its hard to nd the right plan to t your training intentions. The plan is not tailored to you so is likely to be suboptimal. You need to set up workouts manually on the Concept2 PM.
Benets
But Youre likely to need to pay a substantial fee for each plan. You need to put in a lot of time and effort to get each plan. You need to set up workouts manually on the Concept2 PM
The plan is tailored to you You get a training plan from a so is likely to be optimal. coach or personal trainer. Youre likely to be doing less The plan is tailored to you. work and getting more benet.
1. RowPro plan You get a plan by using the RowPro Training Plan Wizard. The plan is tailored to you.
The plan is tailored to you so is likely to be optimal. Youre likely to be doing less work and getting more benet. RowPro sets up the workouts automatically on the Concept2. You get a lifetime supply of training plans for less than the cost of a single personal plan from a trainer.
You need to pay for RowPro. You need to put in a little time and effort to get each plan.
5. Fits your annual calendar and weekly schedule The next step is to make sure the plan is technically sound, meaning it is based on exercise science. Look for the four tell-tale signs: 1. Manageable weekly volumes (total meters or minutes) 2. Multi-day cycles of directed effort, easy rowing and rest 3. Multi-week cycles of strength, endurance and speed workouts 4. Workouts based on heart rate and stroke rate targets, not pace targets Effective and safe training plans are based on exercise science and are prepared by experts. And unless a plan is specically tailored to your physiological characteristics, it is almost certain to be sub-optimal and may not be safe for you.
If you went to a personal coach or trainer to get a plan from, heres what theyd do: Ask lots of questions about you: your physical state, your exercise, rowing and medical history, and your training intentions, timeline and goals. Possibly test you to measure your tness and/or exercise response. Go off and create a training plan that ts you and your rowing goals, based on your input, and using their standard templates based on exercise science. Explain your plan to you and help you get started. Once youre underway, depending on your deal they might also: Monitor and assess your progress. Collect and analyze your results. Give you feedback and if necessary adjust your plan. The RowPro Training System does all of this and more. RowPro: Uses the Training Plan Wizard to collect all the info it needs about you. Creates a training plan for you based on the choices youve made (purpose, duration, focus, level) in the Training Plan Wizard, together with Jons training plan templates that are fully based on exercise science and reviewed by Olympic Rowing Coach Brian Hawthorne. Tailors the training plan to you based on your physical parameters (age, gender, height and weight), your training history, and for competition plans your racing history, that you enter in your RowPro User Prole and conrm in the Wizard. Sets targets for each training session based on heart rate and stroke rate so the plan automatically adjusts the intensity to match your current level of tness. The result is a training plan closely tted to you and your training purpose. You would otherwise only be able to get such a plan by going to a personal trainer or coach with expertise in rowing and getting them to create a training plan specically for you. Once you start using your training plan, RowPro: Shows you the currently scheduled training sessions and lets you time-shift them a few days either way to t them into the other activities in your life. Sets up each training session directly onto your Concept2 Performance Monitor. Automatically collects your results and provides you with analysis tools so you can easily track your progress. So if you dont have a personal coach or trainer to guide your rowing, its more or less certain that following a RowPro training plan will get you the results you want far better than just rowing your own sequence of favorite workouts. Also, when you row with a RowPro plan, you get some other very important benets:
Your focus changes from "will I row today" to "what am I scheduled to row today? This simple and powerful mind-shift helps keep you rowing. The exercise science foundation ensures you get the right timing and mix of strength, endurance and speed workouts to deliver the results you want. The workout variety improves your motivation and avoids the boredom and muscle 'plateau' of doing the same workout over and over again.
Work and rest Your body doesnt adapt to exercise while you are exercising; it adapts afterwards when you are resting. The proper spacing of work and rest is core to making progress. Cycles Multi-day cycles of work and rest, and multi-week cycles of easy and hard, are both key ingredients in the work/rest patterns for effective training. Ramp up and down When you train effectively, your Endurance, Strength and Speed gradually ramp up, and when you stop training for extended periods, your Endurance, Strength and Speed gradually ramp down. Diversity If you repetitively do the same workout, you will quickly reach a plateau and not progress much further. To continue to develop your Endurance, Strength and Speed, you need to cycle through workouts that stimulate each one in a series of overlapping cycles.
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The sections below provide a step-by-step guide for using the RowPro Training Plan Wizard to get a training plan.
Open Control Center | Training Plans and click Use Wizard to Create Training Plan.
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Your rst option is how extensive you want this training plan to be. Is rowing your main activity or just one segment of a broader training program? Your choices are: Full Choose this if rowing is your main activity and you want the fullest training outcome from this plan. Short Some of the Full plans contain long workouts. If you want to limit the duration of individual rows to 20 minutes max, choose the Short option. Segment Select this option if your rowing is only one segment of a broader training program. This limits the size of the workouts more than the Short option.
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You have a choice about how many weeks your training plan covers. If you choose more weeks you will get a more complete result, however if you need to for example t a school semester or tie into a race date then you can choose a shorter plan. Your choices are: 14 weeks This is the recommended plan duration. The rst 2 weeks are Technique weeks and you can skip those if you wish to make this a 12-week plan. 12 weeks This is a slightly compressed timeframe but still gives a fairly complete result. 10 weeks This is a more compressed timeframe. Us this duration if you need to t a semester or other such time restriction. 8 weeks This is the shortest plan available. It does not give as complete a result as the longer plans but is a useful gap-ller or if you need to t a race date. Once youve made your choices, click Next.
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Your choices are: Weight control Choose this if the result you want most is to lose weight or control your weight. Fitness Choose this if your main intention is to get t or stay t. Also choose this for offseason maintenance or cross-training from another activity. Competition Choose this if your main intention is to maximize your speed for peak racing performance. Note: Although any given RowPro training plan has one of these three training purposes as its primary focus, in practice that same plan will also provide considerable benet for the other two training purposes that are not the specic focus of that plan. So if you feel you have more than one of these training purposes, pick the one you feel most strongly about and make that your focus, and let the others come along for the ride.
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If you have a rowing log you might want to use it to review your rowing history. The Wizard needs to know separately about what youve been doing in the last 12 months and what youve ever done. Note if you havent been rowing but have a signicant history in another activity or sport, use the history related to that instead. Read the items on this form carefully and take a bit of time to get them as accurate as you can. If you have no log, just use your best recollection. But do not exaggerate!
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RowPro training plans for tness are available in more and less intense versions: Cardio For advanced tness or maintenance. Tone up For beginner tness, lite maintenance or recovery.
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RowPro training plans for competition are optimized for the race distance, so for completion plans you need to indicate what race distance you are training for: Marathon Optimized for marathon races. Very long Optimized for half marathon, 60 min and 10,000m races. Long Optimized for 30 min races. Medium long Optimized for 5,000m and 6,000m races. Medium Optimized for 2000m races. Short Optimized for 500m and 1,000m races.
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At this point the Training Plan Wizard uses your personal prole and your rowing and competition background to determine the levels of training challenge appropriate for you. The Wizard takes into account many factors in your personal prole and rowing history when assessing the highest training level you are cleared to use. The Wizard uses slightly different assessment schemes for Weight, Fitness and Competition plans. Within the levels the Training Plan Wizard clears you to row, you can choose whether to go for the highest level you are cleared to row or you can choose a level further down. The main difference between the levels is the volume of rowing you will do each week - the higher the level the greater the volume you will row and the more substantial the training result will be. The following proles will give you a good idea of the 'typical' rower for each level:
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Burn baby burn - Rowed workouts > 30 min, Rowed 3 hrs / wk and 12 hrs / mth, been rowing 4 yrs. Moderate burn - Rowed workouts > 20 min, Rowed 3 hrs / wk and 12 hrs / mth, been rowing 2 yrs. Light burn - Rowed workouts > 10 min, Rowed 1 hr / wk and 5 hrs / mth, been rowing 2 yrs.
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Very t - Rowed workouts > 40 min, Rowed 5 hrs / wk and 18 hrs / mth, been rowing 6 yrs, BMI < 24 (male) or < 22 (female). Fit - Rowed workouts > 30 min, Rowed 3 hrs / wk and 12 hrs / mth, been rowing 4 yrs, BMI < 26 (male) or < 25 (female). Moderately t - Rowed workouts > 20 min, Rowed 3 hrs / wk and 12 hrs / mth, been rowing 2 yrs, BMI < 28 (male) or < 27 (female). Casual - Rowed workouts > 10 min, Rowed 1 hr / wk and 5 hrs / mth, been rowing 2 yrs. Beginner - Never rowed before on-water or indoors.
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Elite - Rowed workouts > 60 min, Rowed 16 hrs / wk and 40 hrs / mth, been rowing 6 yrs, Raced 7x over 5 yrs and placed in the top 10, BMI < 24 (male) or < 22 (female). Competitive - Rowed workouts > 60 min, Rowed 5 hrs / wk and 20 hrs / mth, been rowing 6 yrs, Raced 7x over 5 yrs and placed in the top 10, BMI < 24 (male) or < 22 (female). Semi-competitive - Rowed workouts > 30 min, Rowed 5 hrs / wk and 20 hrs / mth, been rowing 2 yrs, Raced 3x over 3 yrs and placed in the top 50%, BMI < 26 (male) or < 25 (female). Lite competitive - Rowed workouts > 20 min, Rowed 1 hr / wk and 5 hrs / mth, been rowing 2 yrs, Never raced before, BMI < 28 (male) or < 27 (female). Beginner - Never rowed before on-water or indoors.
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Some points to note: All RowPro training plans start on a Monday. If its not currently Monday and you want to start your plan today, just choose the previous Monday as the start date.
The rst two weeks of each RowPro training plan are Technique weeks where you row slowly and focus on your stroke technique. If youve already done enough rowing so you want to skip the Technique weeks, just set the start date 2 weeks earlier than you would otherwise have set it. The End Date is just so you can see when the plan will nish. This is important to get right if for example youre training for a race on a specic day.
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Once you complete this step, the Training Plan Wizard will close and youll see the plan youve created listed in Control Center | Training Plans. If this is the rst training plan youve created, it will have a black arrowhead next to it in the list. This indicates it is set as the Active plan, which means that when you go into Session Setup | Training, this is the plan whose sessions will be listed there. If this is not your rst training plan, youll need to select it, right-click and click Set as Active to make it the Active plan. Note: the Active plan sessions will only show in Session Setup | Training when they are within +/- three days from today.
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Digital Rowing is not liable for any personal injuries that you may sustain as a consequence of using a RowPro training plan. Digital Rowing is not liable for any personal injuries that you may sustain as a consequence of using RowPro and/or an Indoor Rower, including your selection of various exercise options. Remember: Physical exertion is healthy. Too much physical exertion is unhealthy. It's a ne line that only you can draw after seeking appropriate professional advice. Use RowPro entirely at your own risk. Use of RowPro training plans constitutes your acceptance of the foregoing disclaimer.
Details - Gives a detailed view of all the sessions in the selected training plan. If you click one of the sessions in this view, you will see a Session Spec for that session, and you can print that Session Spec to help you row a training session without using RowPro. Print Previews and prints the selected training plan. Active - Sets the selected training plan as the Active plan, which means that its sessions appear in Session Setup | Training. It is essential that a training plan with a current date range is set as the active training plan; otherwise no training sessions will appear in Session Setup | Training. Export - Has no function at present. Delete - Deletes the selected training plan.
Sessions marked TT are Time Trials. When you select those sessions, a box appears below the list that allows you to select the set piece you want to row as your Time Trial. When selecting a training session to row, ideally you will select the session due today. However due to life pressures, you can't always row a planned session on the exact day it is scheduled, so RowPro gives you some exibility to choose sessions scheduled within plus or minus three days of today. You cannot choose sessions scheduled further away than 3 days from today, because that would seriously compromise your training. Being able to select sessions from plus or minus three days also makes it possible for you to change the order of the sessions so you end up rowing them out of their planned sequence. Even though you can do this, it's important not to change the order in which you row the sessions, because that would compromise your training.
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Apart from Technique sessions, all RowPro training plan sessions include a warm-up and a warm-down, and these must be rowed. You can make these longer in Session Setup, but you cant make them shorter than the minimum settings. Typically the warm-up and warm-down are either 2min or 500m, or for some of the more demanding training sessions they are 3 min or 750m. There are no heart rate, stroke rate or pace targets for the warm-up and warm-down, and you should make a point of rowing them gently. For the warm-up, start slowly and towards the end of the warm-up, if the training session has intervals, do one or two brief bursts at the pace and stroke rate of the rst interval.
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Keep your Stroke Rate in the green target range on the SPM Indicator on the top frame of the PM twin just above the SPM panel. Keep your Heart Rate in the pink band shown on the Heart Rate chart in RowPro.
Note: If your heart rate monitor is connected to a watch, keep your heart rate between the upper and lower limits shown in place of the Heart Rate chart in RowPro. If you have no heart rate monitor, follow the cues that are shown in place of the Heart Rate chart. When you row an Interval training plan session, the Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets for the Active periods are different from the targets for the Rest periods. As you move from Active to Rest and from Rest to Active, RowPro automatically moves the targets to their correct settings for the Active or Rest period you are rowing, so all you need to do is keep rowing and adjust your rowing to the new targets.
Each area of the training plan printout above is described in the sections below.
Technique weeks There are two optional weeks at the start of each training plan where you row slowly and for small durations with your entire focus on optimizing your stroke technique. Note: If youre not an experienced rower, we recommend that you row the two technique weeks at the start of your rst RowPro training plan. If you want to skip the technique weeks in subsequent plans, you can do so by setting the start date of your training plan two weeks earlier than you intend to start the plan. Base weeks Most of the training plan is base weeks, where you do the core strength and endurance training to establish your physiological base for the later stages of your plan. The training volumes (meters per week) build progressively. Speed weeks Once you have the base training under your belt you move onto the nal speed phase of your plan where the training volumes reduce again and the training intensity ramps up.
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The weekly volume chart shows at a glance the amount of training you'll do in each week of the plan. You can see that the volume starts low, builds up to a peak at the end of the base phase, and then backs off again as the intensity peaks through the speed phase. This pattern is important to the effectiveness of your training - it's important to cycle your body through endurance, strength and speed training, even for weight control plans. This stops your body from reaching a plateau due to overly-repetitive workouts.
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The main body of the training plan printout shows the set of daily training sessions that make up the plan, organized into weeks. In some plans, one or more days of the week are optional, as shown above that day in the table. Optional means if you want to extend yourself a little you can row that day, or if you want to take it a bit easier you can skip that day every week. Each individual training session is shown in a short-hand way to save space, like this:
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Row 4,000 meters in total. The overall session consists of 4 intervals. Each interval consists of an Active part and a Rest part. The Active parts are 250 meters to be rowed as SLT (Slow Tone). The Rest parts are 500 meters to be rowed as Easy (unsaid but standard). If you set out the intervals one after the other, the resulting sequence would look like this: 250m Active Row to the SLT Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 500m Rest - Row to the Easy Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 250m Active Row to the SLT Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 500m Rest - Row to the Easy Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 250m Active Row to the SLT Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 500m Rest - Row to the Easy Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 250m Active Row to the SLT Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 1,500m Rest - Row to the Easy Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets You will notice that the last Easy is 1,500m. This is because the 4,000m total is more than the sum of the 4 intervals. This is typical, and all it means is that you continue rowing Easy until you reach the 4,000m total distance.
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Row 20 minutes in total. The overall session consists of 4 intervals. Each interval consists of an Active part and a Rest part. The Active parts are 20 seconds to be rowed as PS (Power Shift). The Rest parts are 4 minutes to be rowed as Easy (unsaid but standard). If you set out the intervals one after the other, the resulting sequence would look like this: 20 sec Active Row to the PS Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 4 min Rest - Row to the Easy Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 20 sec Active Row to the PS Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 4 min Rest - Row to the Easy Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 20 sec Active Row to the PS Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 4 min Rest - Row to the Easy Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 20 sec Active Row to the PS Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets 6 min 40 sec Rest - Row to the Easy Heart Rate and Stroke Rate targets You will notice that the last Easy is 6 min 40 sec. This is because the 20 minute total is more than the sum of the 4 intervals. This is typical, and all it means is that you continue rowing Easy until you reach the 20 minute total time. In both the examples above you will notice that in the 4x250r500 and 4x20r4 there is an r, meaning Rest. This is the cue to row Easy during that part of the intervals. You will occasionally see an s there instead of an r. The s means you Stop rather than rowing Easy during that part of the intervals.
2. Your body is getting the correct training stimulus because the effect on your body of the training activity is closely linked to your heart rate. The Heart Rate target ranges listed in the HR Band column in the training types table are derived from your User Prole in RowPro, so they are specic to you. Stroke Rate By rowing within a specied Stroke Rate band, the physical impact on your body is predictable. The effect on your body of the training activity is closely linked to your stroke rate. The Stroke Rate target bands listed in the SR Band column in the training types table are derived from the training plan template and are the same for everyone. Note: The fact youre not rowing to Pace targets means its not appropriate to have a pace boat when youre rowing a training session. Some people nd this a little disconcerting, but you soon get used to rowing to your Heart Rate, not to a Pace.
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The reason heart rate is used as one of the targets in RowPro training sessions is that your heart rate is a good measure of the intensity of the training you are doing. RowPro uses ve heart rate bands to express training intensities, as follows: 1. AN Above the Anaerobic Threshold, up to your Maximum HR. 2. AT Around the Anaerobic Threshold, your max HR over a long period. 3. UT - Up Tempo, an intermediate intensity. 4. LS Long Slow, a low intensity. 5. AR Active Recovery, a very low intensity. The next step is for RowPro to map each of these bands to heart rate numbers in beats per minute (BPM) that are specic to you. This is critical to tailoring the training plan to match your physiology. RowPro has two methods for mapping the heart rate bands to your physiology: Standard method RowPro uses an industry-standard calculation that takes into account your age and gender to calculate your maximum heart rate, and uses percentages of that to set the heart rate bands. Test-based method If you know your anaerobic threshold heart rate (AT), for example by doing a Conconi test, you can enter this into your User Prole in RowPro. This enables RowPro to set more accurate heart rate bands for you.
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Each training session in RowPro is a specic training type that has a specic training focus such as endurance, strength, speed, or a combination of these, as follows: Code/Description BMIB ! BMI Burn BPB ! BP Bumps E! Easy Training Type Very easy BMI burn - Row at low intensity to improve your tness and burn body fat. BMIB with shifts to MaxSS - Row at a high Stroke Rate to stimulate your cardiovascular system. Easy row for maintenance - This is primarily aimed at low intensity tness and recovery. Maximum Steady State - Row fast for long times to improve your speed endurance. Easy with shifts to MaxSS - Row short bursts at high levels of effort to develop your muscle power. Slow " muscle pressure - Row at a low stroke rate to develop your muscular / strength endurance. Slow 75-85% muscle pressure - Row at a low stroke rate to develop your muscular/strength endurance. A series of practice starts - Improve your racing technique and performance from the starting line. Focus on technique only - Improve your technique to optimize your stroke efciency. " muscle pressure at UT HR - Row strongly at an intermediate tempo. A trial race - Improve your racing strength/power, technique, efciency and endurance.
MSS ! MaxSS PS ! SLT! SP! ST! T! TL! TT! Power Shift Slow Tone Slow Pressure Starts Technique Tempo Load Time Trial
Each training type has heart rate and stroke rate targets associated with it, so when you are rowing a training session you can just focus on staying in the target bands. When youre rowing an interval training session, you shift from the targets for the Active part of each interval to the targets for the Rest part of each interval and back again.
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The core method for determining if you have improved is to compare your performance and your heart rate between two similar rows. You have improved if: Your performance has gone up for the same or lower heart rate, or Your performance is the same for a lower heart rate, or Your heart rate has gone down more than your performance, or Your performance has gone up more than your heart rate
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Based on your training purpose and goals, you have improved if: You were training to maintain or reduce weight and you have achieved that. You were training to improve your racing performance and you have done that. You notice a distinct improvement in your endurance, strength or speed.
It pays to know what to do when the unexpected happens. Here are some common issues and methods for dealing with them:
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We all know life just gets in the way sometimes and the result is you cant train for a while. This can be a minor issue if the interruption is short or a major issue if the interruption is extended. The best way to deal with that depends how long your training schedule is interrupted. Here are some simple guidelines: If the interruption is just a day or two You can use the +/- 3 days listed in Session Setup | Training to time-shift any training day by up to +/- 3 days. Note if you do this, take care to maintain the Easy rows between the harder rows in the plan, i.e. dont do a hard row one day and then another hard row the next day. If the interruption is less than a week You can push on with the plan, but skip the days you missed. Just restart your training at the new today. If the interruption is more than a week You should stop rowing your plan and start a new plan. This is hard to accept, but your body is moving through training cycles, and those cycles are broken if youre off-plan for more than a week. If you just push on with the plan at the new today, youll lose a lot of the benet of the plan. In the circumstances, shifting to a new plan is a better strategy.
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Apart from the considerations relating to the interruption as noted above, you also need to deal with the fact that youre not at your full capability. Post-injury, the rst consideration is whether you are t to row at all, and you should be guided by your doctor about that. Dont train while injured without clearance from your doctor. Assuming you are cleared to row, then you should probably start with a Fitness plan with a Tone Up focus, taking care not to over-extend yourself past the set targets in the plan. If your injury is due to over-training, you need a different approach. You can tell if youre overtraining by monitoring your improvement. If youre training a lot but steadily measuring negative improvement, then youre probably overtraining. As a rst step you should stop training completely for 3-5 weeks and then start training lightly again. If you strike problems again, you may need a longer break. Post-illness, the rst consideration is to make sure the illness is over before you restart training. Dont train during illness without clearance from your doctor. Restart your training based on the amount of time youve been off-plan as discussed above. If it was anything more
than a minor illness, then you should probably start with a Fitness plan with a Tone Up focus, taking care not to over-extend yourself past the set targets in the plan.
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When you are away and can train on a Concept2 Indoor Rower, but not with RowPro, there are some ways you can continue with your RowPro training plan. LogCard RowPro enables you to put up to 5 upcoming training sessions onto your Concept2 LogCard. From there you can insert your LogCard into any PM3 or PM4, select one of the training sessions to row, and row it. Your results will be saved on the LogCard (without strokes, and Interval rows will be saved as separate rows). When you get home you can import the results into RowPro. Manual RowPro enables you to print out each training plan session in the form of instructions. This enables you to set up a Continuous row manually on any PM2, PM3 or PM4, and while you row, read from the big-font printout (which you can lie on the oor nearby) and adjust your rowing at the meters indicated. When you get home you can manually enter your results into your RowPro rowing log.
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Most people who row at a gym are completely exhausted after 5 minutes on the machine and can't even imagine how anyone could row for 20 minutes or even an hour or more. It just seems impossible. However it's just a matter of backing off the pace to a level where you can row aerobically, meaning your heart rate stays below your Anaerobic Threshold or AT. If rowing is your main or only form of exercise, you really need to row a minimum of 20 minutes in any session to get a useful training effect that carries forward to your next workout to produce and maintain a healthy tness. Virtually all the workouts in RowPro rowing plans are at least 20 minutes long, and can be a lot longer depending on the type and level of rowing plan. At the other end of the scale, once you're rowing sessions longer than an hour you need to take measures to keep hydrated, plus most people rowing marathon distances also need to use special seat padding arrangements and possibly hand protection to avoid problems from excessive rubbing. Ask around the forums for advice from seasoned veterans of longer rows.
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A very common pitfall is to nd a workout type that suits you, like say 30 minutes hard work, and just repetitively do that workout whenever you row. The reality is your body needs a combination of strength, speed and endurance work to maintain a healthy tness, and this means you need to mix it up a bit.
The workouts in RowPro rowing plans are a professionally-designed mix that cycle your body through a series of strength, speed and endurance phases to produce the training effect you are working towards. So if you've never done an Interval workout and are hesitant to start, just go with what the rowing plan says and you'll quickly start enjoying the variety.
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The damper setting is possibly the most poorly understood variable. Theres a popular gym cult that "youre not a real man unless you row with the damper on 10", but this is rubbish. Think of a 10-speed bike. Who in their right mind would say (or believe if told) "youre not a real man unless you ride in 10th gear"? The bike gear lever and the rowing damper are very similar. Concept2 has cleverly arranged the math inside the PM to ensure this is the case. You can easily prove this to yourself by monitoring your heart rate and rowing with different damper setting. Provided you stay at the same SPM and Pace, your heart rate will be the same regardless what damper setting you choose. The reality is that like higher gears, higher damper settings require more muscular strength, but you go further with each push / pull. On a bike, you quickly work out which is the optimum for you too high and your muscles get really tired, too low and youre wasting too much energy just moving your legs back and forth. People rowing soon work out their own optimum damper setting. On Concept2 Indoor Rowers, women and lightweight men tend to row with a damper setting between 3 and 5, and heavyweight men tend to row between 3 and 7.
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Your heart rate is like a meter telling you how hard you're working, which is why it's so important to monitor your heart rate while you row, particularly when you're rowing to a plan, and to keep your heart rate within the target band for your workout. The rst thing to realize is that rowing for more than a few minutes is only possible if you keep your heart rate below your Anaerobic Threshold or AT, otherwise your muscle cells simply run out of the energy that fuels Anaerobic work, with the result that your muscles suddenly feel dead - it's called "hitting the wall". The question is how to tell what your AT is. To avoid you having to do a test, RowPro uses a simple age-based formula, however this is conservative, so if you're already quite t you may nd this results in your heart rate target ranges feeling too low when you do a RowPro rowing plan. The 'correct' solution is to do a test to determine your AT and then plug that into your User Prole in RowPro. Ideally this test should be done while rowing on a Concept2 Indoor Rower. Testing to nd your AT is commonly done either by Lactate testing involving pinpricks to take
blood samples, or by a Conconi test involving ramping up intervals and monitoring your heart rate until you physically have to stop. Either way, testing requires maximal effort, so if you plan to do a test you should work with a professional who knows what to do and you should get clearance from your doctor rst. There are other heart rate ranges below your AT, and it's important to stay in these ranges to get the intended training effect. For example, if you're wanting to do a fat-burning row, you need to keep your heart rate well down in the appropriate range, otherwise you'll get a good cardio workout but won't burn much fat.
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Stroke rate is one of the most important variables in your rowing, as it has a major effect on the type of workout your body gets. A "middling" stroke rate would be around 22-26 SPM. When you go lower than that, say 18-22 SPM, this is more demanding on your muscles and is basically a strength workout. When you go higher, say 26-30 SPM, you're moving more into cardiorespiratory work, and over 30 SPM you're doing speed work. All of these are important types of work you need to cycle your body through for effective training. It's important not to just settle on one stroke rate and always do that for all your workouts, because you'll be missing out on the other workout types and your training will be less effective in delivering the results you want. A note of caution though: Take care when rowing under 20 SPM, because the load on your lower back muscles in particular is substantial. If you nd your lower back gets sore, increase your stroke rate a little and ease off the pace until you can row without any soreness or pain, then gradually come back down to the lower stroke rate again. Stroke technique is also critical at lower stroke rates. A common problem in stroke technique is "shooting the slide", and doing this while rowing under 20 SPM is really bad for your lower back muscles and can lead to injury. To explain: At the catch your trunk is leaning slightly forward and your knees are folded up. At the nish your trunk is leaning slightly rearward and your knees are straight. As you move from the catch to the nish, you need to progressively tip your trunk from the forward tilt at the catch to the rearward tilt at the nish. The thing not to do is leave your trunk tipped forward while you drive with your legs, and only begin tipping your truck rearward when your legs are more or less straight - that's what "shooting the slide" means, and that's what overloads your lower back muscles. For guidance, look at the coaching clinic and match the way the Oarsman does it there. One other common pitfall is that at rst it seems completely counter-intuitive to pull a lower SPM at a higher pace, but its denitely possible and an important skill to master. RowPro can train you in this. Follow the timing of the Oarsman on-screen to get your drive and recovery
sensible. The Oarsman does the correct drive to recovery timing when you row at any given SPM. Basically you do a slower recovery, rather than pausing anywhere in the stroke. Also, click Coaching Clinic on the RowPro main menu, and click the Stroke Rhythm button beside the coaching notes. Youll see the drive to recovery ratio changes with slower SPM. Its this changing ratio you need to learn to do, so your drive to recovery timing is optimized for your SPM at any given time. It feels very odd at rst, but as you get more skillful at it youll nd eventually it becomes second nature.
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For many people, pace is the rst thing on their mind, whereas it probably should be the last. You may have noticed that when you row sessions from a RowPro rowing plan, a) there is no pace target, and b) you can't use a pace boat. Both of these are deliberate. To get a given training effect from a workout, you need to row for a specic time at a specic stroke rate and in a specic heart rate range. When you do that, the resulting pace is just that - a result. When you row at a certain heart rate, then the pace is what it is. When you get tter, your pace will be faster at the same heart rate as when you were less t. In this way your training automatically adapts - you row at a faster pace when you're tter. The key point is that it's your heart rate and stroke rate that determine the training effect you get, not your pace. This is also why you should not train with a pace boat unless you're specically needing to train at a specic pace. The math for pace is that Pace = SPM x DPS, where DPS is the Distance per Stroke. This means that to go faster, you need to either increase SPM without conceding DPS, or vice-versa. This is easier said than done! Interestingly, there is a slight HR advantage if you row the same pace at a lower SPM, hence if you're training for competition it's a good idea to include plenty of low stroke rate strength workouts. RowPro competition plans include lots of strength workouts. They deliver a performance peak at a dened date to optimize race results, while recognizing that achieving high peaks on race day requires dropping off those peaks in between, hence the training varies. The bottom line is that always doing the same training and seeking to just incrementally get faster has in-built limits that are lower than proper peaking, and you can readily prove this to yourself by trying it each way.
7. Getting help
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Your rst port of call for help is the built-in RowPro Help. To launch it click Help on the RowPro main menu, or press the F1 button for context-sensitive help on major forms.
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The entire RowPro Help is avaliable online at www.digitalrowing.com
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RowPro Help and RowPro Help Online have a complete Troubleshooting section that covers all the common problems you may encounter and how to resolve them.
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For free and friendly personal assistance, email [email protected]. This is also available to tryout users.