What Was Your Work Out Today?
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I'm probably only going to get in my lunch walk today. I was going to go for a trail ride this evening but I totally spaced that my 13yo has a jazz band concert this evening.4
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@DiscusTank5 We were diving out of Swanage, in Dorset in the UK. The rock was near there (about 10 minute's drive then a 25 minute walk); we chose it for geographical convenience as much as anything else.
It's odd, I have probably around 250 dives on the South Coast of the UK. Swanage is a very popular spot for divers, but this weekend bought my Swanage total up to 3 dives total. My first Swanage dive was 10 years ago, so there's been a long gap. (Most of my South Coast dives have been from Brighton, Portland, Plymouth or Cornwall.)
That humidity sounds a little bit unpleasant...3 -
Lower Power day in the weight room, featuring deadlifts. All of my lifts, upper and lower body, are now up to pre-injury weights...with the exception of deadlift, which caused the injury in the first place. I'm being far more cautious in bringing that weight up.2
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Rest day yesterday. Started at the gym early this morning with trainer. Noon was a PT session, then a lap swim in the pool. 1600 yds, simply 10 x100's after my normal 600 yds of warmup.
Seeing steady improvement in the shoulder, both in increased mobility and regained strength. We're also working on my traps and left side neck tightness. This is making it easier to turn my head to the right to breathe. The result is better balance and less speed loss while bilateral breathing as I swim.
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Some slacker-tude lately.
Saturday, clean up and open house day at the rowing club boathouse, so I did quite a bit of physical stuff (carrying & washing boats, chiefly), but no workout. Sunday, usual rest day. Monday, had a physical therapy session but didn't manage my other time well so didn't get in a workout. 🙄
Today was too nice to pass up, so I went for a bike ride. Water level finally dropped enough to un-flood the trail at a highway underpass, so I rode the river trail up into the city center, then took a side branch to a park across from the rowing club area, for a total of not quite 22 miles, all easy pace.
At one creek-side meadow, besides the usual numerous geese (some pairs with fuzzball babies), there were 10 whitetail deer feeding when I first went by. On the return pass, they were all lying down under a tree. (They herd up some in the Winter, but we should be reaching the point where they usually break up into smaller groups.) I did see one by itself on another stretch of the trail.
Here they are being tiny dots in the distance, roughly under the trees at right and center.
Supposed to get some rows in later this week, in quads. Water's still cold to get singles out, for my tastes. Soon, I think.3 -
Swings, getups and yoga...2
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Hour elliptical, 5.85 miles.
Wasn't sure how well today's session would go, considering I was short sleep. I actually was preparing to go to bed early, until my wife came to me in a panic saying she couldn't find her cat (who had missed dinner, already abnormal) and was freaking out that it had somehow made it outside and was now vulnerable to the foxes and coyotes which roam the area. So what should have been an extra hour sleep turned into a two+ hour search through every single crevice and possible hiding spot from attic to basement looking for this critter. Do you realize how many places a cat can hide in your home? Long story short, we eventually found the cat safely inside the house in the furnace room (should not have had access, but hey, curiosity and all that), and I finally got to bed with a tick under five hours to sleep before my gym alarm. Thought seriously about skipping the gym and getting that hour sleep before driving straight to work, but I wanted my Wednesday post-cardio donut run, so I went anyway, lol. Pace, calorie burn, heart rate were all within norm, even if it felt like I needed just a touch more exertion to make it happen. But I got it done, and those donuts tasted awfully nice during my hour commute to work, lol.2 -
Full body lifting with weights3
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Near perfect weather, so we got out on the river this morning, rowed just under 7k, with me in bow rowing and steering. We're all working on de-rusting our skills after the Winter hiatus.
I'm anticipating we'll start into our regular M-W-F-Sa (weather permitting) group rowing schedule sometime in the next couple of weeks . . . just need some warmer night temps to get the water warmed up. I'm so ready.
Why so cautious about water temp? Once we're going full bore, some of the group will be out in singles. An old rower saying about racing singles is "it's not if you flip, it's when you flip". The racing shells are usually about a 12 inches wide (low 30s centimeters) at the waterline. Rowers dying after a flip isn't nearly rare enough (in the US, certainly), and cold water is usually a factor when it happens.
It's much more difficult to flip a quad . . . usually only happens if there's a collision with a power boat, or every rower in the boat does something very wrong simultaneously. Right now, we're making up quads of quite experienced rowers. I've witnessed many dozens of singles flip, only seen a quad flip once (new rowers all did something wrong simultaneously), and heard about one other case on our river. I and another rower flipped a double one April in Michigan. We had a coach out with us who fished us out quickly, vs. the usual self-rescue scenario, but it still wasn't fun.2 -
My 45 min. run today went like this: 10 min of walking, then 15 min. of running outside in high humidity with my aging labrador retriever, who was really ready to come home by the end (tbh, we both were). A few chores around the house, then drove 5 min. to my gym for 30 min. running on the treadmill, 10 min walking cool down.
Then . . .
2 sets of: eight standing kettlebell arm raises (10 lbs), ten 15 lb kettlebell tricep lifts (lying down), 10 reps bird dogs. Finished stretching with pigeon poses, then a torture device (ie, foam roller).
Got home and had to help Hubs carry our old couch out and bring in a new one from the back of his truck, going through the back yard because our front door is too small. That counts, right?? I'm going to feel this tomorrow.3 -
Upper body hypertrophy day in the weight room, lots of sets of 12 reps. Easy reps to start each set, but if you slow your pace down, those last couple reps remain impressively difficult to complete.
Felt a twinge in my recovering elbow tendon, which made me a tad nervous. But it wasn't when moving a heavy weight, nor when gripping and pulling. Rather it was while doing lateral DB raises focusing on my side delts (shoulder) with very light weights. In this case it wasn't mass, but physics, which was putting undue strain on my elbow.
The physics of gravity says when you hold a weight at the end of a length (such as my arm), the torque increases very rapidly with either increased weight or with increased distance. This means holding a heavy weight close to my ribs can have the same torque on the shoulder/arm as a light weight held with my hand stretched out as far as it'll go. Because I'm working the side shoulder, my arm was raised out to my side. With my wrist facing down (back of hand facing up), my wrist extensor muscles have to work extra hard to keep my wrist straight. And those extensor muscles are connected to...my elbow tendon.
I have some thoughts I can use in future workouts to try to alleviate this strain while I continue to rehab (which from my reading can take up to a year to fully heal). I can still do the lateral raises, but twist my wrist so my palm faces forward is the obvious choice. I can also seek out one of the machines which has me brace my elbow against a padded arm while raising my arm, no gripping required thus no elbow torque. Not sure if my gym has one of these machines (I've seen them in other gyms). I want to avoid upright rows.
Got a week before repeating this workout to figure it out.3 -
@AnnPT77 your post reminded me of my old Boy Scout days earning merit badges in canoe and rowboat. One of the requirements was to paddle/oar out to the middle of a lake, intentionally swamp your craft, and demonstrate how to return the craft to normal floating and then climb back in. We were wearing life vests and were not belted in, not sure how that compares to your experience. But the water was always very cold, since our camp lake was fed from a stream originating with the mountain snow/ice pack. We always said it was a glacier-fed lake, which is not far wrong.
Camp staff kept a roaring fire on the side of the lake for boys to warmup next to upon returning to the shore. Nobody was allowed in the lake until this fire was up and running.2 -
@AnnPT77 your post reminded me of my old Boy Scout days earning merit badges in canoe and rowboat. One of the requirements was to paddle/oar out to the middle of a lake, intentionally swamp your craft, and demonstrate how to return the craft to normal floating and then climb back in. We were wearing life vests and were not belted in, not sure how that compares to your experience. But the water was always very cold, since our camp lake was fed from a stream originating with the mountain snow/ice pack. We always said it was a glacier-fed lake, which is not far wrong.
Camp staff kept a roaring fire on the side of the lake for boys to warmup next to upon returning to the shore. Nobody was allowed in the lake until this fire was up and running.
We have our learn-to-row class members flip a single intentionally and get back in, after one of the coaches demos (with the other coach or experienced assistants on the dock with the class members to point out other details or answer questions). They do it in a recreational single (wider), but the method is the same. Also, it's late June by then, and the water's much warmer. There are quite a few involuntary flips during the class, usually, too.
That process of getting back in is tiring but achievable. The issue is that cold takes a person's coordination (and possibly mental clarity) quite rapidly, so that's a worry. There's also a potential shock effect from hitting very cold water while working very hard. People can gasp and drown.
Most rowing (in shells) is done without a life jacket. Standard PFDs, even kayaking ones, increase flip risks. (It has to do with interaction of the PFD with the hands or oar handles.) People who row in cold water (safely) usually rely on pontoon-like floats that attach to the riggers (the bars out to the side of the boat where the oars fasten into the oarlocks), dry suits, and specialized (expensive) PFDs. Larger clubs will put safety launches on the water with the rowers. Ours is a small club.
We're not belted in to the boat, though we usually are wearing shoes that are attached to the boat. When the shoes are properly configured (important), they're designed to automatically release the rower's feet if the boat flips. The boats have buoyancy, float even when flipped. Even the oars float enough to be an aid.
Waiting for the water temp to be more forgiving is frustrating when we want to be rowing, but it's a relatively inexpensive, logistically convenient safety measure.
Even after that, those in the bigger boats (double or quad) watch out for our fellow rowers out with us in singles, and will deliberately change our normal route to stay closer to them, especially early in the season, and especially when there are newer rowers out in singles.
I've done rescues of capsized single rowers multiple times from a double or quad. (Happens more if the in-water rower panics, doesn't think through the self-rescue scenario, and gets over-fatigued with multiple attempts.) It's awkward, but achievable if folks in the bigger boat have reasonable skills. We end up with the wet rower draped over the bigger boat's stern, and the single pulled up alongside and held there by one of the big boat's rowers. Rowing that non-hydrodynamic configuration into shore is a strength workout, and slow.2 -
Walking with my dog this morning suddenly ended with a downpour. Later I went to the gym and rode the exercise bike for 47 min, exited . . . to sunny weather outside.3
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Spring weather seems to have finally settled in around here. This afternoon, my friend and I did a short, tempo style bike/run session. Bike workout was 48 minutes with some climbing at an overall 16.5mph pace. We jumped off and went right into a transition run, my first run off the bike this year. Only 15 minutes of running for me at a comfortable 10:30 pace. The goal was simply getting used to the bike/run transition. My friend Kristina is a few weeks out from a HIM race, so she went longer. Good thing I didn't try to stay with her, since she knocked out a 5k in under 25 minutes right off the bike, lol.
Plan to swim tomorrow. Group ride on Saturday.3 -
Rowed stroke (!) in the quad this morning. (Stroke is the stern-most rower, the one everyone else can see since we face opposite the direction of travel. Stroke sets the rhythm. I haven't stroked in a long time, not a natural at it. All I do the whole time is count in my head: In, out, 3, 4, in . . . .
)
Just over 6k, a little shorter than usual because one rower needed to leave promptly, and another arrived late. We did some power 10s (10 strokes high intensity) periodically, so an interval-ish workout.4 -
30 min. pool swim this morning, rest day tomorrow.
Enjoy the weekend, everyone!3 -
NROL full body workout3
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Crankily, I had to admit that with a threat of rain and a tight schedule, stationary bike was my best answer. I messed up my bike settings, and the bike said it wanted to be calibrated before I worked out (presumably because of the recent firmware update?), so things were a little wonky. Still, an hour at (mysteriously) 108W average - have to admit, the last few minutes felt a little more fatigue-y than average; then a 3'-ish CD at just 60W (dim bulb?
).
Needed to wrap up my workout in time to make it to the rowing club, where we were collaborating with the university rowing club to put the barge in the water. The barge is a 16-person craft, giant, rectangular - like rowing your living room. We use it for training new people (and for some parties). It stores on land in 4 sections, needs to be put in the water, bolted together.
Here's a view of the strange craft in a spoiler, during the bolting-together process, with some faces blurred out to anonymize (one actually now headless - oops).3 -
spinning2
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- Bent over dumbbell rows with 10lbs 50 reps 4 sets
- 200 leg lifts 4 sets of 50
- Speed roping 6 sets one minute intervals and one minute rest in between the first two sets then a 2 minute rest after the first two seta and so on until i hit six sets.
Example: 1 minute speed rope 150+ rpms per minute then kick it into high gear for the last ten seconds. Rest one minute then do another set for one minute and finally rest for two minutes. I will repeat this 3 times for a total of 6 sets total or 3 supersets.
- 10 laps in the pool
- sauna
- cold shower
• Protein after my workout
• BCAAs during my workout
• 2 cups brown rice + one can of chicken (18g of protein) + 1 small spinach tortilla 2 hours before workout
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Rain day, so back to stationary bike again. I oopsed my Garmin set-up, but it was the usual 60 minutes ride (94W average) and 3 minute CD (71W). Went into it late in the day and feeling fatigued from wake-up today, so no push. Heart rate ran a little higher than usual for that pace - not surprising since resting rate was up a few bpm today, too - though I don't have the Garmin stats to prove it. 🤷♀️1
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All you gym / lifter types on this thread will no doubt be jealous (ha!!) of my outdoor workout in 69% humidity this morning: 60 min bike ride, followed by an immediate 30 min. run. Sweat kept stinging my eyes throughout. My sprint triathlon is one week away.3
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At the insistence of some friends, I registered for and joined a large group ride yesterday that was titled " Bikes and Beers" and was sponsored by a local brewery. I drove an hour to get there for the 8am 45 mile group start. I hadn't slept well and the route was sort of boring, so I skipped the final loop and headed back home, completing only 30 SLOW miles. I donated my 2 free beer and one commemorative pint beer glass tickets to a friend. I got no empathy from my regular riding partners who were smart enough to say "no thank you" when invited.
Today, my wife, brother and SIL took their new eBikes out for the first time, while I rode my mtn bike. We rode a beautiful wooded trail in Eastern Ct for 15 miles, then stopped for a late breakfast at an outdoor cafe. It was much more fun than Saturday's ride. The eBike will allow my wife to join our regular riding crew for longer (25-50mile) social rides in scenic locations. Shelter Island, NY, Newport, RI and the Catskills in NY all have great cycling routes, both road and trails, so we're planning to ride several of those routes this summer.3 -
I went scuba diving this weekend.
The first dive was the HMS M2; a submarine with a plane hanger and launching mechanism. She sank with all hands in the 1930s.
Our shot line is a bit ropey, and not heavy enough. So it got pulled off the wreck. We spent the first 15 minute desparately swimming against the currentt, praying to see the wreck. Amazingly, we found it and spent 15 minutes going from the stern to bow. There were many conger. Visibility was OK despite a plankton bloom, at maybe 5 metres.
I was on nitrox 32%, but my buddy was on air. The bottom is 34 metres, so right at the MOD for my mix.
I picked up a couple of minutes's deco; my buddy had 16 minutes. So it turned into quite a long dive; at 53 minutes.
My drysuit had a total flood. It turned out to be due to a hole, so that was my only dive of the trip.
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Friday was lower hypertrophy day, featuring sets of 15 reps on squat. Hot tub remained hot for the third week in a row; I think that's a new record, as it is notorious for constantly having some kind of maintenance problem requiring recalibration or something, as some weeks you get in to barely luke warm water, other days you're feeling like a lobster being boiled alive.
Weekend off, spent watching TV with my wife, other than when our grown son paid to take us out to dinner for Mother's Day. The look on his face when he learned how much the multiple rounds of margaritas cost for him and his mother...more than half the total bill!
Today was upper power day, five sets of five reps for both chest and back, with a little shoulder and arm work thrown in. I aim to limit my lifting sessions to under an hour, but today took 75 minutes. Need to keep a tighter rein on rest periods between sets.2 -
Rowed 2 seat in the quad (engine room - my favorite!) for just under 7k . . . we had another rare day with light wind, no rain (or worse). Very nice!
Later, PT appointment: Quite a lot of nice neck/shoulder massage, plus some good TRX exercises and targeted stretches. For funsies, I turned on my Garmin (set on "cardio) during my 8-minute arm bike warmup. The bike said 3.8 to 4.2 METS as I went along, total of 43 calories at the end. (Garmin said 46 calories, pretty close - only 7% difference.) Per the machine, I'm about 0.2 METS stronger on reverse direction than forward, not surprising given my usual exercise emphasis 😆.3 -
Short lap swim at noon today. Quick 1200 yds was all I had time for. Got outside for a 4 mile trail run this evening. It was very nice in the woods tonight. No mosquitos to speak of.
Trainer session tomorrow am.3 -
No gym time today, my alarm clock didn't go off. Probably on account of I didn't turn it on. It's an analog clock, with a simple alarm which doesn't account for if it's AM or PM, so I can't simply leave it on all the time or else it'll alarm in the afternoon while I'm still at work or commuting home, so I have to remember each night to turn it on since I turn it off each morning. My kids (and now my boss) all use their phones for alarm clock, but since I keep my phone on my bedside table my concern is I'll just reach over and click it snooze-style and not actually wake up...that's the reason my alarm clock is on the other side of the room, force me to physically get up out of bed. Maybe I'll compromise and do both...rely on my alarm clock as my primary method, but with a cell phone backup alarm a few minutes later. Better than missing my morning gym session and potentially being late to work.2
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Yesterday my planned 30 min pool swim was shortened at min. 18 because of lightening, but at least I got in an intense session (my last swim before the sprint tri this Sun). Today's 30 min bike ride was inside because of rain--I pedaled as hard as I could the whole time to make up for it.3
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