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Drills for blade depth

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Content provided by Rowing Chat and Rebecca Caroe. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Rowing Chat and Rebecca Caroe or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Blade depth on the drive | Faster Masters Rowing Radio Support this show with a donation https://fastermastersrowing.com/podcast Timestamps 02:30 Keep the top edge consistent level and covered at this height through the drive. Important for an effective drive. It affects the length of time the oar is in the water. 04:00 common errors with blade depth Going too deep The blade has floatation and will sit in the water at the correct height if you just leave it with no pressure. Add pressure to the blade does bury it a little more. Lifting the hands too high causes deep blades. Use the reference point for the handle “aim for where your knees were” Norm Graaf advice. Opening up the body too early on the drive sequence. If the body lifts away from the knees this causes the blades to go too deep “rowing up over the barrel”. 07:00 The blade is not fully square when it goes into the water. This causes it to dive deep. Is there enough height above the water to square on the recovery? A solution is to relax the handle. If you hold too tightly the water isn’t able to fix the blade depth and square placement. 09:30 Drills and skills to build blade power Blade depth drills Row in circles - leave one blade flat on the water with the handle next to your body. Row with the opposite hand. Watch your blade as you row - make corrections to the depth. Check the waterline on the oar shaft - it should stay consistent until the oar comes out of the water. 13:45 Backing down drill Keep the blades in the same position as you row (don’t counter-feather). Build your confidence increasing the stroke length from arms only to full slide backing. You can see your blades as you back. Practice the correct recovery sequence - arms / body / legs flow up the slide as your hands separate. Practice in sweep and sculling boats. 16:30 Half blade depth drill Row with your oars half way out of the water. Requires more control over the oar - finesse. You can’t row hard but allows you to practice the handle control. Practice full blade depth as well. 20:00 Bungee rowing drill - put the elastic bungee to the stern of your foot stretchers. This slows down the boat on the recovery and gives you resistance feedback. Try rowing one stroke with power and one light pressure easy alternating. Goal is to apply pressure to the handle keeping the blade at the correct depth. 4 sets of 8-10 strokes focusing on higher power. 21:45 Vary pressure through the stroke drill. Change from quarter to half pressure (50%) at the release. Row 20 strokes with this focus. Then go from 50% up to 75% pressure at the release. Maintain handles horizontal and drive length through the water. Lastly try 75% up to 100% full pressure. 23:30 The silent pyramid exercise This helps build up to full pressure strokes; it also helps concentration. Start with 1 stroke with power and 1 stroke easy light pressure; then 2 on and 2 off; 3 on / off; Up to 10 strokes with power and 10 strokes off easy - then work your way back down the pyramid, 9 - 8 - 7 down to 1 stroke. 26:00 Managing training with long Covid The effects take a long time to recover after illness. A useful measurement is heart rate variability. Morning resting heart rate gives you a norm. If you are fatigued from training this will change - elevate. Rule of thumb 5 beats above normal you should take it easy that day or do a light training to keep your heart rate low. 28:30 Heart rate variability - measures the amount of time between heart beats. This reacts to how much fatigue you have and indicates if your body is in a relaxed or stressed state. It indicates whether your sympathetic nervous system is over-active (fight or flight). In a relaxed state your parasympathetic nervous system is activated. Measure using an app HRV4Training it measures heart rate and asks questions about your lifestyle - sleep, training, injury. The factor is personal to you and indicates what’s normal for you.
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Drills for blade depth

RowingChat

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Fetch error

Hmmm there seems to be a problem fetching this series right now. Last successful fetch was on September 09, 2024 04:47 (4d ago)

What now? This series will be checked again in the next day. If you believe it should be working, please verify the publisher's feed link below is valid and includes actual episode links. You can contact support to request the feed be immediately fetched.

Manage episode 332543666 series 2411600
Content provided by Rowing Chat and Rebecca Caroe. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Rowing Chat and Rebecca Caroe or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Blade depth on the drive | Faster Masters Rowing Radio Support this show with a donation https://fastermastersrowing.com/podcast Timestamps 02:30 Keep the top edge consistent level and covered at this height through the drive. Important for an effective drive. It affects the length of time the oar is in the water. 04:00 common errors with blade depth Going too deep The blade has floatation and will sit in the water at the correct height if you just leave it with no pressure. Add pressure to the blade does bury it a little more. Lifting the hands too high causes deep blades. Use the reference point for the handle “aim for where your knees were” Norm Graaf advice. Opening up the body too early on the drive sequence. If the body lifts away from the knees this causes the blades to go too deep “rowing up over the barrel”. 07:00 The blade is not fully square when it goes into the water. This causes it to dive deep. Is there enough height above the water to square on the recovery? A solution is to relax the handle. If you hold too tightly the water isn’t able to fix the blade depth and square placement. 09:30 Drills and skills to build blade power Blade depth drills Row in circles - leave one blade flat on the water with the handle next to your body. Row with the opposite hand. Watch your blade as you row - make corrections to the depth. Check the waterline on the oar shaft - it should stay consistent until the oar comes out of the water. 13:45 Backing down drill Keep the blades in the same position as you row (don’t counter-feather). Build your confidence increasing the stroke length from arms only to full slide backing. You can see your blades as you back. Practice the correct recovery sequence - arms / body / legs flow up the slide as your hands separate. Practice in sweep and sculling boats. 16:30 Half blade depth drill Row with your oars half way out of the water. Requires more control over the oar - finesse. You can’t row hard but allows you to practice the handle control. Practice full blade depth as well. 20:00 Bungee rowing drill - put the elastic bungee to the stern of your foot stretchers. This slows down the boat on the recovery and gives you resistance feedback. Try rowing one stroke with power and one light pressure easy alternating. Goal is to apply pressure to the handle keeping the blade at the correct depth. 4 sets of 8-10 strokes focusing on higher power. 21:45 Vary pressure through the stroke drill. Change from quarter to half pressure (50%) at the release. Row 20 strokes with this focus. Then go from 50% up to 75% pressure at the release. Maintain handles horizontal and drive length through the water. Lastly try 75% up to 100% full pressure. 23:30 The silent pyramid exercise This helps build up to full pressure strokes; it also helps concentration. Start with 1 stroke with power and 1 stroke easy light pressure; then 2 on and 2 off; 3 on / off; Up to 10 strokes with power and 10 strokes off easy - then work your way back down the pyramid, 9 - 8 - 7 down to 1 stroke. 26:00 Managing training with long Covid The effects take a long time to recover after illness. A useful measurement is heart rate variability. Morning resting heart rate gives you a norm. If you are fatigued from training this will change - elevate. Rule of thumb 5 beats above normal you should take it easy that day or do a light training to keep your heart rate low. 28:30 Heart rate variability - measures the amount of time between heart beats. This reacts to how much fatigue you have and indicates if your body is in a relaxed or stressed state. It indicates whether your sympathetic nervous system is over-active (fight or flight). In a relaxed state your parasympathetic nervous system is activated. Measure using an app HRV4Training it measures heart rate and asks questions about your lifestyle - sleep, training, injury. The factor is personal to you and indicates what’s normal for you.
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