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Yes, I have been using the drills almost since day 1. My warmup routine starts with about 10 minutes of the drills. I actually find that if I start paddling without having done the drills it seems to take me a while to settle. I have a dodgy shoulder and I start my warmup on land with a theraband. I do pull parts and face fulls for about 5 minutes before I even get on the water.Do you have a copy of Oscar Chalupsky's technique drills?
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Hacker Mike wrote: Hi
Don't get too discouraged. Most of the guys I paddle with who are on Blue Fins are averaging in the 10-10.5km/hr bracket. Use the time on the boat to focus on good technique and skills and the speed will come.
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I'm not an expert by any stretch of the imagination, but what I would recommend is that you break up the problem into discrete pieces and analyze each in turn. Kind'a like you do every day in your business What is the limiting factor with respect to your speed? E.g:I run a software development business and it is quite time intensive.
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tve wrote:
Hope this helps.
- cardio, e.g. you can go faster for 6 miles and then fatigue sets in?
- technique, e.g. are you engaging the big muscles at every stroke? (I find that 10 second all-out intervals are great to practice that)
- technique, e.g. is all your effort turning into propulsion or is it squirting out elsewhere, like rocking the boat or lifting water at the end of the stroke? (best for someone else to look at you paddling and point these out)
- muscle strength, e.g. do you still have energy to spend but pulling the paddle doesn't work anymore?
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This is so true.Impala wrote: Hi,
to the post opener: it also depends a lot where you paddle what boat.
If you are a surfski novice, you will get kicked ass by fat, unfit but experienced ocean paddlers. There, neither flatwater technique nor fitness will help.
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SpaceSputnik wrote: It's funny. I would be completely happy with 10km average at 9.5 - 9.8km/h. I am currently much slower. Been told it's all technique.
I do, (or rather have been up to this point), paddle a 50 lb V7 and I don't even want to mention my averages here because they are laughable.
48 yo, been lifting weights consistently for a few years and consider myself stronger than average: reverse row at 200ish lb for several reps, squat in similar numbers. Decent core.
Still pushing it at 8 km/h feels like a pretty significant muscular effort even though I rotate and leg-drive. That needs lot more work of course, but I just can't imagine getting whole 2km/h sustained by just optimizing things like catch angle and power distribution during the stroke.
Something is not working in a pretty big way here....9.5 km/h would be heaven.
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