David Frost reviews Practical and Personal Looks at Coronary Artery Diseases (CAD) in Master's Rowers - download the additional information link below.
Timestamps
00:45 David Frost's journey through CAD
Coronary artery calcification - men need checking after age 70 more than women.
Even rowers who are known for being stoic - if you feel something in your chest, get it checked out.
"You have the coronary arteries of a 92 year old" was my signal that I needed help. The Agatston Score is is a proxy for heart health.
04:30 Five things that cause inflammation
- environmental stress
- toxins stress
- too much sunlight
- smoking
- exercise
Inflammation in your arteries can cause an issue if you work too hard, too fast for too long.
08:00 Rowers have a higher than average incidence of atrial fibrillation (AFIB)
Maybe rowers are doing themselves a disservice by training long and hard. What to do about this?
12:00 Heart age vs calendar age
There are interesting heart age metrics - pulse wave velocity measure tells how elastic your arteries are. Heart Rate Variability - the higher it is the better you are recovering.
David encourages masters to measure these and track their trends.
Dr Churchill in Boston is studying masters rowers' aorta for ASCVD.
Get a calcium CT scan - it helped David understand his condition.
18:00 A self-scan system
Perceived exertion, rest and hydration are a good guide to how you are feeling each day. David is mindful of recovery as well.
What age should you start getting the calcium CT scan done?
For men from age 40 and women maybe 50. For the plus wave velocity test this could be done from mid life - age 40 maybe ladies a bit later. Note David is a layman, not a doctor.
Rowing training is more 80% steady state and 20% higher intensity. This has trended upwards from about 60% when David was younger.
As humans we are slow to recognise when our body moved into the "next" stage. The competitive mindset can make us live in denial of aging.
It's not good for you to carry to much body fat - your waist to hip ratio is worth checking.
25:00 Burden or banish? David's new book
Sloth and gluttony contribute to heart disease - 80% is preventable. Lifestyle measures can defer the onset of heart disease.
Hopefully rowers can start to banish the preventable problem.
STRESSED spelled backwards is DESSERTS.
David's package of information
https://1drv.ms/p/c/af369003831e6951/EZ82vA6IqaRAtv172PZYmW0BV8HomDD4kselkTqn1Ykffw
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David Frost reviews Practical and Personal Looks at Coronary Artery Diseases (CAD) in Master's Rowers - download the additional information link below.
Timestamps
00:45 David Frost's journey through CAD
Coronary artery calcification - men need checking after age 70 more than women.
Even rowers who are known for being stoic - if you feel something in your chest, get it checked out.
"You have the coronary arteries of a 92 year old" was my signal that I needed help. The Agatston Score is is a proxy for heart health.
04:30 Five things that cause inflammation
- environmental stress
- toxins stress
- too much sunlight
- smoking
- exercise
Inflammation in your arteries can cause an issue if you work too hard, too fast for too long.
08:00 Rowers have a higher than average incidence of atrial fibrillation (AFIB)
Maybe rowers are doing themselves a disservice by training long and hard. What to do about this?
12:00 Heart age vs calendar age
There are interesting heart age metrics - pulse wave velocity measure tells how elastic your arteries are. Heart Rate Variability - the higher it is the better you are recovering.
David encourages masters to measure these and track their trends.
Dr Churchill in Boston is studying masters rowers' aorta for ASCVD.
Get a calcium CT scan - it helped David understand his condition.
18:00 A self-scan system
Perceived exertion, rest and hydration are a good guide to how you are feeling each day. David is mindful of recovery as well.
What age should you start getting the calcium CT scan done?
For men from age 40 and women maybe 50. For the plus wave velocity test this could be done from mid life - age 40 maybe ladies a bit later. Note David is a layman, not a doctor.
Rowing training is more 80% steady state and 20% higher intensity. This has trended upwards from about 60% when David was younger.
As humans we are slow to recognise when our body moved into the "next" stage. The competitive mindset can make us live in denial of aging.
It's not good for you to carry to much body fat - your waist to hip ratio is worth checking.
25:00 Burden or banish? David's new book
Sloth and gluttony contribute to heart disease - 80% is preventable. Lifestyle measures can defer the onset of heart disease.
Hopefully rowers can start to banish the preventable problem.
STRESSED spelled backwards is DESSERTS.
David's package of information
https://1drv.ms/p/c/af369003831e6951/EZ82vA6IqaRAtv172PZYmW0BV8HomDD4kselkTqn1Ykffw
Get better at extracting the oar without being splashy and frantic. And why your elbow position is of critical importance.
Timestamps
00:45 Finishes for sweep
The goal is to get the oar out of the water in a smooth movement and as efficiently as possible.
Start with the correct set up at the finish. Your handle end should be in line with the side of your rib cage. Check the position with our outside hand pointing to the stern and across your side body. (see video).
Check your handle height when the oar is squared and buried under the water. Ideally your outside hand should be on your lower ribs.
Check your elbow position - the outside arm elbow should be pointing backwards towards the person behind you. You do not want your elbow flared out to the side over the gunwale of the boat. Because the most efficient way to pull on the handle is at 90 degrees to the handle. with your elbow flared sideways this is inefficient in terms of the ergonomics of how much forece you can put onto the handle.
03:45 Drills for finishes
Pause at the finish with the oar flat on the surface of the water. This helps you check the height of your handle and your outside hand should be brushing your shirt. The handle height is the same as when your oar is under the water a the end of the power phase. Check you are drawing your finish to the right position.
05:15 Check your hands are doing the right job
Outside hand drawing through with pressure and controlling the height of the handle; the inside hand is squaring and feathering. Outside hand pushes down to extract the oar from the water and then the inside hand turns the oar to feather it. Practice this slow motion or in fours/pairs.
06:30 Wide grip drill
Wide grip (inside hand down the loom) helps to teach you which hand controls the handle. By isolating your inside hand closer to the oarlock pivot, it makes it harder to control the handle height with that hand. Control each hand by altering the grip tightness on the handle - loosen the grip alternately to keep the focus (inside/outside).
08:00 Elbow position affects your hands
If your elbow is lower than your wrist it's hard to push down on the handle with the outside hand.
Progressively move your hands back to a normal grip starting from wide grip. There's a tendency for may athletes to have too much control with the inside hand. You're also unlikely to be only feathering with the one hand.
Keep pressure through to the end of the stroke, holding your oar under the water 1 cm longer.
Work your inside hand at the very end of the power phase - the outside hand loses effective power at the end of the power phase because it's at an increasing obtuse angle to the oar handle. Whereas the inside hand can stay at 90 degrees to the handle. Give a n extra pull with the inside hand at the end of the stroke.
Stationary stability drill free video joining bonus in our Coach Mastermind Group as a joining bonus. Get yours here
https://fastermastersrowing.com/member-register/coach-mastermind/
12:00 Bring focus to elbow timing
And to your hand grip tightness while rowing. Ensure your aren't dominating with the wrong hand.
RowingChat
David Frost reviews Practical and Personal Looks at Coronary Artery Diseases (CAD) in Master's Rowers - download the additional information link below.
Timestamps
00:45 David Frost's journey through CAD
Coronary artery calcification - men need checking after age 70 more than women.
Even rowers who are known for being stoic - if you feel something in your chest, get it checked out.
"You have the coronary arteries of a 92 year old" was my signal that I needed help. The Agatston Score is is a proxy for heart health.
04:30 Five things that cause inflammation
- environmental stress
- toxins stress
- too much sunlight
- smoking
- exercise
Inflammation in your arteries can cause an issue if you work too hard, too fast for too long.
08:00 Rowers have a higher than average incidence of atrial fibrillation (AFIB)
Maybe rowers are doing themselves a disservice by training long and hard. What to do about this?
12:00 Heart age vs calendar age
There are interesting heart age metrics - pulse wave velocity measure tells how elastic your arteries are. Heart Rate Variability - the higher it is the better you are recovering.
David encourages masters to measure these and track their trends.
Dr Churchill in Boston is studying masters rowers' aorta for ASCVD.
Get a calcium CT scan - it helped David understand his condition.
18:00 A self-scan system
Perceived exertion, rest and hydration are a good guide to how you are feeling each day. David is mindful of recovery as well.
What age should you start getting the calcium CT scan done?
For men from age 40 and women maybe 50. For the plus wave velocity test this could be done from mid life - age 40 maybe ladies a bit later. Note David is a layman, not a doctor.
Rowing training is more 80% steady state and 20% higher intensity. This has trended upwards from about 60% when David was younger.
As humans we are slow to recognise when our body moved into the "next" stage. The competitive mindset can make us live in denial of aging.
It's not good for you to carry to much body fat - your waist to hip ratio is worth checking.
25:00 Burden or banish? David's new book
Sloth and gluttony contribute to heart disease - 80% is preventable. Lifestyle measures can defer the onset of heart disease.
Hopefully rowers can start to banish the preventable problem.
STRESSED spelled backwards is DESSERTS.
David's package of information
https://1drv.ms/p/c/af369003831e6951/EZ82vA6IqaRAtv172PZYmW0BV8HomDD4kselkTqn1Ykffw