World Fitness Blog : Leading Global Bloggers

December 2, 2020

Get More Power from Rowing

I’m a rower – on water and in the gym. I regularly watch rowers and trainers work out on their rowing machines with growing frustration. Why am I frustrated?

Because they could be getting much better scores if only they knew one key technique.

Get More Power from Rowing - Fitness, crossfit, rest and recovery, rowing, indoor rowing, power, core strength, power output, hamstrings, hip hinge, back strength, glutes, arm strength, competitive rowing, rowing ergometer, rowing technique, ratio and rhythm

Master the Rowing Machine

Go into the average gym, CrossFit, or a rowing club, and you will see a lot of great athletes using the rowing machines.

What difference does it make?

They are an order of magnitude different. Somehow those on-water rowers seem to coax more and more out of a rowing machine and leave most gym rowers for dead.

Two reasons why this happens:

  1. On-water rowers who use the rowing machines understand the concept of ratio and rhythm. This allows them to get more rest each stroke, thus allowing them to be more powerful because they’re getting less tired.
  2. On-water rowers know how to recruit extra muscles into their effort. The more muscles that are brought into the power phase, the more the flywheel accelerates, and the better the numbers.

The Basic Rowing Stroke

Rowing is comprised of two main parts:

  1. The Power Phase– In which you push against the footboard and accelerate the handle and chain towards you.
  2. The Recovery Phase– You rest and return to a bent-leg compressed posture with the chain retracted inside the machine.

An effective power phase uses legs, back, and arms to accelerate the handle and chain. So far, so good., but that isn’t what I’m seeing being done in the gym.

Most gym rowers fail to use their back muscles to accelerate the handle and chain.

This is a critical difference compared to the on-water rowers. This is what I teach my clients.

Add Back Power to your Rowing

First, learn which muscles to activate. Finding them and feeling these muscles, and knowing how to make them activate is probably the hardest part of this technique improvement.

Then, I would like to show you how to recruit them into your rowing stroke cycle and give you a drill to practice, which will enable you to add your back muscles into your rowing stroke.

Body Swing Only Rowing

On-water rowers learn technique and effective power using drills and exercises. And so I’m going to show you a drill called Body Swing Only Rowing.

  • Let’s start by sitting on the rowing machine.
  • Pick up the handle and sit with your legs straight, arms straight, and your body leaning forward.
  • The key is that your shoulders are forward of your hips (use a mirror to check), and your neck and shoulders are relaxed.

On-water rowers call this position the catch position. It’s achieved by hinging through your hips with a straight back. If you have tight glutes and hamstrings, you may find this challenging.

If you cannot achieve this position, don’t do the exercise. You won’t gain anything until you can stretch forward in this posture.

Stage One

  • Swing yourself backward until your shoulders are behind your hips.
  • Leave your legs and arms straight. Then swing forwards again, and back moving the flywheel with the handle and chain as you swing.
  • Try not to lean back further than 5-10 degrees.
  • Now make the flywheel spin faster by gripping your abdominals just before you start the backswing.

A strong mid-section helps you connect your backswing to the handle and chain without any slippage.

Stage Two

  • Add the arms to the backswing.
  • Start swinging the back alone as in stage one, and then add an arm draw to keep the handle and chain accelerating as the handle comes close to your body.
  • Then straighten your arms and swing forward from the hips.
  • This sequence is important—arms before body swing.
  • Keep working the swing-and-draw with a strong core to remove chain slippage so that when you start to move, the chain immediately accelerates the flywheel. Notice that you can do a tiny bit of backswing before you start the arm draw.
  • This is important for activating the back muscles. You have to get larger muscle groups (legs and back) working before smaller muscles (arms) in rowing.

This is a critical skill for developing stroke power.

Stage Three

  • Half the leg drive.
  • Add a half leg drive. Rowers call this half-slide, and it’s when your legs are 50% towards being straight.
  • Normally this is when your elbows are over your knees.

Stage one is the back. Add stage two, which is the arms, and then add stage three, the legs.

You are now moving the handle and chain faster because more body parts are accelerating the flywheel.

The critical component is the transition from one body part to the next.

Keeping this smooth and keeping the chain taut, and continuing to accelerate will give you the best results.

Stay focused on legs-back-arms and the reverse sequence when you return to start another stroke.

Learning this will reinforce the big muscles before the small muscles rule.

String It Together

Do the drill with 10 strokes at each stage. Then move to full slide and use a full leg drive; try to make the second half of your power phase feel like when you did the drill.

Use the mirror to check your posture. The first half of your power should be using only your leg drive. Check your torso is leaning forwards with shoulders forward from the hips. This is an unnatural posture and has to be learned – but it reinforces the big before small muscle rule, and that’s why it’s effective.

The last thing you can practice is rowing and try to finish your legs, back and arms simultaneously. This is an exaggeration from normal rowing technique – but it’s a good way to get a seriously powerful end of the rowing stroke.

And a good way to continue practicing or use it to do a 10 stroke power push during a workout when you want more power and that split to go down.

Next is learning that second thing… ratio and rhythm. But we’ll leave that for another day.

Source

December 1, 2020

Hydrow Review – Total Body Home Happiness

Hydrow Review - Total Body Home Happiness - Reviews, rowing, endurance, indoor rowing, power, technique, at home training, total body, at home workouts, stay fit at home, hydrow

Full disclosure: this isn’t going to compare the Hydrow home rowing system to a Concept 2 rower, which is probably what most readers of Breaking Muscle are most familiar with.

They are two completely different systems and we will include them both in a comparison roundup before Christmas. This is a review of a standalone home training system and not an adjunct to anything else.

What that means is that I assessed how the Hydrow shapes up as a total package assuming that it would be the center of an at-home training regimen.

I went into this with an open mind although I have a couple of confessions to make: I don’t like bikes or treadmills because as a cyclist, and a sometime runner, I prefer to do those things in the real world and am not limited by the land or weather around me.

Rowing uses 84% of your body’s musculature, far more than most other aerobic exercise modalities.

Eric Stevens, Breaking Muscle

And, I think the best bang for your buck is always going to get as close to possible to a total body solution; rowing fits the bill on all counts.

Frankly, most of us are never going to have a boat or scull or access to a suitable waterway, not to mention the necessary skill or ability to maneuver one on our own. While you don’t need much skill or instruction to ride a bike or run, rowing is an acquired skill which also adds to its appeal.

At a Glance
Product Hydrow Rowing Machine
Pros Sleek design, a strong user experience, and an impressive group of instructors make it fun, challenging, and engaging. Quiet electromagnetic resistance mechanism provides consistent tension for a unique indoor rowing experience.
Cons It doesn’t appeal to every budget and requires a membership pass.

Great Fitness Technology Comes at a Price

The Hydrow is rowing’s answer to Peloton bikes in so far as the way it is designed and where it might fit in the industry. Yet, I have seen a lot of commentary about the pricing of a Hydrow rower (priced at $1,995 with discounts right now) when compared to a Concept 2 (the Model D costs $900 before shipping and taxes) or a NordicTrack RW900 ($1,599 before shipping and taxes).

It is true that you can get cheaper indoor rowers but Hydrow is one of the emerging hybrid technology creations that are taking the fitness world by storm, making it part of a new category of devices.

It’s not surprise that the Hydrow comes with a 22-inch screen, an electromagnetic resistance mechanism and, most importantly, networked software and an infrastructure to support perfectly timed row-along workouts with top-notch instructors on the water. It’s slick design and high production values on the hardware, software, and content.

It’s goes without saying, the software that supports Hydrow is an engineering lift in itself and shouldn’t be discounted as if you’re logging into a YouTube channel. It’s a fully-functioning SaaS (software as a service) application built to scale for a large audience. If the weight of the software wasn’t enough, the hardware itself is about 145 lbs and measures 86x25x47 inches.

Hydrow Review - Total Body Home Happiness - Reviews, rowing, endurance, indoor rowing, power, technique, at home training, total body, at home workouts, stay fit at home, hydrow

The Hydrow may be glossy but it is also surprisingly solid; the aluminum and steel frame can hold a 375 lb person whereas NordicTrack maxes out at 250 lbs and a Peloton bike maxes out at 297 lbs.

Would it be nice if the Hydrow hit the 500 lb limit of a Model D? Sure but kudos to the Hydrow engineers for going that extra mile over their direct competition.

Getting Better at Rowing Tips:

  1. Don’t grip too hard
  2. Drive with your legs
  3. Drive straight back
  4. Don’t let your butt go solo
  5. Don’t pull with your arms
  6. Keep your elbows relaxed
  7. Don’t shrug your shoulders up
  8. Sit up tall at all times
  9. Don’t re-bend your knees too soon
  10. Focus on steady movement

The Hydrow’s 22-inch screen is clear and sharp, even with direct light on it. It swivels so that if you decided to switch to floor exercises, you can still see the screen, and it comes with a great software interface.

Again, some users have remarked about the similarity to the Peloton interface but frankly that’s nitpicking because most fitness apps these days are pretty close in terms of how you move through screens, find workouts, pick instructors and search. And a good thing, too, because it works.

If you know how to lift weights properly, you know how to row.

Ellen Tomek, Olympic Rower

It’s also worth pointing out that Hydrow, the company, has raised $52 million in investment and the money is all up there on the screen and in the design of the product. The user experience is peerless and everything, from the seat design to the feel of the resistance, feels like a premium product.

Your instructors are on the water, your pacing and their pacing has to synchronize, your experience of rowing is enhanced by the visuals, and the controls never get in the way or seem superfluous. This is a well-thought out product and has few weaknesses.

Hydrow Review - Total Body Home Happiness - Reviews, rowing, endurance, indoor rowing, power, technique, at home training, total body, at home workouts, stay fit at home, hydrow

If there was one fear that I had about committing to the Hydrow it was the potential liabilities of long-term maintenance. This is not a product that you can take apart and oil and fix yourself. Time will tell how that pans out for users but it’s not unusual to feel that pang of fear when you have invested heavinly in something like this.

Home Workouts Go Better with Help

If you are one of those people who is disciplined or advanced enough to do things on your own then the Hydrow may be frustrating to you in so far as it is best consumed as a guided experience.

You can’t ignore the screen or the software and go it alone. Participation in the community isn’t a must but you get absorbed into what other people are doing as you see their activity in rows with you or in a nice little feed that shows who has finished a row and how they performed.

It’s optional to share but it does work on an visceral level, engaging you and making you feel like you’re part of a group of fellow enthusiasts. You can filter the results by age and gender and it can be quite a motivational factor.

Hydrow Review - Total Body Home Happiness - Reviews, rowing, endurance, indoor rowing, power, technique, at home training, total body, at home workouts, stay fit at home, hydrow

However, the best part of it all is the instructors. You have real rowers, you have one or two person sculls, and proficient rowing on a body of water with bridges and boats and real world scenery.

In one workout, I saw the instructor have to adjust after getting too close to the walls of a tunnel under a bridge. You do feel like you are part of an experience on the water, even when you are as cynical as I am.

However, what really struck me was the fact that you are forced into maintaining good technique because of the intimacy of the instruction. Your instructor is right there in front of you, a skilled rower, and you can’t flail around or mess up your own form unless you turn off the sound and close your eyes.

Every row is different and can be a zen experience, as much as they are a challenge. The emphasis on form and consistency are a constant challenge, even to the best rowers.

If you have experienced rowing in a typical box gym without that follow along instruction, the experience on Hydrow is a revelation, feeling as close to being on the water as possible.

I am sure for actual rowers, that may seem an exagerration but I can only talk about how it made me feel as someone who hasn’t rowed on water but is now itching to try it out at some point.

I don’t know if indoor bikes and treadmills offer that same level of immersion. I was handed the Hydrow experience as a reviewer on these pages and I have become a believer.

Hydrow Indoor Rowing System
Weight 145 lbs
Dimensions 86x25x47 inches
Screen 22 inch display with 25 degree pivot in each direction
Connectivity Bluetooth connection, WiFi (10mbps recommended), Ethernet (optional) Wifi: 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac; Ethernet: 100mbps/RJ45
Electrical

120-volt standard outlet; 60Hz; Power (Max): 210W, 2A; Power (Avg): 35W (.54A); Power (Idle): 5W (50mA)

Drag Mechanism Electromagnetic resistance that adjusts 240 times per second attached to a polyester webbing handle strap
Size Limit 36″ inseam; 375 lbs weight
Price $2,495 but expect holiday deals a plenty by signing up at Hydrow’s Shop. Expect to pay over $30 per month for membership

Source

Powered by WordPress