A month ago
I decided I'd lay off the heavy weights and chin-ups and instead focus
on endurance and cardio work. So began a month of skipping, boxing and
rope flicks (symmetrical and asymmetrical, which looked a like what
these German guys are doing.
I
also used a lot of cardio machines in an attempt to beat previously
standing personal bests. Whilst on the rowing machine I had a look at
some of the in-built games that you can play. These are designed to
encourage you to increase and decrease your speed of rowing so that
your heart gets used to working at different rates. It's great for
general fitness (and, for example, training for a fight).
The
fish game was brilliant. At the left of the screen is your cursor, a
medium-sized fish at the bottom of the screen. The fish is facing the
right edge. Moving right to left on the screen are a number of fish
of varying sizes, some bigger than your fish, some smaller. The
harder you row, the higher up the screen your fish rises. Any
oncoming smaller fish your fish will eat; any oncoming bigger fish
will eat you. Hence you row hard to rise your cursor to catch the
small fish above you then ease off to catch the ones below. The same
goes for staying out of the way of oncoming bigger fish. It's pretty
fun and works your reflexes as well as your body.
The
darts game was a lot harder. There's a dartboard at the right of the
screen. You're given a supply of 100 LCD 'darts'. The darts fly out
from left to right at varying heights, meaning you need to react
quickly and vary your speed. The harder you row, the higher the arc
your dart will have. If your dart flies out from the top of the
screen, you need to ease off to let it sail down toward the centre of
the board. The next dart could fly from the bottom, meaning you'd
need to row hard to raise its arc. At the end of your darts, you'll
have a combined score.
Target
practice was similar to the above but the board was designed more
like an archery target, with the aim to get the arrow into the
centre.
Interval
training involved a series of 500m blasts of rowing, interspersed
with 30 second rests. This seemed to go on indefinitely. Interesting
to begin with, but hard to keep up with no end in sight.
A
lot of the cardio machines were difficult to get on as they are very
popular. The same goes for the punch bag, the skipping ropes and the
heavy rope. These three are all stored in the same corner of the gym
which is normally occupied with people doing these activities or
others (sit-ups, gymnastics rings, etc.) At quiet times, I managed to
get on a few of these. These aren't exercises you can particularly
measure, but as I trained I could feel my endurance sustaining better
than in previous years.
In
the month of the project I managed to make one solid improvement with
my 10 minute row: 41 metres onto personal best. It's not far off what
I was rowing when I was 24, and still doing Muay Thai. My cardio was
exceptional back then, so I'm not doing too bad for a 33-year-old
carrying a little extra these days. I'm also getting through
cardiotone classes without gassing. Now to get back onto weights and chin-ups. Still no visible abs.
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