Lane Assignments

The days of taking it easy are over. Coach Durant started the night off by telling us his new plan to give us lane assignments. I got placed in the lane with Dagon and one of the new guys (I’m terrible with names). They were both extremely fast.

I watched myself on my flipturns tonight. I think I flipped over straight every time, then pushed off upside-down, and flipped back over after pushing off the wall. I’ve really improved that part of my turn. I’m still having a problem with breathing off the wall. I keep taking a breath before taking a stroke and tonight I realized just how much of a difference that makes. Sabrina was in the lane next to me and we were head-to-head coming into the wall on several occasions, but she always came off the wall much faster than I did. I’ll work on breathing now that I’m feeling better about my rotation.

Warm-Up (1300):
1 x 400 Free
4 x 75 (25 free, 25 back, 25 free) on 0:10 rest
6 x 100 Free (2 white, 2 pink, 2 red) on 1:40

Main Set (2150):
4 x 150 (100 free, 50 back) on 3:00
4 x 25 backstroke drill choice on 0:30
4 x 150 (100 free, 50 back) on 2:50
4 x 25 backstroke drill (kicking on our side) on 0:30
5 x 150 free on 2:45

Drills:
3 x Power Turns

Backstroke

We had 15 people tonight. I can’t keep up with all the names, but it’s great to see so many people enjoying swimming. I spent most the night in a lane (not the Axe Grinder!) with Dagon, Sabrina, and Jeff. We were just doing drills, but we really pushed ourselves. At one point we were more than 100 ahead of the other lanes.

We learned a new backstroke drill tonight called Vertical Ice. I’m not sure I can explain it very well, but here’s my attempt. You take 3 full strokes and then freeze when you have one arm fully extended above your head, the other arm sticking straight up, perpendicular to your body, and you kick 7 times, then repeat. This helps you with your rotation, as you’re supposed to be completely rotated when you freeze. Luckily we did it with fins.

We finished up the practice with some Hammer-Downs without fins, which was a lot of fun. We started at the back wall and pushed off under water, kicking half-way across the pool without coming up. At mid-pool, we began treading water with our arms fully extended above our heads. This is a challenge, especially while trying to catch your breath from kicking your way out there without coming up for air. After treading water for 10 seconds, you put the “hammer down” and sprint at full speed back to the wall. We did that 6 times on 1:30.

I noticed that my “swimmer’s elbow” started to come back after those, and I think it’s related to pushing it as hard as I can on the sprint portion. I’m not in pain or anything, but I can tell my elbow isn’t 100%. I guess it’s good to narrow down the times when it happens so I can figure out what I’m doing wrong that causes it.

Warm-Up:
1 x 400 Free

Drills:
20 x Backstroke flip-turn work
2 x 300 Drill ( 2 x (50 Free, 50 Vertical Ice, 50 Free) )
2 x 200 Drill ( 50 Free, 50 Vertical Ice, 50 Fly drill, 50 Free )
3 x 100 Drill ( 25 Free, 25 Vertical Ice, 25 Fly (full), 25 Free )
6 x Hammer Down ( 12.5 underwater kick, 10 seconds tread, 12.5 sprint freestyle )

Warm-Down:
1 x 75 Free easy

3 Backstroke Drills

Even without Wade and his son, we still had 14 people tonight. That’s a good group. We even had a full spectrum of skill levels. The drawback to having such a large group is that I can’t tell you all the people that were there tonight. I doubt I even saw all of them. But I can tell you that one of my neighbors showed up. We may even wind up car pooling with him at some point.

For most the night, I was in the Axe Grinder lane with Andrea, Chelsea, and Sabrina. We were doing backstroke drills and I want to point out that the Axe Grinder is not the best lane for that type of activity. Several drills required us to circle clockwise (swimmers usually circle counter-clockwise), which put us going down against the wall, then trying to push off the back wall without hitting the ladder, which is next to the lane-line. This usually meant someone would push off from about the middle while those coming down were trying to avoid grinding their fingers off against the wall (also coming down the middle)… it wasn’t pretty. I saw Andrea and Chelsea collide, and I smacked into Andrea, and I hit someone (still not sure who) when I pushed off once. But we managed to survive.

Warm-Up (600):
3 x ( 4 x 50 sculling and pulling (1/4, 1/2, 3/4, all sculling) )

Main Set (1800):
4 x 50 backstroke kicking one-arm streamline on 1:20 with fins
4 x 50 double-arm backstroke on 1:20 with fins
4 x 50 backstroke “swim the rope” (use the lane-line to pull faster) on 1:20 with fins
4 x 25 full-stroke backstroke on 0:30 with fins
4 x 50 backstroke kicking one-arm streamline on 1:00 with fins
4 x 50 double-arm backstroke on 1:00 with fins
4 x 50 backstroke “swim the rope” on 1:00 with fins
4 x 25 full-stroke backstroke on 0:30 with fins
16 x 25 freestyle kick on 0:45 (no fins)

30 Minute Time Trial

Every couple months we subject ourselves to a 30 minute time trial. The goal is just to swim as far as you can in 30 minutes. Coach Durant was hoping for a good turnout for the time trials, and he got what he wanted tonight. I believe our final count was 13. We had 3 new people. One of them was a 16-year-old kid that warmed up in the Axe Grinder lane with me and Jeff, but then he moved over with the 2 new girls for the time trial.

I really wanted to know my time at the 400, 800, and 1650 marks. I remember that I looked up at the clock to see my times at each of those intervals. I even remember that I was happy with my times, but I don’t remember what the clock said at 400 and 800, but my 1650 time was 20:48. I guess it’s possible that I was off by 50 (making it a 1600), but I was still happy.

Jeff was in my lane and he was clicking the lap button on his stopwatch each 50. He ended up with 36 laps and I passed him 4 or 5 times. Andrea and Chelsea were in the lane next to us and they were really doing well. I think I only passed Andrea 3 times, and she stayed right with me the last 200 or 300. It was all I could do to pull away as the clock ran down. You couldn’t ask for a better group to swim with!

Warm-Up (2000):
8 x 100 pull (75 free, 25 sculling)
1 x 200 easy
4 x ( 4 x 25 (free, scull, free, back) on 0:40 )
6 x 100 free on 2:00 (2 x white, 2 x pink, 2 x white)

Main Set (2200):
1 x 2100 on 30:00 (time trial)
1 x 100 easy

Ready and waiting

When I got home from work today, Charmaine was already dressed in her cycling gear and ready to ride the trainer. I was a little late leaving work, so I was a bit concerned that she would have started without me, but she was still waiting. It turned out to be a pretty good ride. I was in a higher gear than normal and doing fine… but then we started messing around, seeing who could ride at the highest gear for the longest. That burned me out rather quickly, and then I ran into a problem. My bike refused to down-shift. I was stuck on my big gear in the front. That wasn’t all that big of a deal, since I could still make it fairly easy on the back, but it was weighing on my mind. Finally I took about a 1 minute break and got it to shift back down on the front. After that it was hard to get back into the rhythm, but we eventually did. We made it through an entire West Wing episode and then about half an episode of The Big Bang Theory.

Friday on the trainer

Charmaine talked me into riding our bikes and watching a couple episodes of The West Wing Friday night. I’m hoping that I’ll start getting used to being in the saddle, but so far I don’t last more than about 40 minutes before I’m pretty uncomfortable. We ended up finishing the first episode and got about 5 minutes into the next episode before I couldn’t take it any more. I think that means we rode about 50 minutes, which is pretty good for me. Other than the 25 mile ride in last year’s Spudman Triathlon, I don’t think I’ve been on my bike this long.

Saturday Charmaine jumped back on the trainer again. I was in no condition to hurt myself again, so I felt a bit bad about letting her ride on her own. She didn’t want me to feel bad about it, so she said she would be pretty quick. More than 2 hours later she was still riding. I think it’s pretty obvious that I’m holding her back on this training thing. Hopefully I’ll start to catch up one of these weeks.

Where is everyone?

Tonight was the smallest group we’ve had yet. Everyone had their own lane! It was just me, Charmaine, Justin, Jeff, and Steve.

I’ve been fighting what I think is tennis-elbow or a mild tendonitis in my right elbow for a couple weeks now. The last few times I’ve swam it has flared up a bit, but tonight was the worst yet. My arm was completely useless by the end of practice and I could barely drive home using my left arm. Even now I can’t find a comfortable position for my right elbow. I’m going to have to really take it easy when I’m out of the pool if I want to be able to swim. I’m also trying to improve my stroke technique to help my elbow as well. I’ve got a lot of improving to do!

We discovered that we’re all breathing incorrectly. Some of us are holding our breath from when we breathe in until it’s time to breathe in again, then quickly exhaling, other are pausing while they inhale, and still others are exhaling too long. Any and/or all of these are fairly serious problems that can lead to ataxia (not enough oxygen in the brain) which makes you run out of steam extremely quickly. Breathing is about relaxing. Swimming is about who can stay relaxed the longest. If you’re breathing is slowly causing your brain to lose oxygen, you won’t be relaxed very long. We spent a few minutes at the end of practice working on some breathing exercises to help us see what we’re doing wrong.

Warm-Up (800):
400 free
200 free Pulling
200 fly kick on our backs with fins

Main Set (2200):
12 x 50 free on 1:00
10 x 50 fly on 1:10 with fins (25 fly drill, 25 full stroke)
8 x 100 free on 1:45 (4 white, 2 pink, 2 red)
12 x 25 underwater fly kick on 0:40 with fins (come up after mid-pool)

Warm-Down (275):
4 x 50 shooters with fins (25 underwater, 25 easy)
1 x 75 easy

1-4-3-2

Tonight we learned how to race. Go out hard, bring it back a little easier, build with the legs, and then bring it home. When you break down a 200, for example, the first 50 should be the fastest; the second 50 should be the least fast (but not slow); you need to really build with the legs on the third 50, or you’ll lose the race; and you give everything you have left on the last 50.

It was the smallest group we’ve had since I’ve been going. There were just 6 of us. I was, once again, in the Ave Grinder lane. Jeff was with me. He did really well for the first half of the workout, but then trailed off at the end. In the next lane were Wade and Charmaine, who did the big set with fins… and the final lane were Sabrina and Andrea. I think we all pushed pretty hard tonight. I managed to stay ahead of Sabrina every time, but Wade was killing me with his fins.

Warm-Up (1300):
400 Free
200 Back
4 x 50 Fly drill on 10 seconds rest (1 left, 1 full, 1 right, 1 full)
10 x 50 kick on 0:50 with fins (50 free, 50 choice)

Main Set (1900):
4 x (

4 x 50 Free on 1:00 (1-4-3-2)
1 x 200 Free on 3:00 (1-4-3-2)
)

4 x 75 drill (50 swim, 25 sculling)

Riding the West Wing

We haven’t ridden our trainers too much, but I’ve decided that I should be blogging about the times when we do, just so there’s a record of it… and why we weren’t swimming or running (yeah right) or doing something else.

Last night I spent some time messing around with the iPhone SDK while Charmaine was reading a book. After a while I heard a peculiar noise. It sounded a bit like the clothes dryer at first, but then I realized it was coming from the TV room. Charmaine had started to ride her bike while watching TV. I’ve found too many excuses to skip riding in the past, so I decided I would get on and ride. We ended up riding about 45 minutes… the entire length of a West Wing episode on Boxee.

I spent more than half the time in a higher gear than the last time we rode, so I was pretty happy about that. I really enjoy riding the bike. Now if I could just stop getting sore from all that time in the saddle!

Substitute Teacher

Coach Durant is out of town for the state championship swim meet this weekend. Filling in for him was a friend of his that used to swim fro BYU. She did a good job and I think we all worked pretty hard, so as to not let down our real coach.

I was in the Axe Grinder lane again tonight with Jeff and Andrea. Somehow I managed to stay away from the wall. Maybe I’ll become friends with this lane after all. In the next lane over was Steve. He was really working hard tonight. It was all I could do to stay ahead of him on the 9 x 50s we did at the end of our warm-up.

Coach Durant left instructions for us to do the main set without fins unless we couldn’t make the interval. I thought that was a great excuse to just use fins, but Andrea talked me out of it. We only managed to do the first 3 without fins, then finished up with our fins on. Steve did the whole thing without fins. Wow. Between Andrea and Steve challenging me, it’s amazing that I found an excuse to take it easy for the second set of 3 x 200 (I even went last after Jeff and Andrea). I felt bad about that and moved up to second for the last set and then took the very last one as hard as I could. So at least it wasn’t a total slack job. It’s great to have people like Andrea and Steve there to push me so hard.

Warm-Up (1050):
1 x 600 (200 Free, 200 Back, 200 Free-Back: rotating every 5 strokes)
9 x 50 Free on 1:00 (3 x (1 x “smooth”, 1 x medium, 1 x “strong”) )

Main Set (2200):
3 x 200 Free on 3:30 no fins
1 x 100 Easy
3 x 200 Free on 3:30 with fins (i went last and took these a little too easy)
1 x 100 Easy
3 x 200 Free on 3:30 with fins (i went second, second, and then first and pushed it)
1 x 200 Easy