It is most revealing that the AI bot gives the ultimate advice - talk to a real person.
dw
On Thursday, 29 June 2023 at 22:00:45 UTC+1, Dick White wrote:over 'old'.
It is most revealing that the AI bot gives the ultimate advice - talk to a real person.
dw
There are some interesting bits in there - but bearing in mind that it is simply an internet statistical trawl - it will largely reward 'dogma' and if there is a paradigm shift, it is unlikely to reproduce the change unless it weights 'newer' thinking
For fun I thought I would ask about the "ideal" rowing blade depth - and here was the answerblade depth will vary depending on the rower's technique, the type of oar, and the water conditions...."
"....The ideal blade depth in rowing is when the blade is fully submerged in the water, with only about 1 cm of the blade showing above the surface. This allows the blade to grip the water more effectively and generate more power. However, the exact
So even in the one sentence it contradicts itself - "fully submerged" and 1cm showing above the surface are the two different 'camps' and it has combined them into one answer with an impossible solution.
It also says a deeper blade will "generate" more power - and we all know that blades don't make power themselves!
So it is great at presenting back to you the rubbish that is out there in the internet, in an apparently intelligible way - which is what I guess Human coaches have been doing for years :)
James
On 04/07/2023 10:07, James HS wrote:thinking over 'old'.
On Thursday, 29 June 2023 at 22:00:45 UTC+1, Dick White wrote:
It is most revealing that the AI bot gives the ultimate advice - talk to a real person.
dw
There are some interesting bits in there - but bearing in mind that it is simply an internet statistical trawl - it will largely reward 'dogma' and if there is a paradigm shift, it is unlikely to reproduce the change unless it weights 'newer'
blade depth will vary depending on the rower's technique, the type of oar, and the water conditions...."For fun I thought I would ask about the "ideal" rowing blade depth - and here was the answer
"....The ideal blade depth in rowing is when the blade is fully submerged in the water, with only about 1 cm of the blade showing above the surface. This allows the blade to grip the water more effectively and generate more power. However, the exact
So even in the one sentence it contradicts itself - "fully submerged" and 1cm showing above the surface are the two different 'camps' and it has combined them into one answer with an impossible solution.
It also says a deeper blade will "generate" more power - and we all know that blades don't make power themselves!
So it is great at presenting back to you the rubbish that is out there in the internet, in an apparently intelligible way - which is what I guess Human coaches have been doing for years :)
James
James -
That's a perfect exposition of what was going around inside my skull on reading Charles's deliberate provocations (it's what Charles does so
very well, the cad!).
As we've always said, of things computery: "garbage in, garbage out".
That there are so many logical conflicts in those 2 sentences perfectly
sums up the collective ignorance of those who presume to tell us how to
row. Neither science, nor logic, gets a look-in! Yet foolish people
will cling to this new holy grail of AI, foolishly believing that doing
so will make them sound smart without their having the nous or industry
to be so.
Bullshit baffles brains!
Cheers -
Carl
--
Carl Douglas Racing Shells -
Fine Small-Boats/AeRoWing Low-drag Riggers/Advanced Accessories
Write: Harris Boatyard, Laleham Reach, Chertsey KT16 8RP, UK
Find: tinyurl.com/2tqujf
Email: ca...@carldouglasrowing.com Tel: +44(0)1932-570946 Fax: -563682
URLs: carldouglasrowing.com & now on Facebook @ CarlDouglasRacingShells
On Wednesday, 5 July 2023 at 14:00:39 UTC+1, carl wrote:thinking over 'old'.
On 04/07/2023 10:07, James HS wrote:
On Thursday, 29 June 2023 at 22:00:45 UTC+1, Dick White wrote:
It is most revealing that the AI bot gives the ultimate advice - talk to a real person.
dw
There are some interesting bits in there - but bearing in mind that it is simply an internet statistical trawl - it will largely reward 'dogma' and if there is a paradigm shift, it is unlikely to reproduce the change unless it weights 'newer'
blade depth will vary depending on the rower's technique, the type of oar, and the water conditions...."
For fun I thought I would ask about the "ideal" rowing blade depth - and here was the answer
"....The ideal blade depth in rowing is when the blade is fully submerged in the water, with only about 1 cm of the blade showing above the surface. This allows the blade to grip the water more effectively and generate more power. However, the exact
changing it in an actual program and not get a crazy push-back to wanting to do the 'old way' (I tried to have bench pulls and leg press removed from our gym (as they are both useless and injurious) and replaced with more useful equipment (sliding barJames -
So even in the one sentence it contradicts itself - "fully submerged" and 1cm showing above the surface are the two different 'camps' and it has combined them into one answer with an impossible solution.
It also says a deeper blade will "generate" more power - and we all know that blades don't make power themselves!
So it is great at presenting back to you the rubbish that is out there in the internet, in an apparently intelligible way - which is what I guess Human coaches have been doing for years :)
James
That's a perfect exposition of what was going around inside my skull on
reading Charles's deliberate provocations (it's what Charles does so
very well, the cad!).
As we've always said, of things computery: "garbage in, garbage out".
That there are so many logical conflicts in those 2 sentences perfectly
sums up the collective ignorance of those who presume to tell us how to
row. Neither science, nor logic, gets a look-in! Yet foolish people
will cling to this new holy grail of AI, foolishly believing that doing
so will make them sound smart without their having the nous or industry
to be so.
Bullshit baffles brains!
Cheers -
Carl
--
Carl Douglas Racing Shells -
Fine Small-Boats/AeRoWing Low-drag Riggers/Advanced Accessories
Write: Harris Boatyard, Laleham Reach, Chertsey KT16 8RP, UK
Find: tinyurl.com/2tqujf
Email: ca...@carldouglasrowing.com Tel: +44(0)1932-570946 Fax: -563682
URLs: carldouglasrowing.com & now on Facebook @ CarlDouglasRacingShells
Carl
I am as guilty of the next coach - but get insights into how it all works when I read your posts :)
The biggest one (ignoring slip for a moment) is the image of levering yourself past the blade locked in the water - which then leads to a conversations about how to lock and un lock it - and voila!
Then I try and translate that into a program at my club and get bemused looks from all levels!
When I actually apply science - that changes my mind (like warm-up being useful to performance, but cool down not so much, or the fact that DOMS slows down a trained rower's 2K by about 2-3 seconds, so keep training before 'tests' in season) - try
This medium is not yet dead - and is at least searchable - unlike the metaverse!!
James
On 06/07/2023 09:27, James HS wrote:thinking over 'old'.
On Wednesday, 5 July 2023 at 14:00:39 UTC+1, carl wrote:
On 04/07/2023 10:07, James HS wrote:
On Thursday, 29 June 2023 at 22:00:45 UTC+1, Dick White wrote:
It is most revealing that the AI bot gives the ultimate advice - talk to a real person.
dw
There are some interesting bits in there - but bearing in mind that it is simply an internet statistical trawl - it will largely reward 'dogma' and if there is a paradigm shift, it is unlikely to reproduce the change unless it weights 'newer'
exact blade depth will vary depending on the rower's technique, the type of oar, and the water conditions...."
For fun I thought I would ask about the "ideal" rowing blade depth - and here was the answer
"....The ideal blade depth in rowing is when the blade is fully submerged in the water, with only about 1 cm of the blade showing above the surface. This allows the blade to grip the water more effectively and generate more power. However, the
changing it in an actual program and not get a crazy push-back to wanting to do the 'old way' (I tried to have bench pulls and leg press removed from our gym (as they are both useless and injurious) and replaced with more useful equipment (sliding barJames -
So even in the one sentence it contradicts itself - "fully submerged" and 1cm showing above the surface are the two different 'camps' and it has combined them into one answer with an impossible solution.
It also says a deeper blade will "generate" more power - and we all know that blades don't make power themselves!
So it is great at presenting back to you the rubbish that is out there in the internet, in an apparently intelligible way - which is what I guess Human coaches have been doing for years :)
James
That's a perfect exposition of what was going around inside my skull on >> reading Charles's deliberate provocations (it's what Charles does so
very well, the cad!).
As we've always said, of things computery: "garbage in, garbage out".
That there are so many logical conflicts in those 2 sentences perfectly >> sums up the collective ignorance of those who presume to tell us how to >> row. Neither science, nor logic, gets a look-in! Yet foolish people
will cling to this new holy grail of AI, foolishly believing that doing >> so will make them sound smart without their having the nous or industry >> to be so.
Bullshit baffles brains!
Cheers -
Carl
--
Carl Douglas Racing Shells -
Fine Small-Boats/AeRoWing Low-drag Riggers/Advanced Accessories
Write: Harris Boatyard, Laleham Reach, Chertsey KT16 8RP, UK
Find: tinyurl.com/2tqujf
Email: ca...@carldouglasrowing.com Tel: +44(0)1932-570946 Fax: -563682
URLs: carldouglasrowing.com & now on Facebook @ CarlDouglasRacingShells
Carl
I am as guilty of the next coach - but get insights into how it all works when I read your posts :)
The biggest one (ignoring slip for a moment) is the image of levering yourself past the blade locked in the water - which then leads to a conversations about how to lock and un lock it - and voila!
Then I try and translate that into a program at my club and get bemused looks from all levels!
When I actually apply science - that changes my mind (like warm-up being useful to performance, but cool down not so much, or the fact that DOMS slows down a trained rower's 2K by about 2-3 seconds, so keep training before 'tests' in season) - try
This medium is not yet dead - and is at least searchable - unlike the metaverse!!
James
James, I can't disagree - except with your comment re warm-downs, where there appears to be growing evidence (I'm told by folk far more knowledgeable than me) that the older competitors do have a real need
for proper on-water warm-downs. Otherwise, which of us has not done ourselves some degree of injury on apparatus & ergs through poor
technique, personal stupidity (guilty as charged!) & the fact that some
bits of kit & how they are used can take us too far beyond the range of actions directly relevant to the rowing stroke. We can be very strong
in some departments directly used by rowers but then apply that same
can-do mentality to exercises for which rowing has not prepared us.
Cheers -
Carl
--
Carl Douglas Racing Shells -
Fine Small-Boats/AeRoWing Low-drag Riggers/Advanced Accessories
Write: Harris Boatyard, Laleham Reach, Chertsey KT16 8RP, UK
Find: tinyurl.com/2tqujf
Email: ca...@carldouglasrowing.com Tel: +44(0)1932-570946 Fax: -563682
URLs: carldouglasrowing.com & now on Facebook @ CarlDouglasRacingShells
On Tuesday, July 11, 2023 at 2:45:41 PM UTC+1, carl wrote:thinking over 'old'.
On 06/07/2023 09:27, James HS wrote:
On Wednesday, 5 July 2023 at 14:00:39 UTC+1, carl wrote:
On 04/07/2023 10:07, James HS wrote:
On Thursday, 29 June 2023 at 22:00:45 UTC+1, Dick White wrote:
It is most revealing that the AI bot gives the ultimate advice - talk to a real person.
dw
There are some interesting bits in there - but bearing in mind that it is simply an internet statistical trawl - it will largely reward 'dogma' and if there is a paradigm shift, it is unlikely to reproduce the change unless it weights 'newer'
exact blade depth will vary depending on the rower's technique, the type of oar, and the water conditions...."
For fun I thought I would ask about the "ideal" rowing blade depth - and here was the answer
"....The ideal blade depth in rowing is when the blade is fully submerged in the water, with only about 1 cm of the blade showing above the surface. This allows the blade to grip the water more effectively and generate more power. However, the
changing it in an actual program and not get a crazy push-back to wanting to do the 'old way' (I tried to have bench pulls and leg press removed from our gym (as they are both useless and injurious) and replaced with more useful equipment (sliding barCarlJames -
So even in the one sentence it contradicts itself - "fully submerged" and 1cm showing above the surface are the two different 'camps' and it has combined them into one answer with an impossible solution.
It also says a deeper blade will "generate" more power - and we all know that blades don't make power themselves!
So it is great at presenting back to you the rubbish that is out there in the internet, in an apparently intelligible way - which is what I guess Human coaches have been doing for years :)
James
That's a perfect exposition of what was going around inside my skull on >>>> reading Charles's deliberate provocations (it's what Charles does so
very well, the cad!).
As we've always said, of things computery: "garbage in, garbage out".
That there are so many logical conflicts in those 2 sentences perfectly >>>> sums up the collective ignorance of those who presume to tell us how to >>>> row. Neither science, nor logic, gets a look-in! Yet foolish people
will cling to this new holy grail of AI, foolishly believing that doing >>>> so will make them sound smart without their having the nous or industry >>>> to be so.
Bullshit baffles brains!
Cheers -
Carl
--
Carl Douglas Racing Shells -
Fine Small-Boats/AeRoWing Low-drag Riggers/Advanced Accessories
Write: Harris Boatyard, Laleham Reach, Chertsey KT16 8RP, UK
Find: tinyurl.com/2tqujf
Email: ca...@carldouglasrowing.com Tel: +44(0)1932-570946 Fax: -563682 >>>> URLs: carldouglasrowing.com & now on Facebook @ CarlDouglasRacingShells >>>
I am as guilty of the next coach - but get insights into how it all works when I read your posts :)
The biggest one (ignoring slip for a moment) is the image of levering yourself past the blade locked in the water - which then leads to a conversations about how to lock and un lock it - and voila!
Then I try and translate that into a program at my club and get bemused looks from all levels!
When I actually apply science - that changes my mind (like warm-up being useful to performance, but cool down not so much, or the fact that DOMS slows down a trained rower's 2K by about 2-3 seconds, so keep training before 'tests' in season) - try
ditto) and I used to add at the end of the 'work' a cool down (12-15 minutes plus) and a stretch out (static stretches) which took about 20 minutes at the end of a session.James, I can't disagree - except with your comment re warm-downs, where
This medium is not yet dead - and is at least searchable - unlike the metaverse!!
James
there appears to be growing evidence (I'm told by folk far more
knowledgeable than me) that the older competitors do have a real need
for proper on-water warm-downs. Otherwise, which of us has not done
ourselves some degree of injury on apparatus & ergs through poor
technique, personal stupidity (guilty as charged!) & the fact that some
bits of kit & how they are used can take us too far beyond the range of
actions directly relevant to the rowing stroke. We can be very strong
in some departments directly used by rowers but then apply that same
can-do mentality to exercises for which rowing has not prepared us.
Cheers -
Carl
--
Carl Douglas Racing Shells -
Fine Small-Boats/AeRoWing Low-drag Riggers/Advanced Accessories
Write: Harris Boatyard, Laleham Reach, Chertsey KT16 8RP, UK
Find: tinyurl.com/2tqujf
Email: ca...@carldouglasrowing.com Tel: +44(0)1932-570946 Fax: -563682
URLs: carldouglasrowing.com & now on Facebook @ CarlDouglasRacingShells
Carl
You make a good point about efficacy of cool down in masters - I was looking at it purely for land based exercises where I used to ask for a 3K warm up (proven efficacy in the literature) and dynamic stretching (again proven) and muscle activation (
Papers I read (with some credibility behind them) still backed the efficacy of stretching on future performance, but found that the cool down had no contribution to the future performance outcome.
This was counter to most of my previous awareness, but I think was repeated in several learned papers - and I tend to adopt 'science' and so could shave 15 minutes off a training session for athletes.
But I will delve further and see if there are any more specific studies that relate to masters athletes.
On the water we tend to have a 'cool down' period as landing on our steps is inevitably a bit complicated - but I have never thought too heavily about it and should!!
James
On 13/07/2023 08:10, James HS wrote:thinking over 'old'.
On Tuesday, July 11, 2023 at 2:45:41 PM UTC+1, carl wrote:
On 06/07/2023 09:27, James HS wrote:
On Wednesday, 5 July 2023 at 14:00:39 UTC+1, carl wrote:
On 04/07/2023 10:07, James HS wrote:
On Thursday, 29 June 2023 at 22:00:45 UTC+1, Dick White wrote:
It is most revealing that the AI bot gives the ultimate advice - talk to a real person.
dw
There are some interesting bits in there - but bearing in mind that it is simply an internet statistical trawl - it will largely reward 'dogma' and if there is a paradigm shift, it is unlikely to reproduce the change unless it weights 'newer'
exact blade depth will vary depending on the rower's technique, the type of oar, and the water conditions...."
For fun I thought I would ask about the "ideal" rowing blade depth - and here was the answer
"....The ideal blade depth in rowing is when the blade is fully submerged in the water, with only about 1 cm of the blade showing above the surface. This allows the blade to grip the water more effectively and generate more power. However, the
changing it in an actual program and not get a crazy push-back to wanting to do the 'old way' (I tried to have bench pulls and leg press removed from our gym (as they are both useless and injurious) and replaced with more useful equipment (sliding barCarlJames -
So even in the one sentence it contradicts itself - "fully submerged" and 1cm showing above the surface are the two different 'camps' and it has combined them into one answer with an impossible solution.
It also says a deeper blade will "generate" more power - and we all know that blades don't make power themselves!
So it is great at presenting back to you the rubbish that is out there in the internet, in an apparently intelligible way - which is what I guess Human coaches have been doing for years :)
James
That's a perfect exposition of what was going around inside my skull on >>>> reading Charles's deliberate provocations (it's what Charles does so >>>> very well, the cad!).
As we've always said, of things computery: "garbage in, garbage out". >>>>
That there are so many logical conflicts in those 2 sentences perfectly >>>> sums up the collective ignorance of those who presume to tell us how to >>>> row. Neither science, nor logic, gets a look-in! Yet foolish people >>>> will cling to this new holy grail of AI, foolishly believing that doing >>>> so will make them sound smart without their having the nous or industry >>>> to be so.
Bullshit baffles brains!
Cheers -
Carl
--
Carl Douglas Racing Shells -
Fine Small-Boats/AeRoWing Low-drag Riggers/Advanced Accessories
Write: Harris Boatyard, Laleham Reach, Chertsey KT16 8RP, UK
Find: tinyurl.com/2tqujf
Email: ca...@carldouglasrowing.com Tel: +44(0)1932-570946 Fax: -563682 >>>> URLs: carldouglasrowing.com & now on Facebook @ CarlDouglasRacingShells >>>
I am as guilty of the next coach - but get insights into how it all works when I read your posts :)
The biggest one (ignoring slip for a moment) is the image of levering yourself past the blade locked in the water - which then leads to a conversations about how to lock and un lock it - and voila!
Then I try and translate that into a program at my club and get bemused looks from all levels!
When I actually apply science - that changes my mind (like warm-up being useful to performance, but cool down not so much, or the fact that DOMS slows down a trained rower's 2K by about 2-3 seconds, so keep training before 'tests' in season) - try
ditto) and I used to add at the end of the 'work' a cool down (12-15 minutes plus) and a stretch out (static stretches) which took about 20 minutes at the end of a session.James, I can't disagree - except with your comment re warm-downs, where >> there appears to be growing evidence (I'm told by folk far more
This medium is not yet dead - and is at least searchable - unlike the metaverse!!
James
knowledgeable than me) that the older competitors do have a real need
for proper on-water warm-downs. Otherwise, which of us has not done
ourselves some degree of injury on apparatus & ergs through poor
technique, personal stupidity (guilty as charged!) & the fact that some >> bits of kit & how they are used can take us too far beyond the range of >> actions directly relevant to the rowing stroke. We can be very strong
in some departments directly used by rowers but then apply that same
can-do mentality to exercises for which rowing has not prepared us.
Cheers -
Carl
--
Carl Douglas Racing Shells -
Fine Small-Boats/AeRoWing Low-drag Riggers/Advanced Accessories
Write: Harris Boatyard, Laleham Reach, Chertsey KT16 8RP, UK
Find: tinyurl.com/2tqujf
Email: ca...@carldouglasrowing.com Tel: +44(0)1932-570946 Fax: -563682
URLs: carldouglasrowing.com & now on Facebook @ CarlDouglasRacingShells
Carl
You make a good point about efficacy of cool down in masters - I was looking at it purely for land based exercises where I used to ask for a 3K warm up (proven efficacy in the literature) and dynamic stretching (again proven) and muscle activation (
Papers I read (with some credibility behind them) still backed the efficacy of stretching on future performance, but found that the cool down had no contribution to the future performance outcome.
This was counter to most of my previous awareness, but I think was repeated in several learned papers - and I tend to adopt 'science' and so could shave 15 minutes off a training session for athletes.
But I will delve further and see if there are any more specific studies that relate to masters athletes.
On the water we tend to have a 'cool down' period as landing on our steps is inevitably a bit complicated - but I have never thought too heavily about it and should!!
James
James -
I think you may know Kosta Kolimechkov? It was he who recently directed
my attention to the desirability, specifically for older rowers, of
ample warm-downs.
Club rowing now being so dependent upon the "masters" bunch of rowers
(how can one be a novice "master"?), it would be a shame to have them damaged, if that's what could happen, by unduly limiting their scope for active warm-downs (as opposed to them hanging around awaiting landing space).
Cheers -
Carl
--
Carl Douglas Racing Shells -
Fine Small-Boats/AeRoWing Low-drag Riggers/Advanced Accessories
Write: Harris Boatyard, Laleham Reach, Chertsey KT16 8RP, UK
Find: tinyurl.com/2tqujf
Email: ca...@carldouglasrowing.com Tel: +44(0)1932-570946 Fax: -563682
URLs: carldouglasrowing.com & now on Facebook @ CarlDouglasRacingShells
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