For most of the past week I've had an itchy rash from my ankles halfway up to my knees. That's because the access we use on the Rainbow River is a ramp, meaning that we have to wade at least shin-deep into the water every time we put in and take out. As a result, that part of all my paddling pants has stayed wet all week. I didn't bring enough paddling clothes with me, and getting the clothes I have dry in between workouts has been more or less impossible.
That's just one of the reasons that by Friday morning I was thoroughly weary of camp. The novelty of getting up in the morning and putting on damp clothes to paddle in sub-40-degree-Fahrenheit weather had worn off at least a day or two before.
Another reason is that the volume of training had been taxing and had left me feeling beat up and worn out. That's how this camp always is, for in fact it is intended to be such. I can only imagine how done-in the people are who attended the full two weeks.
In the aches and pains department, I'm having some pain in my outer lower right lat muscle. It's not so bad that I can't paddle, but by Friday morning it had gotten so that I was wincing a little every time I inhaled. I may have aggravated it a bit during our workout on Thursday.
That workout we did Thursday afternoon was a bear, but I was pleased with how I had performed. Friday morning's workout was just the sort of thing to bring me back to reality. It was two sets of six four-minute pieces done at 60 to 64 strokes per minute with a minute rest after each one; the first set was done with resistance on the boat, the second set without. The purpose is to promote good paddling technique: the resistance dampens the boat's glide and prompts the paddler to focus on a good solid catch at the start of each stroke, and the low stroke rate allows him to contemplate all the other technical aspects. It's important work and I understand why we do it, but that doesn't make it feel any less of a grind. Chris Hipgrave and I did it together and we agreed that we were glad to have it behind us.
Friday afternoon's session was much shorter and sweeter. We warmed up with some short pieces at various stroke rates, and then we did a bunch of short all-out sprints with short rest: six times 15 seconds on, 45 seconds off; and then eight times ten seconds on, 50 seconds off. Each set of sprints got tough about midway through, more because I was struggling to maintain control of my strokes than because I was genuinely tired.
The camp finally came to a close yesterday morning. Mercifully, the weather relented and gave us a temperature in the high 50s. There were some gusty winds blowing, though. Chris Hipgrave, Terry Smith, and I did a pair of time trials, each just shy of 600 meters long. The first was downstream on the Rainbow River starting at the highway 484 bridge, and the second was down on the Withlacoochee River, starting next to a dock and finishing at the bike trail bridge. My times were 3 minutes, 11 seconds for the first one, and 2:59 for the second. The second one was done on the same course we'd timed ourselves on the previous Saturday; I was about 10 seconds slower yesterday than I'd been a week before, and I chalk that up mainly to the swirling winds.
And now I'm back home, with a mountain of ancillary chores to catch up on. I'm not sure what's next for me in terms of canoe and kayak training, but that'll become clear over the next few days as I recover from camp.
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