Tonight’s row was another 45 minutes at 20 spm, and this one turned into a real exercise in control rather than a straightforward easy aerobic row.
The final numbers were 10,741m in 45:00 at 2:05.7/500m, with an average heart rate of 138 bpm and a max of 148 bpm. Stroke rate was held at 20, average power was 176 watts, drag factor was 124, and the conditions were 15.8°C with 58% humidity.
From the start, the session had a little more pressure in it than ideal. The pace itself was not aggressive, but the heart rate was climbing a little earlier than I would have liked, which meant the row quickly became about managing the effort honestly and keeping it inside the right boundaries.
The 5-minute splits were:
5:00 – 1182m – 2:06.9 – HR 129
10:00 – 1201m – 2:04.8 – HR 136
15:00 – 1200m – 2:05.0 – HR 137
20:00 – 1201m – 2:04.8 – HR 141
25:00 – 1194m – 2:05.6 – HR 141
30:00 – 1198m – 2:05.2 – HR 142
35:00 – 1205m – 2:04.4 – HR 143
40:00 – 1198m – 2:05.2 – HR 145
45:00 – 1163m – 2:08.9 – HR 143
That profile shows the session well. The first half was steady and controlled, but by the time I moved into the second half the heart rate was already sitting high enough that I had to pay attention. The goal then was not to force a late push just to make the numbers look better, but to keep the row disciplined, stay smooth, and avoid letting the effort drift beyond where it should be.
The small drop later in the row was deliberate. It was there to respect the cap, keep the session aerobic, and finish with control instead of turning the piece into something it was never meant to be. That matters, because these rows are about building consistency and repeatability, not winning one session and paying for it the next day.
What I liked was that the session stayed composed. Stroke rate remained tight, the pacing stayed mostly stable, and even when the heart rate rose, there was no panic and no collapse. It was simply a matter of reading the session properly and adjusting when needed.
So this was another useful aerobic row, but one with a firmer edge than some of the smoother days. Not spectacular, not flashy, but honest work: pressure managed, cap respected, and another solid piece added to the block.



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