Garbage Yards: Reality or Swimming's Urban Legend

In my most recent blog entry, "One Man's Garbage..." forums.usms.org/blog.php , I asked my fellow swimmers their respective opinions on the impact long, slow, continuous swimming has on meet performance. The expression "garbage yards" (and the pejorative overtones such a phrase conjurs) has become so embedded in the forum lexicon that many, I suspect, now consider as indisputable truth swimming this way is a waste of time for anyone with competitive ambitions. Such a view appears particularly well-entrenched among the many non-credentialed exercise physiology pontificators here on the forums who also have a fondness for sprinting and dry land exercise. But is the concept of garbage yards truly valid--or a kind of urban legend made up largely by sprinters who would rather be doing something other than spending 90 minutes without stopping in the pool? I don't mean only practicing this way. But if you are, like me, inclined to enjoy swimming, once or twice a week, long, slow, relatively relaxing, continuous yards, do you believe (and more importantly, perhaps, have any evidence to bolster said belief) that so-called "garbage yards" can have some value for actual racing? Or do these only teach your body to swim slow? I invite you to read my recent blog forums.usms.org/blog.php and post your thoughts advice there or here. At the risk of provoking censure by the forum authorities, I furthermore ask you to leave all civility by the wayside. Feel free to trash talk and smack upside the head of any and every one who disagrees with your personal bias here! It's been way too long since these forums have had a good, old-fashioned range war of opinions run amuk and ad hominem attacks! Go at each other tooth and claw. It will only stir the blood of us all, I say--something we garbage yard enthusiasts probably need a bit more of, I will admit.
  • I didn't use blue font or smilies. ;) Hey what are you guys talking about
  • I might contend that after dabbling in sprint and distance orientated sets this year that maybe both ideas have a place in every swimmer's repertoire, regardless of which camp you pitch your tent in. Distance oriented sets have no place in a sprinter's repertoire. :angel: And they have nothing to do with "race performance."
  • Perhaps the pursuit of garbage yards would most ideally suit an individual doggedly seeking the most catatonic of low readings on his heart monitor (and kindly sharing said readings with a few of his closest friends on Facebook)... Thanks, Mr. Cruise, for the invitation to post said results here, too. Perhaps one benefit of garbage yardage (this has a nicer ring to it, I think, than the plainer garbage yards) is its impact on what is surely the single most important aspect of competitive swimming: that is, getting your resting heart rate down as close to a corpse's as possible. This morning, after months of being stubbornly waylaid in the low 40s, my own resting heart rate took a huge and exciting leap in the direction of death by registering a 2012 personal best of 36. I credit garbage yardage to this salutory development and hope to soon match Bjorn Borg's 29 and that female triathlete's 18. Beat..beat...beat..........beat.......................................beat......................................................beat..................................................Doctor! Paddles! Stat!!!!
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Perhaps one person's garbage is someone else's ambrosia?
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Wasn't Michael Phelps doing like 10,000 garbage yards in the middle of the Olympics?
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Perhaps the pursuit of garbage yards would most ideally suit an individual doggedly seeking the most catatonic of low readings on his heart monitor (and kindly sharing said readings with a few of his closest friends on Facebook)...
  • I find this really interesting, Jim. My current resting pulse rate is 38. I usually manage to get it down to 30 bpm, but this is helped by taking beta-blockers and other pills. I need a low resting pulse rate because I actually work between heart beats. I hope you find this of interest... www.youtube.com/watch Wow, this is really amazing! :applaud:
  • Again, if you do NOTHING ELSE THIS WEEK, PLEASE WATCH GRAHAM'S STORY, FILED BY THE DISCOVERY CHANNEL AND POSTED ON YOUTUBE HERE: www.youtube.com/watch I want to concur, THIS VIDEO IS REALLY AMAZING!!!:bow:
  • Distance oriented sets have no place in a sprinter's repertoire. :angel: And they have nothing to do with "race performance." What exactly do you mean? Is there a difference between a sprinter swimming 50 event and a sprinter swimming 100 event? IMO there's a difference. If 100 oriented swimmer works only on sprints he might not have enough endurance to keep the speed on last 25 yards/meters. If sprinter prepares only for 50 event I agree - there's no need in such sets.
  • If any of you missed this, I implore you: Go back and watch this video. ... www.youtube.com/watch Awesome. We are, indeed, in the presence of so many variants of greatness. Graham, I'm not just in awe of your engraving skills, but your freestyle stroke is a similar work of beauty. 10K a day, as well? Wow! :bow: I've got relatives in Birmingham -- is your studio / works open for viewing to the public? If so, PM me the details or post the details here. I'd love to send folks your way and to come see your work some day when I'm next there. Wow!