How many yards a practice do you swim?

Former Member
Former Member
I tried doing a search in the forums on this and couldn't find anything. I am curious to know how many yards people in Masters are swimming a practice. I swim on average 3000-4000 yards a practice, 3 times a week.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Originally posted by Conniekat8 Sure you are, that must be why you bonked at nationals and can't figure out why. That reminds me, you should take up boxing. Put your best qualities together, overtraining and figting with people. You'd do much better there then in swimming. That's one place where someone wanting to fight all the time is actually appreciated. And in your 40's, you can still make elite ranks. I think you have a better shot there. That's what you have to say to my technical post? Jealousy of someone who looks and is better, and grammar errors (40's is wrong in English, 40s is right, I taught you this before). Your post is looking for a fight. OK then, you get the fight. You didn't risk to race in Mission Viejo any individual event. You quit, you ducked the stepping on the blocks and risk to test yourself. You had no guts and failed more than the participants. When you can swim (like yards in 2005), you are much slower than me. Me against you, that's not a race. This culture erased possibilities of beauty and courage and shapes you as a flabby instead. Think if people who make an achievement in being attractive, are flabby. In contrast, sometimes I don't do well for my personal standards. But that's me against me. The highest race. For example, my 1500 free in Mission Viejo was in 22 minutes, it is a C time for me but still ranks #33 in my age group in 2005, and by society's standard that's something. For me, no, that's not good enough. But that's just me. Against me. You are a hypocryte because you will never reach 22 minutes in 1500 free Long Course but still attack it from your lower standards.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Originally posted by Conniekat8 Sure you are, that must be why you bonked at nationals and can't figure out why. That reminds me, you should take up boxing. Put your best qualities together, overtraining and figting with people. You'd do much better there then in swimming. That's one place where someone wanting to fight all the time is actually appreciated. And in your 40's, you can still make elite ranks. I think you have a better shot there. That's what you have to say to my technical post? Jealousy of someone who looks and is better, and grammar errors (40's is wrong in English, 40s is right, I taught you this before). Your post is looking for a fight. OK then, you get the fight. You didn't risk to race in Mission Viejo any individual event. You quit, you ducked the stepping on the blocks and risk to test yourself. You had no guts and failed more than the participants. When you can swim (like yards in 2005), you are much slower than me. Me against you, that's not a race. This culture erased possibilities of beauty and courage and shapes you as a flabby instead. Think if people who make an achievement in being attractive, are flabby. In contrast, sometimes I don't do well for my personal standards. But that's me against me. The highest race. For example, my 1500 free in Mission Viejo was in 22 minutes, it is a C time for me but still ranks #33 in my age group in 2005, and by society's standard that's something. For me, no, that's not good enough. But that's just me. Against me. You are a hypocryte because you will never reach 22 minutes in 1500 free Long Course but still attack it from your lower standards.
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