Pull buoys and kick boards-I just hate them SO much!

Former Member
Former Member
Am I all alone in this? I am a newer swimmer, aspiring to join our local masters group, however, I loathe pull buoys and kick boards! I love doing kick drills with no board, it feels purer and more ergonomic. Kick drills with a board torque my neck up and shoulders out of line and make me feel like a slow barge to nowhere. As for pull buoys, I just don't get the benefit. They throw me way off balance and are so distracting that I can't really focus on just my arms. Wouldn't using fins for the arm-focused drills be equally beneficial? I ask because these crutches I mean tools seem to be an intrinsic part of the masters workout, and I'm worried that if I eschew them, I will throw off the timing of my lanemates, or somehow not fit in to the group flow. Am I a budding purist or an inflexible whiner? Should I just get over it and use the board and buoy? Or is it acceptable to adapt the workout without these items? Willow
Parents
  • in a related thought: there have been a number of threads on shoulder problems here, and i wonder how many of these folks use paddles, which i would think would way over torque the shoulders and lead to injury. hummmmmmm.... I don't beleive in paddles either! I have bad shoulders and have not used paddles for about 20 years. They are hell on your shoulders and I don't think they contribute anything to perfecting your stroke. I rarley even use a pull buoy. I've noticed that the swimmers that excell in practice on pulling sets are not necessarily the faster swimmers. The faster swimmers are usually the ones that have a strong kick.
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  • in a related thought: there have been a number of threads on shoulder problems here, and i wonder how many of these folks use paddles, which i would think would way over torque the shoulders and lead to injury. hummmmmmm.... I don't beleive in paddles either! I have bad shoulders and have not used paddles for about 20 years. They are hell on your shoulders and I don't think they contribute anything to perfecting your stroke. I rarley even use a pull buoy. I've noticed that the swimmers that excell in practice on pulling sets are not necessarily the faster swimmers. The faster swimmers are usually the ones that have a strong kick.
Children
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