A few things I learned doing the 1 hr Postal swim last night
Former Member
At the last minute, I decided to skip the normal workout and do the swim.
I get going and I have a lane mate who I'm pretty much side by side with for the first few hundred yards until she broke away.
What was interesting was this. Her turns were a little faster. We were both doing open turns, but she seemed to gain half a length on me coming out of each one.
If I breathed bilaterally, I'd gain on her. I'd also gain on her if I breathed on the left (right is my normal side). But whenever I'd breath on the right, my pace would slow.
The problem is that if I breath on the left I get side stitches. If I breath bilaterally, I can start to get them but not as bad.
My questions are first and foremost, how do I use this information? Do I try to breath bilaterally more? Should that become the way I swim if I'm faster that way? Would I ever want to do an open water swim breathing bilaterally.
I can do flip turns. But they're not very good. I generally don't use them in distance because I seem to get tapped out. Since I never plan to race in a pool, I generally haven't worked on them much. Is there a technique for a fast open turn? Or should I do more flip turns?
Finally, would biking 30 miles that day affect how well I did in the hour swim that evening?
Sarge, I have worked very hard on developing a fast turn with a good streamline off every wall and I know I gain on every single turn. Having said that I know several swimmers with extremely fast open turns who say they have tried to flip but get dizzy/feel like they're drowning, etc. You have to decide for yourself what is best for you and you do not have to do flip turns. This year in the One Hour I am going to experiment with breathing every stroke to get more air, especially in the first half hour. Breathing every stroke doesn't seem to slow me down and I want to see if that helps my fatigue. And yes biking thirty miles that day would definitely affect your swim!
Sarge, I have worked very hard on developing a fast turn with a good streamline off every wall and I know I gain on every single turn. Having said that I know several swimmers with extremely fast open turns who say they have tried to flip but get dizzy/feel like they're drowning, etc. You have to decide for yourself what is best for you and you do not have to do flip turns. This year in the One Hour I am going to experiment with breathing every stroke to get more air, especially in the first half hour. Breathing every stroke doesn't seem to slow me down and I want to see if that helps my fatigue. And yes biking thirty miles that day would definitely affect your swim!