I learned to swim as an adult a couple of years ago. When I started the front crawl, I would focus on being "long" in the water - i.e., really reaching with the forward hand on each stroke, and not pulling until the trailing hand entered the water (the TI front quadrant swimming concept).
But over time, my shoulders would bother me. And I recently learned that swimming with high elbows (envisioning your arm going over a barrel) is better for your shoulders. I was definitely dropping my elbows before.
The problem I'm having is that when I swim with high elbows, I feel like I'm not as "long" in the water, that I get less glide, and that generally, I have to work a lot harder (though my shoulders feel better). One obvious thing I've noticed is that with a high elbow stroke, I can't seem to keep my leading arm out in front until my trailing arm catches up.
Any thoughts? Thanks.
Edit: I should add that I'm a recreational swimmer, so technique that is easier on the shoulder is preferred to a technique that may be better for competitive swimmers but is more stressful to the shoulder joint.
Just a beginner's recommendation: if it is irritating your shoulder's, wether or not it's more efficient, it should be avoided or scaled back until comfortable. I'm in the same boat, learned to swim recently and practiced this stroke as I learned, but it also strains my shoulders. I just use it on long swims if I need to briefly recover from accidentially going too anerobic.
It's probably better to sacrafice a little efficiency to avoid injury. For instance, I only breath on the left because my left should dislocates easy and breathing to the right seems to place it in a vulnerable position.
Just a beginner's recommendation: if it is irritating your shoulder's, wether or not it's more efficient, it should be avoided or scaled back until comfortable. I'm in the same boat, learned to swim recently and practiced this stroke as I learned, but it also strains my shoulders. I just use it on long swims if I need to briefly recover from accidentially going too anerobic.
It's probably better to sacrafice a little efficiency to avoid injury. For instance, I only breath on the left because my left should dislocates easy and breathing to the right seems to place it in a vulnerable position.