PeterP said...
Lack of cross-training....SUP requires very limited movement in legs, gluts and hips. If you don't cross-train then your hamstrings start pulling up and all-round performance goes out the window. I know, because I don't cross-train and my hammies take a hammering if i try and run. I can's stand yoga so I'm pretty buggered.
I reckon running, yoga and diet and you'll be a better paddler without having to paddle.
Yep me too. The trouble is that I like SUP too much. Whenever I get a chance to exercise, I want to SUP. And I surf, DW and do flat water too so there's virtually no conditions when I can't. But only doing one exercise leads to a body that has a very narrow range of tolerance, and stressing the same bodily systems each time doesn't give much time for recovery, and I find myself prone to injuries and overtraining-type problems. Now my hamstrings/back are crazy tight (I can barely touch my knees) and I can't run for more than about a mile without straining my calves. When I do swim or (especially) cycle on my non-paddling days I pretty much instantly notice an improvement in SUP performance. But since I've got limited time (a 6-hour round trip commute to work, kids etc) and am a typical old geezer with too many exercise miles on the clock, when I do get the chance I want to SUP, not "waste my time " doing other activities like yoga etc which actually would be far better for me, and make me faster and fitter. Stupid, really. I tried a Pilates class a few times but I have such poor flexibility that I actually can't do the simplest stretching exercises and it is just plain embarrassing.
What I probably need to do is to find stretching and bodyweight exercises that I can do in the "dead time" in my life. For instance, I noticed an improvement in my SUP balance when I started standing on the train when commuting not holding into anything for 1.5 hrs each way rather than sitting. There is also a stairway that has 186 steps on it near work and I'll sometimes go up and down that once extra just to get a bit of extra exercise. It would be good to find stretches etc I could also do in a similar way anywhere without looking like a freak.
The other thing that people don't talk about often is the extra need for sleep required if you are exercising hard. It seems to me that for every hour of hard exercise (eg. HR above 85% of Max), you need an equivalent amount of time in extra sleep. So if I normally sleep 8 hours a day, then if I do 2 hours of hard exercise then I expect to need to sleep 10 hours that night or I'll feel groggy. This amount of extra sleep can sometimes be hard to fit into your life. Hell, it's hard enough just to get 8 hours sometimes. Yet exercising without enough sleep seems to increase my chances of injury. And when you get older, getting fit seems to be as much about avoiding injury as it is about training. Recovery takes so long, and you lose fitness so much quicker when you stop exercising than you can gain it when you don't.
Anyway, basically what is stopping me from getting fitter and faster is that I like SUP too much, and I need to do it less if I want to get better. But I'm not sure that I care about being faster and fitter that much. I'm addicted.