Thursday, May 07, 2009

My New Sport

Its late and I need to get to bed but not before I tell you about my rowing experience.

I became interested in rowing after I heard about these two crazy guys who are going to row across the Atlantic in support of Ataxia UK: http://www.rowingtheatlantic.com/. I love this and I hope they know they've got our support!

I was very intrigued by the proposed journey for Ataxia and as I searched around I found many other people who had made the journey. I spent many hours reading about different journeys across the Atlantic and watching YouTube videos about it. One person I ran across was Roz Savage who gave up her desk job to train and row across the Atlantic. Roz is currently in Hawaii after rowing her first leg of the Pacific from California. The second leg of her Pacific row starts in 16 days.

So there are lots of inspiring stories about rowing and I got interested a while ago but just this week I had the opportunity to try it for myself through a class at the Sac State Aquatic Center. The class was 4 days, 2 hours each night.

Monday night we watched a safety video and then took a boat down to the dock to just sit in it and see what it feels like. I sat in the boat and immediately felt like I was going to tip into the water! I was thinking 'There's no way I can do this. Ataxia is going to make me unbalanced and send me into the water as soon as I get away from the dock.' But our instructor, Rudy talked me through how to stay balanced using the oars as leverage on the water. I was still a bit skeptical but I came back the next night.

Tuesday night we each got a boat and we ventured away from the dock to try some things on our own. I was still quite shaky but when I slowed way down, relaxed and thought about what I was doing it went ok until I lost focus (which was quite often). When I was really struggling Rudy walked me through the things I needed to do and it all came together. Much improvement and some fun.

Wednesday night we spent an hour and a half in our boats and I improved a lot but I also struggled quite a bit. It was a little windy that night and I had to keep correcting my course quite often which meant turning the boat sometimes 180 degrees. This proved to be a challenge as I struggled to figure out the right blade position for my oars. At the end of the night I was exhausted but I could not wait to try it again. It seemed like my skills improved each night as I struggled through the rough stuff and enjoyed the good strokes.

Tonight we ventured even farther into the lake. The wind was blowing pretty hard when we showed up and we almost called it off but the wind died down to a reasonable breeze and we gave it a try. I felt so much more comfortable and confident tonight and these feelings translated into some decent rowing strokes. I had a lot of fun tonight and was much less exhausted because I was actually rowing instead of flailing around.

At the beginning of the week I was pretty freaked out and unstable. I was ready to call it a loss on account of ataxia. However I stuck with it and found that it's just a matter of getting out there and seeing what happens. I look forward to more rowing as I try to incorporate it into my fitness routine.

2 comments:

Spinner said...

looks like fun Kyle - I'm getting the GS 'tuned-up' - I've really streatch/wore out the chain and gears:(

Dynah said...

Glad you got to try rowing! I've still never rowed a single so you're clearly doing well :)