Apr 21, 2006

My friend Alberto who rowed for Orange Coast College found this on the internet

XENO: What you are reading below has been known to the East German sports machine in the late 1970ies. The article is a good recap, explaining why lactic acid is part of training. What the text does not talk about is how to build more mitochondria. We know it is done through long endurance training slightly below the aerobic threshold.




If you "feel the burn," you need to bulk up your mitochondria

By Robert Sanders, Media Relations | 19 April 2006

BERKELEY – In the lore of marathoners and extreme athletes, lactic acid is poison, a waste product that builds up in the muscles and leads to muscle fatigue, reduced performance and pain.

Some 30 years of research at the University of California, Berkeley, however, tells a different story: Lactic acid can be your friend.

A student volunteers does interval training for a study of lactate metabolism during intense exercise. (George Brooks photo)

Coaches and athletes don't realize it, says exercise physiologist George Brooks, UC Berkeley professor of integrative biology, but endurance training teaches the body to efficiently use lactic acid as a source of fuel on par with the carbohydrates stored in muscle tissue and the sugar in blood. Efficient use of lactic acid, or lactate, not only prevents lactate build-up, but ekes out more energy from the body's fuel.

In a paper in press for the American Journal of Physiology - Endocrinology and Metabolism, published online in January, Brooks and colleagues Takeshi Hashimoto and Rajaa Hussien in UC Berkeley's Exercise Physiology Laboratory add one of the last puzzle pieces to the lactate story and also link for the first time two metabolic cycles - oxygen-based aerobic metabolism and oxygen-free anaerobic metabolism - previously thought distinct.

"This is a fundamental change in how people think about metabolism," Brooks said. "This shows us how lactate is the link between oxidative and glycolytic, or anaerobic, metabolism."

He and his UC Berkeley colleagues found that muscle cells use carbohydrates anaerobically for energy, producing lactate as a byproduct, but then burn the lactate with oxygen to create far more energy. The first process, called the glycolytic pathway, dominates during normal exertion, and the lactate seeps out of the muscle cells into the blood to be used elsewhere. During intense exercise, however, the second ramps up to oxidatively remove the rapidly accumulating lactate and create more energy.

Training helps people get rid of the lactic acid before it can build to the point where it causes muscle fatigue, and at the cellular level, Brooks said, training means growing the mitochondria in muscle cells. The mitochondria - often called the powerhouse of the cell - is where lactate is burned for energy.

"The world's best athletes stay competitive by interval training," Brooks said, referring to repeated short, but intense, bouts of exercise. "The intense exercise generates big lactate loads, and the body adapts by building up mitochondria to clear lactic acid quickly. If you use it up, it doesn't accumulate."

To move, muscles need energy in the form of ATP, adenosine triphosphate. Most people think glucose, a sugar, supplies this energy, but during intense exercise, it's too little and too slow as an energy source, forcing muscles to rely on glycogen, a carbohydrate stored inside muscle cells. For both fuels, the basic chemical reactions producing ATP and generating lactate comprise the glycolytic pathway, often called anaerobic metabolism because no oxygen is needed. This pathway was thought to be separate from the oxygen-based oxidative pathway, sometimes called aerobic metabolism, used to burn lactate and other fuels in the body's tissues.

Experiments with dead frogs in the 1920s seemed to show that lactate build-up eventually causes muscles to stop working. But Brooks in the 1980s and '90s showed that in living, breathing animals, the lactate moves out of muscle cells into the blood and travels to various organs, including the liver, where it is burned with oxygen to make ATP. The heart even prefers lactate as a fuel, Brooks found.

Brooks always suspected, however, that the muscle cell itself could reuse lactate, and in experiments over the past 10 years he found evidence that lactate is burned inside the mitochondria, an interconnected network of tubes, like a plumbing system, that reaches throughout the cell cytoplasm.

In 1999, for example, he showed that endurance training reduces blood levels of lactate, even while cells continue to produce the same amount of lactate. This implied that, somehow, cells adapt during training to put out less waste product. He postulated an "intracellular lactate shuttle" that transports lactate from the cytoplasm, where lactate is produced, through the mitochondrial membrane into the interior of the mitochondria, where lactate is burned. In 2000, he showed that endurance training increased the number of lactate transporter molecules in mitochondria, evidently to speed uptake of lactate from the cytoplasm into the mitochondria for burning.

The new paper and a second paper to appear soon finally provide direct evidence for the hypothesized connection between the transporter molecules - the lactate shuttle - and the enzymes that burn lactate. In fact, the cellular mitochondrial network, or reticulum, has a complex of proteins that allow the uptake and oxidation, or burning, of lactic acid.

"This experiment is the clincher, proving that lactate is the link between glycolytic metabolism, which breaks down carbohydrates, and oxidative metabolism, which uses oxygen to break down various fuels," Brooks said.

Post-doctoral researcher Takeshi Hashimoto and staff research associate Rajaa Hussien established this by labeling and showing colocalization of three critical pieces of the lactate pathway: the lactate transporter protein; the enzyme lactate dehydrogenase, which catalyzes the first step in the conversion of lactate into energy; and mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase, the protein complex where oxygen is used. Peering at skeletal muscle cells through a confocal microscope, the two scientists saw these proteins sitting together inside the mitochondria, attached to the mitochondrial membrane, proving that the "intracellular lactate shuttle" is directly connected to the enzymes in the mitochondria that burn lactate with oxygen.

"Our findings can help athletes and trainers design training regimens and also avoid overtraining, which can kill muscle cells," Brooks said. "Athletes may instinctively train in a way that builds up mitochondria, but if you never know the mechanism, you never know whether what you do is the right thing. These discoveries reshape fundamental thinking on the organization, function and regulation of major pathways of metabolism."

Brooks' research is supported by the National Institutes of Health
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 9, 2006

Indoor Rowing in the Orange County Register



By KATHERINE NGUYEN The Orange County Register

ROW, ROW, ROW: Indoor rowing is the name of the game at Iron Oarsman Rowing in Costa Mesa.

Sang H. Park, for the Register

The exercise gods are punishing me.

At the grocery store checkout, I'm taunted by magazine covers boasting, "Get your bikini-hot bod in 8 simple steps!"

At the mall, shops are stocking tight leggings and skinny jeans.

At home this past month, my fitness-minded Jiminy Cricket has been sitting on my shoulder while I've been sitting on my lazy derriere:

"Now, Kat, you know you could have awakened an hour early and gone for a jog before work!"

"Oh dear, was that wise of you to eat four giant cookies?"

"No, Kat, no! Put down that fifth cookie. Right now!"

Cookie issues aside, I'm not the only one who has trouble with regular exercise. According to a study by the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, only 23 percent of American adults report exercising for 20 minutes or longer three or more days a week, and only 15 percent of adults reported physical activity of 30 minutes or longer for five days or more a week. Forty percent don't exercise at all.

After falling off the gym-workout wagon, I told myself that I would try as many different exercise options as necessary to find one I could stick to.

My curiosity led me to try the ever-trendy pole fitness classes, "pole fitness" being the gentle way to phrase pole dancing. Stacy Rae, the instructor who e-mailed me, sold me on the concept with her promise, "You won't feel like you're working out at all!"

This definitely called for the buddy system. So I took my roommate Nate, who recently declared that she had fitness ADD and needed to vary her workouts.

"Is the instructor a real stripper?" Nate wondered on the way there. "I mean, she'd have to be in order to be qualified to teach such a class, right?"

On the contrary. A 41-year-old mother of three boys, Rae looks more like the head of the PTA than an exotic dancer. That turned out to be deceptive, as Rae proved to be ridiculously limber and graceful. The class was held inside Rae's private Body Techniques studio in Huntington Beach. The candles in the darkened room gave off a forgiving glow. Four poles were erected in the small room, to be shared by nine women.

The class started with a half hour's worth of stretching that involved bicycle legwork, rolling the hips in circles and lifting the hips up and down, all the while suggestively tossing our hair about. I had to keep from bursting into laughter several times when Rae would utter phrases like, "Oh yesss, ladies, that's it, let your inner goddesses come out!" and "Let your hands glide along your body's beautiful curves!"

When it finally came time to learn some pole "tricks," I got really nervous but figured, how hard could it be to swing around a pole?

Rae tried to teach us how to walk sexily to the pole, but I just ended up stumbling over my feet. Once, while reaching out for the pole, my arm fell two inches short and I wound up grabbing air. And instead of twirling my body elegantly around the pole, I ran into it. Several times. I had bruises in places that I didn't think I could.

After spinning around and down the pole, one was supposed to grab the pole with both hands and then snap the booty back up in one swift movement, but my bottom kept smacking the ground before my feet could hit the floor to bounce back up.

Surprisingly, my ineptitude with the pole worked in my favor. It made me work harder. You try lifting and pulling and propelling your body around that pole for 30 minutes and tell me that's not a workout. And a fun one at that! The hour was up before I knew it, and I was pumped, if not already sore.

At the end of class, Rae asked for a volunteer to show off her newly acquired skills. One shy-looking but lithe woman was so good that after she completed her steamy moves (we're talking flips and sliding down the pole upside down and stuff here!), I felt like I had to tip her. Turns out she had been taking classes for three years and even had a pole built in her home.

I thoroughly enjoyed the pole workouts. But at $20 a session, they're pricey, especially since I should take the class at least twice a week in addition to other workouts to see any real results.

Next, I tried an indoor rowing class that Nate has been raving about, although I think the "hot guys" who train at the Iron Oarsman Rowing studio in Costa Mesa provide good motivation for her, too. The first class was free and, better yet, it's a five-minute walk from home.

The instructor, Xeno M?ller, is a hulking two-time Olympian rower who won gold in 1996 and silver in 2000. The small studio has about 15 rowing machines. Strap your feet in, pull the handle in front of you and slide back and forth, using your arms to pull and legs to push.

Apparently I am more uncoordinated than I thought. I was totally off rhythm with the rest of the class. While they were pushing, I was pulling.

Instantly, M?ller zeroed in on the newbie in the class. "So Kaaht, seet up straight, chest owt!" he bellowed with his endearing Swiss accent.

"You need to engage the stroke!"

"Don't forget to hinge!"

Wha?

I might as well have been taking astrophysics. I'm sure I was out of sync the entire 45 minutes, but I really enjoyed myself, sweat and all. I think I might have found a workout worth sticking with. My favorite part? I get to sit the entire time.

More information:

Iron Oarsman Rowing

www.gorow.com or (949) 400-7630

Body Techniques

(714) 965-5767 CONTACT
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 6, 2006

BMR: Base metabolic rate

Here's a formula you can use:

66 + (6.23 times your weight in pounds) + (12.7 times your height in
inches)
- (6.8 times your age in years) which equals your BMR (the minimum
amount of
calories you need each day just to live healthy). Since you exercise
alot,
you can multiply this number (your BMR) by1.4 to add more calories to
compensate for your exercising (if you exercise lightly, you would use
1.2
and if strenuously 1.6). After you do this calculation compare that
with the
number of calories you are eating each day.

So in my case (XENO) at present:

66 + (6.23 X 260) + (12.7 X 75) - (6.8 X 33)= XENO'S BMR

66 + 1619.8 + 952.5 - 224.4 = 2414 CAL

With exercise running the IRON OARSMAN

2414 X 1.4 = 3379 CAL

In order to lose weight I should reduce calorie intake by 20%

Sincerely, XENO

Over and out
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 4, 2006

News from ROW2K.COM about Indoor Rowing in Britain



Celebrities pull out all the stops against Olympic champion


April 4, 2006


To celebrate the 152nd Boat Race on Sunday, double Olympic gold medal winner James Cracknell battled it out with a team of sporting heroes on the Concept 2 Indoor Rower. The four sport stars challenging Cracknell over 2,000m - the Olympic regatta distance - on Concept 2 Indoor Rowers were all ITV sports pundits and consisted of former boxing world champions Barry McGuigan and Duke McKenzie, former Wimbledon and Jamaican footballer Robbie Earle and former McLaren Formula 1 driver Mark Blundell.


The aim of the race, which was broadcast as part of ITV's build up to the Boat Race, was to illustrate the extreme levels of fitness and training that are required to become a rower at the highest level.


Not surprisingly rowing legend James Cracknell, who has just completed a cross-Atlantic rowing voyage, comfortably won the race. However, the battle for second and third places was a hard fought affair as boxings Barry McGuigan pushed football's Robbie Earle right to the line before Mark Blundell and Duke McKenzie brought up the rear.


Concept 2's Marketing Manager, John Wilson who is a former Boat Race coach for both Oxford and Cambridge, commented: The celebrity boat race highlighted just how addictive indoor rowing can be.


"It started off as a light-hearted race against James Cracknell but there was a real fight to the end between Barry McGuigan and Robbie Earle. They really pushed themselves to the limit as the machine brought out their deeply engrained competitive spirit."


Concept 2 is the world's leading manufacturer of rowing machines and has been producing the Concept 2 Indoor Rower for 25 years. The Indoor Rower can now be found in more than 80% of health clubs and gyms across the UK and is used by a wide cross-section of sportsmen and women from F1 drivers to triathletes.


The Indoor Rower is also popular with the home market as the PM3 monitor allows you to save your times and race against yourself eliminating the need for a training partner.


Indoor rowing as a sport is growing in popularity year on year and much of this growth is attributed to the many regional, national and international indoor rowing championships that take place each year.


The finishing times for the celebrity rowers for the 2,000m race were:


James Cracknell 6:21.4

Robbie Earl 7:05.7

Barry McGuigan 7:10.3

Mark Blundell 8:04.0

Duke McKenzie 8:31.3
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 2, 2006

Hello with a report from our visit to Crew Classic today April 2, 2006

Even though we lost one hour of sleep due to daylight savings on Saturday night, we still managed to leave our home early enough on Sunday morning to see a bunch of races in San Diego.

As we boarded the parking shuttle we met Frank Augustus Frye. I introduced myself when I noticed that he was wearing a million meter club shirt from Concept2. I told him about the Iron Oarsman team which is part of the world ranking. We had a great time exchanging rowing information AND FRANK will be joining our group. He told us that he has rowed one million meters. So to you Frank, WELCOME to TEAM IRON OARSMAN.

We also met Alfred Czerner he is in his seventies and is capapble to race in the 730ies for 2000 meters. His website is www.allrowing.ws

We watched how Cal Berkley lost to Stanford. Cal's loss will bring great motivation to the team to rectify that mishap, or was it not?

Greg Springer came to say hello. He is an old friend of ours who used to live in Orange County. He won an Olympic silver medal in 1984 in the men's coxed four.

Larry Moore from the Orange Coast college is also a friend of ours and my parents in law. He had a great day today with the first freshman boat coming in a close thrid in the final to Cal and Stanford. The Orange Coast College varsity competed in the Junior Varsity Cup and W O N. We should not forget that OCC is a 2 year Junior College. In my opinion it is all the coach's fault if four year schools are not capable to beat Orange Coast College.

Long Beach Master C women's eight won with two hundred boat lengths.

There was a very nice video screen which made it fun to follow the races today.

Our children had fun palying on the palyground.

We met up with Peter Dreissigacker who showed me the FISH GAME on the rowing machine. Fun game which I will add to the elementary school rowing machines where I volunteer coaching time.
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 21, 2006

My friend Alberto who rowed for Orange Coast College found this on the internet

XENO: What you are reading below has been known to the East German sports machine in the late 1970ies. The article is a good recap, explaining why lactic acid is part of training. What the text does not talk about is how to build more mitochondria. We know it is done through long endurance training slightly below the aerobic threshold.




If you "feel the burn," you need to bulk up your mitochondria

By Robert Sanders, Media Relations | 19 April 2006

BERKELEY – In the lore of marathoners and extreme athletes, lactic acid is poison, a waste product that builds up in the muscles and leads to muscle fatigue, reduced performance and pain.

Some 30 years of research at the University of California, Berkeley, however, tells a different story: Lactic acid can be your friend.

A student volunteers does interval training for a study of lactate metabolism during intense exercise. (George Brooks photo)

Coaches and athletes don't realize it, says exercise physiologist George Brooks, UC Berkeley professor of integrative biology, but endurance training teaches the body to efficiently use lactic acid as a source of fuel on par with the carbohydrates stored in muscle tissue and the sugar in blood. Efficient use of lactic acid, or lactate, not only prevents lactate build-up, but ekes out more energy from the body's fuel.

In a paper in press for the American Journal of Physiology - Endocrinology and Metabolism, published online in January, Brooks and colleagues Takeshi Hashimoto and Rajaa Hussien in UC Berkeley's Exercise Physiology Laboratory add one of the last puzzle pieces to the lactate story and also link for the first time two metabolic cycles - oxygen-based aerobic metabolism and oxygen-free anaerobic metabolism - previously thought distinct.

"This is a fundamental change in how people think about metabolism," Brooks said. "This shows us how lactate is the link between oxidative and glycolytic, or anaerobic, metabolism."

He and his UC Berkeley colleagues found that muscle cells use carbohydrates anaerobically for energy, producing lactate as a byproduct, but then burn the lactate with oxygen to create far more energy. The first process, called the glycolytic pathway, dominates during normal exertion, and the lactate seeps out of the muscle cells into the blood to be used elsewhere. During intense exercise, however, the second ramps up to oxidatively remove the rapidly accumulating lactate and create more energy.

Training helps people get rid of the lactic acid before it can build to the point where it causes muscle fatigue, and at the cellular level, Brooks said, training means growing the mitochondria in muscle cells. The mitochondria - often called the powerhouse of the cell - is where lactate is burned for energy.

"The world's best athletes stay competitive by interval training," Brooks said, referring to repeated short, but intense, bouts of exercise. "The intense exercise generates big lactate loads, and the body adapts by building up mitochondria to clear lactic acid quickly. If you use it up, it doesn't accumulate."

To move, muscles need energy in the form of ATP, adenosine triphosphate. Most people think glucose, a sugar, supplies this energy, but during intense exercise, it's too little and too slow as an energy source, forcing muscles to rely on glycogen, a carbohydrate stored inside muscle cells. For both fuels, the basic chemical reactions producing ATP and generating lactate comprise the glycolytic pathway, often called anaerobic metabolism because no oxygen is needed. This pathway was thought to be separate from the oxygen-based oxidative pathway, sometimes called aerobic metabolism, used to burn lactate and other fuels in the body's tissues.

Experiments with dead frogs in the 1920s seemed to show that lactate build-up eventually causes muscles to stop working. But Brooks in the 1980s and '90s showed that in living, breathing animals, the lactate moves out of muscle cells into the blood and travels to various organs, including the liver, where it is burned with oxygen to make ATP. The heart even prefers lactate as a fuel, Brooks found.

Brooks always suspected, however, that the muscle cell itself could reuse lactate, and in experiments over the past 10 years he found evidence that lactate is burned inside the mitochondria, an interconnected network of tubes, like a plumbing system, that reaches throughout the cell cytoplasm.

In 1999, for example, he showed that endurance training reduces blood levels of lactate, even while cells continue to produce the same amount of lactate. This implied that, somehow, cells adapt during training to put out less waste product. He postulated an "intracellular lactate shuttle" that transports lactate from the cytoplasm, where lactate is produced, through the mitochondrial membrane into the interior of the mitochondria, where lactate is burned. In 2000, he showed that endurance training increased the number of lactate transporter molecules in mitochondria, evidently to speed uptake of lactate from the cytoplasm into the mitochondria for burning.

The new paper and a second paper to appear soon finally provide direct evidence for the hypothesized connection between the transporter molecules - the lactate shuttle - and the enzymes that burn lactate. In fact, the cellular mitochondrial network, or reticulum, has a complex of proteins that allow the uptake and oxidation, or burning, of lactic acid.

"This experiment is the clincher, proving that lactate is the link between glycolytic metabolism, which breaks down carbohydrates, and oxidative metabolism, which uses oxygen to break down various fuels," Brooks said.

Post-doctoral researcher Takeshi Hashimoto and staff research associate Rajaa Hussien established this by labeling and showing colocalization of three critical pieces of the lactate pathway: the lactate transporter protein; the enzyme lactate dehydrogenase, which catalyzes the first step in the conversion of lactate into energy; and mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase, the protein complex where oxygen is used. Peering at skeletal muscle cells through a confocal microscope, the two scientists saw these proteins sitting together inside the mitochondria, attached to the mitochondrial membrane, proving that the "intracellular lactate shuttle" is directly connected to the enzymes in the mitochondria that burn lactate with oxygen.

"Our findings can help athletes and trainers design training regimens and also avoid overtraining, which can kill muscle cells," Brooks said. "Athletes may instinctively train in a way that builds up mitochondria, but if you never know the mechanism, you never know whether what you do is the right thing. These discoveries reshape fundamental thinking on the organization, function and regulation of major pathways of metabolism."

Brooks' research is supported by the National Institutes of Health
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 9, 2006

Indoor Rowing in the Orange County Register



By KATHERINE NGUYEN The Orange County Register

ROW, ROW, ROW: Indoor rowing is the name of the game at Iron Oarsman Rowing in Costa Mesa.

Sang H. Park, for the Register

The exercise gods are punishing me.

At the grocery store checkout, I'm taunted by magazine covers boasting, "Get your bikini-hot bod in 8 simple steps!"

At the mall, shops are stocking tight leggings and skinny jeans.

At home this past month, my fitness-minded Jiminy Cricket has been sitting on my shoulder while I've been sitting on my lazy derriere:

"Now, Kat, you know you could have awakened an hour early and gone for a jog before work!"

"Oh dear, was that wise of you to eat four giant cookies?"

"No, Kat, no! Put down that fifth cookie. Right now!"

Cookie issues aside, I'm not the only one who has trouble with regular exercise. According to a study by the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, only 23 percent of American adults report exercising for 20 minutes or longer three or more days a week, and only 15 percent of adults reported physical activity of 30 minutes or longer for five days or more a week. Forty percent don't exercise at all.

After falling off the gym-workout wagon, I told myself that I would try as many different exercise options as necessary to find one I could stick to.

My curiosity led me to try the ever-trendy pole fitness classes, "pole fitness" being the gentle way to phrase pole dancing. Stacy Rae, the instructor who e-mailed me, sold me on the concept with her promise, "You won't feel like you're working out at all!"

This definitely called for the buddy system. So I took my roommate Nate, who recently declared that she had fitness ADD and needed to vary her workouts.

"Is the instructor a real stripper?" Nate wondered on the way there. "I mean, she'd have to be in order to be qualified to teach such a class, right?"

On the contrary. A 41-year-old mother of three boys, Rae looks more like the head of the PTA than an exotic dancer. That turned out to be deceptive, as Rae proved to be ridiculously limber and graceful. The class was held inside Rae's private Body Techniques studio in Huntington Beach. The candles in the darkened room gave off a forgiving glow. Four poles were erected in the small room, to be shared by nine women.

The class started with a half hour's worth of stretching that involved bicycle legwork, rolling the hips in circles and lifting the hips up and down, all the while suggestively tossing our hair about. I had to keep from bursting into laughter several times when Rae would utter phrases like, "Oh yesss, ladies, that's it, let your inner goddesses come out!" and "Let your hands glide along your body's beautiful curves!"

When it finally came time to learn some pole "tricks," I got really nervous but figured, how hard could it be to swing around a pole?

Rae tried to teach us how to walk sexily to the pole, but I just ended up stumbling over my feet. Once, while reaching out for the pole, my arm fell two inches short and I wound up grabbing air. And instead of twirling my body elegantly around the pole, I ran into it. Several times. I had bruises in places that I didn't think I could.

After spinning around and down the pole, one was supposed to grab the pole with both hands and then snap the booty back up in one swift movement, but my bottom kept smacking the ground before my feet could hit the floor to bounce back up.

Surprisingly, my ineptitude with the pole worked in my favor. It made me work harder. You try lifting and pulling and propelling your body around that pole for 30 minutes and tell me that's not a workout. And a fun one at that! The hour was up before I knew it, and I was pumped, if not already sore.

At the end of class, Rae asked for a volunteer to show off her newly acquired skills. One shy-looking but lithe woman was so good that after she completed her steamy moves (we're talking flips and sliding down the pole upside down and stuff here!), I felt like I had to tip her. Turns out she had been taking classes for three years and even had a pole built in her home.

I thoroughly enjoyed the pole workouts. But at $20 a session, they're pricey, especially since I should take the class at least twice a week in addition to other workouts to see any real results.

Next, I tried an indoor rowing class that Nate has been raving about, although I think the "hot guys" who train at the Iron Oarsman Rowing studio in Costa Mesa provide good motivation for her, too. The first class was free and, better yet, it's a five-minute walk from home.

The instructor, Xeno M?ller, is a hulking two-time Olympian rower who won gold in 1996 and silver in 2000. The small studio has about 15 rowing machines. Strap your feet in, pull the handle in front of you and slide back and forth, using your arms to pull and legs to push.

Apparently I am more uncoordinated than I thought. I was totally off rhythm with the rest of the class. While they were pushing, I was pulling.

Instantly, M?ller zeroed in on the newbie in the class. "So Kaaht, seet up straight, chest owt!" he bellowed with his endearing Swiss accent.

"You need to engage the stroke!"

"Don't forget to hinge!"

Wha?

I might as well have been taking astrophysics. I'm sure I was out of sync the entire 45 minutes, but I really enjoyed myself, sweat and all. I think I might have found a workout worth sticking with. My favorite part? I get to sit the entire time.

More information:

Iron Oarsman Rowing

www.gorow.com or (949) 400-7630

Body Techniques

(714) 965-5767 CONTACT
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 6, 2006

BMR: Base metabolic rate

Here's a formula you can use:

66 + (6.23 times your weight in pounds) + (12.7 times your height in
inches)
- (6.8 times your age in years) which equals your BMR (the minimum
amount of
calories you need each day just to live healthy). Since you exercise
alot,
you can multiply this number (your BMR) by1.4 to add more calories to
compensate for your exercising (if you exercise lightly, you would use
1.2
and if strenuously 1.6). After you do this calculation compare that
with the
number of calories you are eating each day.

So in my case (XENO) at present:

66 + (6.23 X 260) + (12.7 X 75) - (6.8 X 33)= XENO'S BMR

66 + 1619.8 + 952.5 - 224.4 = 2414 CAL

With exercise running the IRON OARSMAN

2414 X 1.4 = 3379 CAL

In order to lose weight I should reduce calorie intake by 20%

Sincerely, XENO

Over and out
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 4, 2006

News from ROW2K.COM about Indoor Rowing in Britain



Celebrities pull out all the stops against Olympic champion


April 4, 2006


To celebrate the 152nd Boat Race on Sunday, double Olympic gold medal winner James Cracknell battled it out with a team of sporting heroes on the Concept 2 Indoor Rower. The four sport stars challenging Cracknell over 2,000m - the Olympic regatta distance - on Concept 2 Indoor Rowers were all ITV sports pundits and consisted of former boxing world champions Barry McGuigan and Duke McKenzie, former Wimbledon and Jamaican footballer Robbie Earle and former McLaren Formula 1 driver Mark Blundell.


The aim of the race, which was broadcast as part of ITV's build up to the Boat Race, was to illustrate the extreme levels of fitness and training that are required to become a rower at the highest level.


Not surprisingly rowing legend James Cracknell, who has just completed a cross-Atlantic rowing voyage, comfortably won the race. However, the battle for second and third places was a hard fought affair as boxings Barry McGuigan pushed football's Robbie Earle right to the line before Mark Blundell and Duke McKenzie brought up the rear.


Concept 2's Marketing Manager, John Wilson who is a former Boat Race coach for both Oxford and Cambridge, commented: The celebrity boat race highlighted just how addictive indoor rowing can be.


"It started off as a light-hearted race against James Cracknell but there was a real fight to the end between Barry McGuigan and Robbie Earle. They really pushed themselves to the limit as the machine brought out their deeply engrained competitive spirit."


Concept 2 is the world's leading manufacturer of rowing machines and has been producing the Concept 2 Indoor Rower for 25 years. The Indoor Rower can now be found in more than 80% of health clubs and gyms across the UK and is used by a wide cross-section of sportsmen and women from F1 drivers to triathletes.


The Indoor Rower is also popular with the home market as the PM3 monitor allows you to save your times and race against yourself eliminating the need for a training partner.


Indoor rowing as a sport is growing in popularity year on year and much of this growth is attributed to the many regional, national and international indoor rowing championships that take place each year.


The finishing times for the celebrity rowers for the 2,000m race were:


James Cracknell 6:21.4

Robbie Earl 7:05.7

Barry McGuigan 7:10.3

Mark Blundell 8:04.0

Duke McKenzie 8:31.3
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 2, 2006

Hello with a report from our visit to Crew Classic today April 2, 2006

Even though we lost one hour of sleep due to daylight savings on Saturday night, we still managed to leave our home early enough on Sunday morning to see a bunch of races in San Diego.

As we boarded the parking shuttle we met Frank Augustus Frye. I introduced myself when I noticed that he was wearing a million meter club shirt from Concept2. I told him about the Iron Oarsman team which is part of the world ranking. We had a great time exchanging rowing information AND FRANK will be joining our group. He told us that he has rowed one million meters. So to you Frank, WELCOME to TEAM IRON OARSMAN.

We also met Alfred Czerner he is in his seventies and is capapble to race in the 730ies for 2000 meters. His website is www.allrowing.ws

We watched how Cal Berkley lost to Stanford. Cal's loss will bring great motivation to the team to rectify that mishap, or was it not?

Greg Springer came to say hello. He is an old friend of ours who used to live in Orange County. He won an Olympic silver medal in 1984 in the men's coxed four.

Larry Moore from the Orange Coast college is also a friend of ours and my parents in law. He had a great day today with the first freshman boat coming in a close thrid in the final to Cal and Stanford. The Orange Coast College varsity competed in the Junior Varsity Cup and W O N. We should not forget that OCC is a 2 year Junior College. In my opinion it is all the coach's fault if four year schools are not capable to beat Orange Coast College.

Long Beach Master C women's eight won with two hundred boat lengths.

There was a very nice video screen which made it fun to follow the races today.

Our children had fun palying on the palyground.

We met up with Peter Dreissigacker who showed me the FISH GAME on the rowing machine. Fun game which I will add to the elementary school rowing machines where I volunteer coaching time.
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.