Apr 25, 2009

New Workout 10 to 100 hard strokes rate 29/30 great for weight loss


Hello rowers and fitness seekers.

Most of you row on the water and wonder what the heck I am doing rowing the machine all the time.

I love to be fit and share the knowledge of rowing. However, rowing on the water is very restrictive to most people. Simply put, there must be an available body of water, a boat to row on and time to spare. I don't have time to spare, I have a family of six, including me and my wife.

For six years, we had a great time running indoor rowing workouts at our studio. Now I am taking these workouts to the internet. There are many "lone rowers" who would enjoy changing their routine around and see the time fly by the same way time flies by at the Iron Oarsman.

This morning we did 10 to 100 hard strokes with 30 strokes rest between. My battery pack ran out so I used a shot gun mic to record sound. Next time I will have a set of spare batteries with me. The angle of the camera is a little different this time. It was great fun. Become a non committed monthly member for $17/month. Always have a different workout to row to, as if you were a member at the Iron Oarsman. CLICK HERE
Sincerely,

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

Apr 24, 2009

Thursday indoor rowing workout calorie burning toning


Great workout 1 minute; 3 minutes; 6 minutes; 3 minutes; 1 minute

max rating is 32. Solid 7 to 10 kilometers depending on your fitness level.

Technical feedback.

We had another great time! This workout is available to the world wide row2go members. Membership is a low $17/monthly no long term commitment necessary.

Check it out here: row2go world wide
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 23, 2009

Wednesday's workout with new backdrop


Hello Rowers,
I cranked out another great row. These rows can be used at your home by subscribing to the world wide membership of row2go. It is only $17 per month and there is no minimum commitment. You get to tap in the growing archive of workouts without ever needing to do one workout twice and less you want to. I feel extremely passionate about this work and love every stroke of it.
All the best,
Xeno
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 22, 2009

New workout to download for your rowing machine


We had a great morning working out on our WaterRowers. I ran two classes, both of which were filmed. Stroke rate ranged from 24 to 32 with crisp intervals. Calorie burning is guaranteed. These workouts can be used at home by becoming a none committed $17 monthly member of the world wide row2go service. Click HERE for more information.
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 20, 2009

World Wide Membership for workouts live and on demand!


Hello rowers and fitness seekers!

We had another successful live stream on Saturday morning. We had a total of 40 viewers/active rowing participants geographical stretching across the globe from Perth Australia, where it was 11 PM local time, to Paris France 5PM local if my math is correct.

Feedback was absolutely terrific. Husbands and wives shared using their rowing machine for the two 45 minute workouts that I lead at the Iron Oarsman, our indoor rowing studio, in Costa Mesa, California.

The most common comments were that it was fun to row while following my lead and that 45 minutes on the rowing machine flew by in a flash. For those who did not row, great enjoyment came from using the chatting module and meeting one another and commenting on the different exercises that I showed during the broadcast. From the U.K. it was mentioned that being live is exciting, but may not always fit into people's busy schedule.

The solution to fit the workouts into people's schedule that I run, has been figured out over the weekend. Every workout is now recorded onto my personal page on Ustream.tv.

The URL to the page is as follows:

http://www.ustream.tv/channel/weight-loss-indoor-rowing-with-xeno-muller-olympic-gold-medali

As I was rowing in my first class, I mentioned to my friend John who sat next to me, that I was using a 3G USB connection to the wireless web. He asked me if I knew what my upload limits were in my wireless contract. I responded that I had no idea! Later that day I checked with my carrier and I was just under the limit. For this reason it is logical that I create a membership based workout service. At the Iron Oarsman our members pay $99 per month to row. For the world wide web indoor rowing "row2go" membership I made calculations that $17 per month would fit perfectly for 24 monthly fresh workouts on demand. This is a great way to push between 5000 and 11000 meters 24 time per month, depending on your fitness and torque level. The monthly membership commitment is under total control of the end user. There is NO long term commitment, not in this time and economic age.

The URL to sign up is:

http://web.me.com/xenoralfmuller/Site/ROW2GO_Live.html


My plan is to do one live rowing workout a week. It is fun to respond to peoples questions and comments as we crank out the meters.

I envision corporations using our stream to motivate their employees to stay health by following the workouts that we put out. Rowing with with me will always be interesting because the footage is as fresh as a bakers fresh bread coming out of the oven. After six years of running workouts at the Iron Oarsman, I have become a professional at entertaining rowers with all sorts of workouts. Inventing new workouts is similar to all the different ways to mix up a Rubics cube.

So if you know someone who needs a little motivation or instruction to row, I am the solution.

All the best,

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

Apr 14, 2009

Weight loss and a better life through rowing


Hello WaterRowers and fintess seekers.

I am sitting at my desk strategizing my next business moves. Over the past years while running my indoor rowing workouts at the Iron Oarsman, I got several clues and ideas which at the time did not rattle me as key, but now with thousands of rowing kilometers under my belt, I am getting it... it is never to late.

I am going to use a clearer message that describes what my business goal is: Weight loss and a better life, with rowing.

For this purpose I am renaming my world wide web streams on Ustream.tv.

Rowing is a great sport because of its zero impact on joints and full body exercise characteristics. The notion of weight loss and a better life, can be understood by pretty much anyone who can read.

Funny enough, I will always battle body weight, which in truth is a great advantage, it will keep me motivated to move and row until I am three hundred years old!

So stay tuned and help spread the word.

Let's row!

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

Apr 12, 2009

Great rowing weekend on the world wide web


Hello Rowers and Fitness Seekers,

I successfully used Ustream this weekend to stream our indoor rowing workouts to the world wide web. At one point we had 35 visitors, some followed both 45 minute workouts on their rowing machine. For variety purpose we changed the angle of the camera. Sound and video came through great.

On Sunday, I held a 30 minute Q & A via Ustream, it worked great. I had forgotten that it was Easter Sunday. I found myself talking to rowers in my parent in law's cul de sac making sure that my kids did not injure themselves on their scooters.

The URL to the stream that I use is:

http://www.ustream.tv/channel/indoor-rowing-with-xeno-muller-olympic-gold-medalist

I have gotten great reviews for my sculling technique DVD that you can find here:

http://web.me.com/xenoralfmuller/Site/DVD_Workouts.html

For those of you racing I wish you lots of speed. For those of you rowing for health and longevity, may every stroke be pure joy.

All the best,
Xeno

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

Apr 10, 2009

Travis' Mr. Griffin Video

Great acting!

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

Apr 9, 2009

Ustream.tv and 3G internet

Alright, I have an urge to express my newly aquired knowledge faster than I can type...

1. Below is my link to live web streaming of future indoor rowing workouts that I am going lead. I am using a free website called Ustream.tv it is available to anyone and it is GREAT.

2. Let's set up a question answer live stream Sunday afternoon at 5PM Pacific Coast Standard Time using the link below. You can use the live message board and I will answer orally to the questions that I read. Send me an email if you are interested in joining, so I know what to expect: xeno@ironoarsman.com

3. With the 3G internet, I can travel up to 30 miles per hour using SKYPE and not lose any quality of sound and image.... Guess what, we could do this for live coaching on the water. What you need for this is to hook up your video camera with better zoom to the lap top that has the 3G internet enabled and VOILA!!! I can witness the rowing as it unfolds while traveling on the water.

4. For those of you who want to share with others who live far away, I highly recomend SKYPE and Ustream.tv. Ustream is similar to youtube, except you have the live version and you can broadcast to an unlimited number of specators.

5. I am applying for the job of: "Head Coach of the Orange Coast College Men's Rowing Program." Orange Coast College is a two year program that is a springboard for rowers whose path did not take them directly into a four year school. The hiring committee may not be looking for the best possible rowing coach, but more a combination of coach/master degree in some other field so that whoever is hired, can teach a course of some sort on campus. I only have a degree in International Relations from Brown, that is one strike against me. In my cover letter I mention that I would start an indoor rowing wellness program on campus for, faculty, students, and OCC employees.

Ok, that is it for now. Below is the link to Ustream.tv

XENO

http://www.ustream.tv/channel/indoor-rowing-with-xeno-muller-olympic-gold-medalist

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

Apr 8, 2009

Cooking show day three at my house...


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

Apr 7, 2009

Day two of cooking show....




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

Apr 6, 2009

Swiss reality TV cooking show

This is a Swiss reality TV show that I was invited to take part in recently. It is a four part show, about home cooked dinners. We all have to try each others dinners. I cook in the third episode. This is the first episode and in Swiss-German. The show is called: "Golden Carrot goes Hollywood"... entertaining even if you don't speak the language.


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

Apr 4, 2009

Smashing Ustream Success


I want to outfit my rowing studio with a projector so I can do two things:
1. Be able to respond to written posts as they come in, which would make the whole more interactive.
2. Get someone else to run the workout from another part of the world. Ustream can bring more motivation to people to row worldwide.
Xeno Muller
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 3, 2009

8AM PST LIVE WORKOUT

Streaming Video by Ustream.TV
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 1, 2009

I got an email asking me what I like about the WaterRower in comparison to another popular machine.

Hi.
Thank you for writing me. Here is a link that summarizes my feeling for the WaterRower
I get as good of a workout on the WaterRower as I get on the C2. There are nuances. Rowing the WaterRower is more quiet and gentler on the body. At first you will find that the resistance is gentler and more evenly distributed on the WaterRower. The feet are closer together and it is more like pushing off the foot board of a boat, which after rowing on the C2 I had to get used to again. The handle and the seat are far more pliable to the fingers and gluts. The machine is very smooth to row and fun to watch the water change color as you accelerate the stroke. I really enjoy rowing the WaterRower and I do not miss the C2 whatsoever. No doubt that the C2 is a bullet proof machine, but I have done enough miles on it and feel at peace having found a great alternative. And yes, I am also selling the WaterRower, but I am not a salesperson by nature. I tell it the way it is and the way I feel about it.
I hope this helped.
Xeno
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

03-30-2009 Workout ready for download by Xeno


Synopsis of the workout. Xeno leads his crew through a great 45 minute workout. Peppered with intervals and technical exercises, the row is fun and let’s you forget that you are actually exercising. Xeno’s workout is great for a mental break and is physically invigorating!
This is a workout filmed during a scheduled workout at the Iron Oarsman, Xeno’s indoor rowing studio, located in Costa Mesa, California. Have a great time. Download the workout now for $4.99 Xeno Muller
Purchase here:
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Mar 22, 2009

Mar 9, 2009

New Pyramid Workout!!!


Today I finished another great workout. This one is a type of pyramid interval workout that starts at 10 seconds of power and 50 seconds easy, culminates at the top with a full minute of power, and gently reverses back to 50 seconds of easy paddle during the final interval. Have a great time. Stay tuned, because I am getting organized to sell such workouts individually. Xeno
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Mar 3, 2009

Questions and Answers from Emails.

Hello Readers,

I got a few emails in the past couple of weeks that I found interesting to answer and post on the blog.


Q: xeno,

quick question for you. Is there an advantage to rowing 6k and 2k erg pieces on slides as opposed to not on slides? If there is a difference, how many seconds do you think that is?

B.

A: The longer the distance the less of an advantage the slides by Concept 2 provide. However, if you burn up 100 or 500 meter sprints the story is different. Moving the rowing machine back and forth is "lighter" then moving your own body back and forth. We found out that if someone tries the sliders for the first time, the rowing stroke shortens up by a few inches at the catch. This is a technical issue that when mentioned is easily corrected, yet it turns out it requires a tad bit of an effort to get the right reach at the catch without rushing in.

If you are someone who does a lot of miles and hard work on the Concept 2, I highly recommend the sliders, because the turnaround points of the stroke are smoother on the body. I found that the WaterRower is very gradual in the resistance and feels as smooth as rowing on water. I hope you will have the opportunity to one day try both rowing machines side to side. When you use the sliders you can do the one legged rowing drill, which is extremely effective for learners to figure out that the rowing stroke is a push with a pull at the end.



Q:
Hi there! I have been watching your videos for a while and they are awesome have learnt a of alot. But I have decided to go from 8s to single sculls and just wondering if you have any extremely beginner tips for me :)

A:
A couple of thoughts come immediately to my mind.
Make sure you are rigged high enough to have clearance between the handle and the top of your thighs on the recovery. Make sure that you adjust yourself on the footboard so that you can pass your hands slightly past the rib cage at the finish. This enables you to lift the oar out of the water by hinging the forearm at the elbow joint and not by breaking the wrist and washing out.
Make sure that you get the forward body angle at hip joint, feel your hamstrings a little to make sure that you don't prematurely lift the knees. Make sure that your lower back is supported at the finish and maintain that feel all the way to the catch. When you roll in the catch, draw the single scull under with your heels. Train at really LOW stroke rates to get a feel for connection of the blade in the water. Strap a bunch of bungees around your hull and feel the nice stability you get and the development of more powerful rowing muscles. Bungees go between the footboard and the stern.


Q:
hello Xeno, i need your help, ive been trying to lower my erg score but i havent been able to, ive been in th erg almost everyday for the past 4 months and im still pulling 740 is there any help you can give me regarding this, i would much appreciate it, counting with the fact that i have an erg test at the end of march and im the only lightweight on the team, im 150 and my height is 5,9 thanks

A:
Hello. My former coach Marty, who helped me win two Olympic medals in the single scull, always said that it is never too late to build and maintain aerobic capacity. From the sentences that you are writing to me, it sounds like you are in a junior or collegiate rowing program. You are plateauing and that can be a result from too many hard workouts and not enough long steady state aerobic training. How have the other rowers been doing, have they increased their personal bests? There is a dangerous false positive that junior coaches use to believe that their training program works. Juniors, as they grow and mature, their physical ability increases. With the right training program, the physical ability increases more rapidly than with a program that focuses too much on hard and high intensity workouts. The result of the later approach to training is a physiological state called acidosis. Too much lactic acid too often and that leads to being overtired, mental exhausting, and to some degrees injury. The coaches find the excuse to such hard training that in order to succeed a rower has to be mentally tough... and use their mental toughness as the end of all ends to win races.
Here is what I would do in order to get ready for your March Erg test. If you can, only train hard every three to four days. In between, do 70 to 90 minutes on the ergo at stroke rate 18 to 22 at a higher resistance that you are used to. The goal is not to rip your arms out of your socket, but to move and find the groove. Train at your aerobic target heart rate which you can figure by using the Karvonen formula:
(MAX HR- REST HR)X80%+REST HR= Target Heart Rate +/- 5 heart beats.
Also make sure that you use carbs and electrolytes when you train in order to replenish the glycogen reserves.
Check out my pacing entry on www.indoor-rowing.blogspot.com

Q:
My name is R. and I am 17 years old. I am from Portugal. I have some objectives for this season.
(...) I know that you won the Olympics in 1996 and few more. I want you to tell me what you can make a difference between our goal and we can. and what you think is the most important one to win a championship rower in the world.

my English is poor or very poor but that does not even want to answer says something...

A:
R., No worries. Your English is good enough for me to figure out a good answer for you. While I was competing, I had rowing on my mind ALL THE TIME. At your age, I imagined rowing the last 500 meters in the single scull at the Olympics leaving the other sculler behind over and over. Through my imagination I could feel the tears of rage and joy trickling down my cheeks and the TV commentators yelling out to the world that I was on the right track to win the Olympic gold medal.

When I would do my endurance weightlifting I always tried to add a bit more weight, because I knew that if I do it in training I will be able to deliver decisive blows to the competition and make them regret that they chose to row the single scull.

I never passed out after a race, but I certainly imagined it many times. I wrote into my second single scull: Push to win, and Push to death. My wife knows I am dramatic... My outlook on rowing has certainly changed after the 1996 Olympics and certainly after becoming a father.

Finally, what makes you the best you can personally be, comes from long training sessions where you hold the target heart rate at the aerobic level. Out of the 500 Watts I was able to pull at the Olympics, 300 Watts were generated at stroke rate 21 for up to 90 minutes at a time. This is why it is so important to train torque at low stroke rates so that you develop you aerobic capacity.

Q:
I recently purchased a waterrower s1 and am really enjoying it. I did a half marathon 21097 a couple of days ago and managed 1hr 19 mins 13 secs. Afterwards my backside and hips were shot for a couple of hours! How would this time stand up to a similar time on the concept 2 online rankings ?
I have used both but find the waterrower a more pleasant place to be (relatively).
Thanks buddy, loving your stuff on youtube !
J. U.K.

A:
Make sure that you get your forward body angle at the hip joint. If the lift of the knees is the primary movement that makes you roll back to the catch, then you are overusing the hip flexor. When you hinge at the hip joint and wait to feel the tension in the hamstring, you can use the contraction of the hamstring to roll into the catch, that keeps the pressure off the hip flexors which is a much smaller muscle.
It is safe to say that the WaterRower measures speed faster than the Concept 2. Numbers have been tossed around and I feel pretty comfortable saying that WaterRower is 5% faster. So in your case it would have taken you 3 minutes 57 seconds longer on a C2.
I am at a stage where I don't care anymore what time I put in or how far I am going. I love a sweaty shirt, the feel of being worked out, and the duration spent rowing.


All the best,
Xeno Muller
Olympic gold and silver medalist, men's single scull.
www.ironoarsman.com
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Feb 25, 2009

You want to keep doing the sport that you love for the rest of your life?

You love to run, play golf, swim, play tennis, ice skate, ride bikes, motocross, ping pong, any sport you can think of. It is important that you cross train so that the joints you use the most during you favorite activity get a break. With rowing it is an easy way to keep fit for those activities without stressing the joints since rowing is a zero impact exercise. Cyclists have told me that during the cold weather season, the indoor rowing workouts made fitter for the cycling season. The same was true about runners. Even golfers found that their swing got more powerful, let alone being able to walk 18 holes.
Try rowing, it is easy to learn. My workout DVDs can help you.
Xeno Muller
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

From blogger to facebook, we are connected


Hello rowers and health seekers!
I interconnected this blog with my facebook profile. From now on, what you find here can be read on the facebook site. This will be great, because it allows me to promote my latest workout DVDs, and reach a wider audience when I publicize rowing tips. The other GREAT technology I possess is the ability to be wireless and blog from pretty much anywhere. This is also the case with SKYPE, no need anymore to be close to a local internet source. I am sitting in my car currently while the kids are dropped of on the school yard by my wife. Next to me is our little son Reid watching baby Einstein.
That is it for now.
Xeno Muller
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Feb 23, 2009

Laufen ohne Verletzung, ich weiss wie!!!

Ist Laufen Ihre Leidenschaft? Ich will, dass Sie fuer viele Jahre ohne beschwerden weiter laufen koennen. Ich habe waerend meinen Olympia trainings Jahre gelernt, dass ich Verletzungen fern halten kann mit CrossTraining. Desswegen moechte ich von Herzen den Rat von trocken rudern zu geben. Mit trocken rudern kann man die Kondition trainieren ohne die Laufglieder zuhart zu beanspruchen.
Gruss,
Xeno Muller
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Runners! I have a great idea for you!

Do you love to run? Believe me, I want you to run for the rest of your life. There is one thing that I learned from intensive training for the Olympics. You need to keep your workouts varied with cross training. Often athletes get little nagging injuries from overuse of a particular joint. So if you are a runner, I wholeheartedly recommend that you try rowing indoors to keep up your cardio and save your joints for many many years of injury free running.

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

Feb 22, 2009

Training program and why it is available.


Hello Row2K readers and others who stumble upon my little soap box.


I finished writing a second training program that is intended for master rowers who are going to compete at the US rowing master's national championship in August. If you are interested in getting the training plan, just add your email to the collection box on the first page of my website: www.ironoarsman.com.

Currently, I have two training programs going, the one mentioned above and one for club rowers who are competing in July.

I would like to explain why I am publicizing the training programs. As a former Olympic rower, with medals, the aftermath of competition is an unknown professional territory when it comes to building a business in rowing other than coaching a defined crew.

I consider myself a gun for hire for individuals who want to get the extra edge in high performance rowing. This market as you all know is very small. My two prodeges last year were the Graves brothers who barely missed making it to the Olympics.

On the other hand, I feel like I am a catalyst for none-rowers to discover health and fitness through indoor rowing. This health/wellness/fitness market is H U G E. At this point I have not yet figured out how to crack this nut. When I do, I will help sponsor rowing events :-)


So in the meantime, I need to spread the word about myself and my rowing capabilities. Tooting my own horn does not feel natural, after all I was born Swiss, where talking about "Going for Gold (like in the US)" is frowned upon.

Publicizing training programs which follow the training fundamentals that brought me Olympic gold and silver in the single scull seem to a natural. The key here is to mention that I have a great sculling DVD for sale which features me rowing my boat, while I am connected to a wireless mic. Spectators get to see how I interact with the single, they hear my thoughts on how to control the boat, and what type of exercises I do routinely, to stay efficient with my gliding and my power application.


In order to succeed at all levels in life I am a strong believer in the two way street.

I wish you all the very best,

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

Feb 21, 2009

XENOTV is now Online! Weightloss every stroke.

With great joy, I am announcing a workout download service for people who want to increase their use of their rowing machine at home. The workouts are 30 minutes long and can be downloaded onto a portable video device such as an IPhone. Go check out further information on our website: www.ironoarsman.com and click on XENOTV. You will have a great time burning more calories and feeling great about losing weight by rowing more!!!
Xeno Muller
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Gewicht verlieren, mit Rudern und Xeno Mueller, Ihr Olympia Sieger

Hallo,
Mit freude schreibe ich auf diesem Blog, dass ich jetzt einen Service habe fuer Rudermachinen Besitzer! Es gibt nichts langweiligeres als eine Fitnessmachine zu Hause alleine benutzen zu muessen... Dies ist jetzt Vergangenheit. Mein Name is Xeno Mueller, und habe 1996 die gold Medaille im Einer rudern an der Olympiade gewonnen. Nun filme ich Ruder trainings fuer Leute die einen Trainingspartner brauchen. Schaut mal bei meiner Webseite vorbei: www.ironoarsman.com und klickt XENOTV.
Alles Gute,
Xeno


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

Feb 20, 2009

Changing Gears going global with the Workouts!!!

Ok, that is it.
I am committing to weekly workouts that are "downloadable" to portable media devices. This makes it possible for anyone who owns a rowing machine to enjoy what we do so well at the Iron Oarsman, our indoor rowing studio, here in Costa Mesa, California. I will keep you entertained on a weekly basis. You will find me rowing the machine as well as pushing the single scull along on the water. I am very excited about my change of gears because it gives me the ability to attack a more global market.
As Facebook friends I will send you the first workout as a present.
The goal is to develop a membership base who enjoys using the rowing machine frequently.
Ah “JA” I will deliver the workouts in English for the Anglo-Saxons and high German for the German speaking parts of Europe.
Los gehts! Let’s go!
FOLLOW HERE:
http://gallery.me.com/xenoralfmuller#100422
Xeno
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Feb 8, 2009

Training for young and elder.

I am a husband and a father of four. For some this is old news, but I am excited to announce that our son Reid has now decided to let us sleep through the night. Amazing, how much more positive I am during the day with a little more sleep.

Being an involved husband and father, I rarely spend more than an hour on the rowing machine per day. Forget rowing on the water all together, it takes to long to haul the boat out and wash it off after the row, let alone the friendly conversations with fellow rowers, time is of essence, especially now with the current economic crunch time.

Back to the headline of this blog. Whether you are 16 or 70 years young, you need to take into consideration that the body produces energy the same way. It is therefore no surprise that the training methods ought to be the same. The belief that "no pain, no gain" is right, is dead WRONG, whether you are 16 or 70.

For twenty years as an athlete and now for 6 years as coach, I can assure you that pain is NOT the secret to winning races. Ten times 500 meters all out, followed by two 2000 meter all out pieces, WILL NOT make you better or faster. This type of training will make you plateau and eventually make you physically sick and injured.

At age 16 rowers are impressionable and less likely to listen to the wisdom of elders. They follow what their coach tells them, which is more often than not: "more pain, more gain, or the other way around". If the junior rower is lucky, he or she will enjoy the benefit of the false positive improvement curve, which is a positive gain in stamina just because of the body maturing into adulthood.

With age comes wisdom, not always the case, but in my example odler means smarter. Knowing that you only have one body, long and steady becomes more enjoyable of a workout than the short hard intervals. Here is exactly the secret to attaining above normal stamina. Whether your name is Rob Waddell, Thomas Lange, Marnie McBean, or even me, there is one SURE WAY to gain without pain. Now, don't read me wrong, you have to do a ton of work, but you do not need to puke your lung out and hate life at the same time.

The above mentioned athletes all had one thing in common. We all did a lot of steady state training. Our stroke rate ranged between 18 and 22. We looked for torque at every stroke we took. We wrapped bungees around the boat and did specific weight lifting. We were lactate tested at our earlobes once to twice a month during our rows or cross training exercise. We did our hard workouts too, but they would only be four to six times a month!!!!! We avoided the overproduction of lactic acid and thus avoided acidosis.

What I write about is no secret. This type of information can be found on www.fact-canada.com or in Volker Nolte's book Rowing Faster. Using a lactate testing device is as simple as a glucose tester. Yes it involves a tiny bit of blood, but with latex gloves, paper towles and alcohol wipes it is really safe.

Do most of your training below 2mmol of lactic acid, and you will see your stamina improve.

For the skeptics: Some "successful" coaches may not believe in what I write above, but look carefully at what type of athletes they coach. Often you find genetic monsters, or the last rowers standing, making the boat, while others crumbled after the endless sickening workouts which made them swim in their own lactic acid, all while being screamed at by their coach and teammates to questioning their commitment to the sport.
Well, I can assure you that brawn alone will not win the races all the time, you need brain for that. The best brains may not be with the most durable bodies that can sustain 10 times 500 meters and the extra 2 times 2000 meter pieces ALL OUT. Rob, Thomas, Marnie, and I are proof of that.

If you want to learn more about some of the stuff that I coach, you might be interested in the latest DVD that I produced. It has me row the single scull (yes I made time) while I am hooked up to a wireless mic. While I scull, explain the different, muscles I use to control and glide with the boat. In addition I show technical drills for blade work and body preparation. There is a second part on the DVD that has me break down the rowing stroke on the rowing machine.

All the best,

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

Feb 7, 2009

This is what has been happening:

Hello Everyone,

I hope your year has started well, despite the economic storm we are going through at the moment.

Things have been quite hectic with our family and that prevented me from writing about rowing in the last month and a half.

Here is a quick update on what is going on at our indoor rowing studio. 1. We switched all rowing machines over to WaterRowers, they are great to row. 2. I started a kids rowing class that is between 30 and 40 minutes long, every Monday at 430PM. 3. We have a new instructor, his name is Stefan and he is from Brazil. He is so well organized that he picks songs with a certain rhythm to which he adjusts the stroke rate to when he runs workouts at the Iron Oarsman. 4. We had a couple of Austrians rowers come visit us, turns out that my German coaching language needed some WD-40. In the end I got the message across no problem. 5. Reid is now pretty much sleeping through the night... Imagine 7 months of interrupted sleep, being woken up three to five times a night. Needless to say, that my outlook for life has greatly improved now that my brain is better rested.

Onto rowing and training: I have been coaching a junior rowing program in Minnesota via SKYPE. SKYPE enables me to communicate rowing ideas and training advice flawlessly with voice and video and all of it live. Seems like I do a fair bit of SKYPE coaching in colder climates, such as Yellow Knife, Northern Territory, in Canada. There the air temperature is -40 degrees.

We also created the first of its kind on the water sculling DVD with me. I hooked myself up to a wireless mic and I comment on how I row the boat and use different drills to help me control the single scull better. In addition to the on the water footage I have a session of indoor rowing in which I go bit by rowing bit through the rowing stroke explaining power application and recovery.

We are planning a new services membership program. If your fitness depends on rowing indoors we have the right stuff for you. As a member you will get to download my Iron Oarsman indoor rowing workouts. You will never get bored on the rowing machine again, you will feel as if you are rowing at the Iron Oarsman with me.

I wish you all a very good rowing continuation and I hope that all your wishes for 2009 will come true.

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

Jan 28, 2009

Lookin forward to tomorrow mornings workout.

Hello Rowers
I reorganized the WaterRowers at the Iron Oarsman this evening... read on

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

Jan 24, 2009

Xeno Muller Affiliate Program


generate income for your club or fitness website Now!

Take a look at our Shop & DVD page. All the workout DVDs are part of the affiliate program.

The affiliate program provides you with an HTML code in form of a purchase button that you can embed on your site. Your Customers can purchase the DVDs directly through your site. All the shipping and inventory is done on our end.

Every time 10 DVDs are sold you will receive a $50 commission check.

For international websites paypal will be used to pay commissions.

Write to xeno@ironoarsman for further information.
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Jan 20, 2009

Indoor Rowing COOPs, affiliate programs for rowing clubs, building stronger communites.


Hello Rowers,

After listening to our new president's speech, I am more motivated than ever, to help communities enjoy the benefits of rowing. I feel it is my duty to share my knowledge of 24 years of active rowing from beginner, to Olympic gold and silver medalist, and now, as coach and indoor rowing entrepreneur.

In my last blog entry, I spoke about marketing rowing and helping clubs meet their yearly budget, by teaching rowing clubs how to run indoor rowing classes to people who have never experienced rowing before. Since, the hamster in my head has been rowing his rower, and I edged out an affiliate sales program. This program gives clubs with a website the opportunity to generate revenue through retailing product without holding inventory or the need to ship it. My rowing workout DVDs can be a start. From there I am sure that other rowing companies will follow suit and make such affiliate programs available too. For more information, feel free to get in touch with me and I will gladly explain how to proceed.

At this point of my life, as parent and husband, I am interested in building better and healthier communities through rowing, the way we have with our own indoor rowing studio here in Costa Mea, California. I would love to see independent indoor rowing studio COOPs flourish across our great nation. These COOPs can run smoothly without putting too much responsibility on one particular individual. They are run similarly to water rowing clubs, without the need of boats or water.

What I get out of the indoor rowing growth. I can explain this by identifying my three passions: My family, rowing, and making the world a better place. Through the growth of the indoor rowing market, I will be able to produce more learning and motivational tools such as the DVDs that I currently make available to others. The revenue will help me provide for my family, who means everything to me. My second passion is rowing and every aspect of it. Rowing builds character and team work. It keeps people mentally and physically healthy. Rowing helps reduce stress, and empowers people to confront greater challenges. Staying mobile and fit through rowing, will help me chase down my great grandchildren, and feel useful to younger generations. My third passion, dates as far back as I can remember. I want to make the world a better place and provide opportunity and happiness to everyone. I consider myself an expert in rowing, and rowing shall be my mean to help the world to be a better place.

Sincerely,
Xeno Muller
Olympic Gold and Silver Medalist
xeno@ironoarsman.com
www.ironoarsman.com
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Jan 8, 2009

WII ROWING!!!!

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

Jan 7, 2009

Letter To Alaska


Hello Alaskan Rower,

Here are a couple of tips on intensity and diet:

As far as heart rate goes. Here is a formula that can be used without too much outside help:

http://indoor-rowing.blogspot.com/2007/09/explanation-on-training.html

The most important is to find the routine to get on the rowing machine and put in time on the "water" figuratively speaking. The more strokes you take with the right technic you will find your stroke lengthening out and become more powerful.

Rowing is about efficiency for each stroke that you take. The torque part of the rowing stroke is what makes rating (strokes per minute) too high not necessary. You want the load per stroke to be such that your recovery is worth spending time on. The ratio between recovery and drive is 2 to 1 roughly. So when you drive the stroke, feel the effort, then on the recovery take your time to allow the arms to travel away from the chest until elbows are straight, then hinge at the hip joint to a forward body angle while your arms are still straight and your shoulders relaxed. At that point you raise the knees so that you feel the contraction of the hamstrings which draws you to the footboard. The rolling of the seat on the recovery is steady, whereas in the drive it is an acceleration. When rowing on the water, you actually draw the boat towards you.

Back to intensity: At our indoor rowing studio, I want to achieve two things: Smiles and sweaty shirts. When you achieve that at home in Alaska, you succeeded and will keep succeeding.

As for the weight loss, I am in the same boat as you are. I could lose thirty pounds, yet to do that I would have to row more. The family and business requirements have priority, so I don't get to row as much as I would want to. Therefore, it is important that I do not take in too many cheap and easy calories. Since March, I totally stopped soda pop, no more eating wrapped candy, no more fries and potatoes.

It was in March, that I used Nutrisystem to get myself jump started, with my weight loss. Nutrisystem showed me how LITTLE I needed to eat in order to lose weight. In a nutshell, every main meal would fit in one cup... There was a snack three times a day, which was small, and the anytime finger food were vegetables that you could eat as much as you wanted.

I hope this helps.

Good luck and happy new year.
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Jan 4, 2009

Neck and Shoulder Tightness

Hello Rowers and WaterRowers,

Yesterday at the Iron Oarsman, I had a conversation with a couple of our rowers. They mentioned to me that they felt tight between the shoulders and the neck. They were a little worried that the rowing would not loosen up that area. The advice I gave, was to warm up gently by rowing full slide one arm at a time. This allows the stretch and hang off the arm and shoulder blade through the back and finger tips during the leg drive portion of the stroke.

The shoulder and neck area are often tight without someone noticing it until that area is used for moving something or when exercise is being done. Those muscles and their mobility are often victim to stress. It is therefore important to start out any exercise, whether it is rowing or jumping with potato bags, in a gentle smooth manner. Be patient when you warm up. Love your WaterRower, it will give you amazing benefits back for all your life.

All the best,

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

Jan 1, 2009

A question from Norway:


Hello and happy new year.

This morning, I got an email from a Norwegian rower asking me for advice as to how I tackled 2K races on the ergometer. Luckily, I have it all written out for people to read. The URL for my race pace description is this:

http://indoor-rowing.blogspot.com/2007/01/pacing-for-2000-meter-racing.html

I do not believe that I am a glutton for punishment, therefore I always looked for the path of least resistance when it came to having to go all out in race situations. As I read my last sentence, it is a total paradox, but hey it worked for me. Trevor, a university friend, once told me that there were two types of athletes: Race horses and work horses. He clearly filed me under work horse. My vision for racing was to build as much armor as possible so I would not feel the pain, when it came to out-row others to the finish line. Spending hours building aerobic fitness, at a high torque per stroke ratio, and keeping the intensity below 2mmol of lactic acid, that was my calling.... WORK HORSE. I remember Trevor filing Jamie, another university friend and world champion single sculler, as a RACE HORSE. So the question I had for me: When would I become more of a race horse... At the 2000 Olympics I graduated as race horse, although I only walked away with silver. That race was a titanic battle with myself. I personally narrated it, follow this link:

http://indoor-rowing.blogspot.com/2008/08/personal-narration-of-2000-olympic.html

At different ages, rowing represents different solutions and challenges, keep it in perspective.

All the best to you,

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

Dec 28, 2008

BBC Health Check on Rowing and why it is good for you:


Follow the link HERE
The photo is of me and Reid doing kitchen chores and finding information the internet about the benefits of rowing
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Dec 25, 2008

Xmas row and thoughts


We had a very nice Xmas. My children got what they wished for and my wife and I are thankful for having a happy and healthy family. 
I have to confess that I did a few detours in my diet in the last few days. Quite often chocolate and other rich foods were offered to me and I did not have the discipline to politely decline... On top of this, my wife and I were busy organizing for the holidays and I did not get to put in my usual miles on my WaterRower. After opening the presents I took the opportunity to roll out my WaterRower to the living room. Reid just finished eating and was happy jumping in his bouncer. Erin, Reid, and I were watching a great show of aerial views of coastlines around the world in high definition. My WaterRower was set one foot away from the TV screen and I felt I was on a hang-glider rowing :-) The setting was perfect for a paddle. As I started rowing I felt a little stiff from sitting around and having interrupted sleep since the birth of Reid in July. In honor of Erin, I should just put up and shut up, because her sleep started being bad six months into “our” pregnancy.
25 minutes into my row I started loosening up and felt the air in my stomach magically disappear. This is when the breathing technique of exhaling into the catch made me think again about most people who row past their most competitive years. If you have a little extra cargo above your hip joint, you will find it far more pleasant to breathe and relax during your row the way I described above. As for the highly trim group, don’t think that my breathing is dictated only by my massiveness. In the contrary, when I was ultra fit, I exhaled rolling into the last half of the recovery and found the best possible effortless hang of the leg drive.
My other thought during my hour long row, which ended in a right-arm-only-pull for the last five minutes while my son Reid was riding in my right arm, was that I am addicted to exercise, but I am not a glutton for punishment. My motto in live is to workout long and steady, like a diesel engine pulling freight through the Mohave Desert. Even when I was training for the Olympics, most of my workouts were long and steady, which I loved. I did not care much about “ramming” into intolerable pain in order to win races.
My advice to the majority of rowers is to go long and steady for 90% of the time, after all you only have one body. Of course, it is OK to row super hard here and there... but you won’t catch me in a rat race for personal bests now that I consider myself a DIESEL ENGINE that is going for the long haul: “ROWING ROWING ROWING...ROWING ROWING ROWING...ROWHIDE!!!”
Over and out.
Xeno.
www.ironoarsman.com
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Dec 24, 2008

Wonderful and heart breaking at the same time. Alzheimer's

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

Dec 23, 2008

Stressed? Find time to row, difficult? Here is how I look at it:


Hello Everyone & happy holidays,
This morning I watched our baby Reid. He is so cute, our family loves him to pieces. I happened to be awake first and was planning to row my WaterRower in front of Good Morning America, when my wife opened the bedroom door and asked if I could come get Reid, since he woke up. No problem, I responded. I carried him in his electrical swing to the living room right next to the WaterRower. He gave me a whole half hour of happiness. I did not push the envelope and row until he would get bored. I stopped at a point at which I felt would be good for Reid and me to have a change of scenery. I changed him and dressed him with fresh clothes. He was totally happy. We walked back to the living room and I set him in his bouncer. I looked up on our DVR one of the stored baby shows and turned on Classical Baby and proceeded to row another 10 minutes. Had he stayed asleep I would have rowed 90 minutes at a leisurely pace. As I was rowing I started thinking of all the people who may not have rowing ingrained in their brain. People, to whom it must not be so easy to chose to exercise when things are not all perfectly in order with their schedules and lives. 
We hear in the news of all the financial and holiday stresses that exist and need to be coped with. How can anyone find time to move their body for their health and mental break. Here is how I see it. When you make the decision to exercise, start out easy. Be gentle to yourself and pick a low level of intensity. Let your body temperature rise slowly, no need to shock the system, at this point of the year, it already is with all that is going on in our world. Consider the exercise as therapy and not a ball busting workout from hell. With this attitude you will be more likely to repeat your exercise routine for a lifetime.
Fighting stress is done by finding peace and that is why I LOVE THE WATERROWER. I like to row the WaterRower leisurely. The resistance is evenly spread out through the stroke and the swishing sound of the water, totally therapeutic. While I was rowing, no one was woken up. The belt mechanism is sound free and the wheels of the seat whisper quiet, only the sound of water, just like rowing in a single scull. 
Believe me, I have found rowing nirvana with WaterRower. I break a sweat and feel rejuvenated. If you are on the fence about acquiring a fitness machine, give the WaterRower a good luck and a test row. Take my word for it, I am an addicted rower, and I need to break a sweat without losing love for working out. Me too, I need to find peace and quiet in my life! Cheers everyone!
Xeno
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Dec 18, 2008

I can make you faster with skype


Hello Rowers!!!

Today, I SKYPE coached as far north as YELLOWKNIFE, Canada. It was great. Can’t believe that there is no snow only between June and September. Currently the temperature is -40 degrees. As I was told -40 in fahrenheit is the SAME as -40 in degrees Celsius!

The other day, I coached in Sydney on the tenths floor of a building overlooking Circle Quay. I also help coach a group of juniors in Minnesota.

SKYPE proves to be an incredible tool, which enables me to be different places in the world without traveling. I am very effective with the webcam, it is an awesome feeling to be able to help someone improve their rowing technique within minutes.

My rate is $40 for 20 minutes of coaching.

All the best and happy holidays!!!

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

Dec 7, 2008

After college & the Olympics

Hello Rowers,

This post is about my passion for rowing indoors after college and the Olympics.

As I mentioned in an earlier post, I am 36 years old, and at the "beginning" of my life long rowing career. As I look back in time, rowing at the Olympics, is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to life long miles rowed. To people I meet, I tell them that I am rowing because I want to chase down my great grand children and regular rows will make this dream happen. In the same breath, I add that rowing is a sport that can be practiced until up to 300 years of age. Once I am of grandfather age, I see myself commuting in a class A RV with my wife to visit our grandchildren, for this I need to stay fit and row everyday.

"We" the rowers know of the zero impact/full body workout rowing is. In my opinion, it is the only cardiovascular sport to be practiced efficiently until advanced age. It is true, that cross country skiing and swimming are also zero "impact/full body workouts", BUT... Let's face it, for cross country skiing requires snow, ability to ski on slippery stuff, and enjoy cold temperatures. As for swimming, you need a pool, and efficient swimming technique in order to have a workout at all. In addition to the swimming option, you will get a soaked hairdo.

"The others" (pretty much the rest of the world) don't know anything about rowing, let alone, the high quality indoor rowing exercise option. As I see it, my job is to inform and educate the rest of the world to whom rowing is a foreign concept. While I write these lines, I am reminded of how many actual collegiate rowers passionately HATE rowing indoors... to them I say that sitting on a rowing machine is not that bad at all, if you have the right state of mind. From experience, I know, that if you learned to row at a boathouse with a coach, you were likely abused and mistreated :-) while being judged on your rowing ability on the ergometer. Therefore you are entitled to hate rowing indoors but keep your mind open to be rehabilitated to enjoy the sport off the water. Too often, unfortunately, the rowing machine is mainly used to compare raw endurance, which is wrongly equated to on the water boat moving ability. This last statement makes me want to scream.

So next time you climb onto the ergometer, whether it is the WaterRower or the Concept2, be mellow and find your groove. Love the ability to stretch out and smoothly move your body back and forth. Rowing is simultaneously a physical as well as a mental BREAK/workout.

Finally, my last advice is to be gentle to your body, you only have one, so don't freak out if an old friend from college is 50 seconds faster for 2K than you are. Use it as motivation to gradually get fit, OK?

Yours truely,

Xeno
www.ironoarsman.com
www.cafepress.com/gorow
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Nov 20, 2008

The Benefits of Indoor Rowing

The Benefits of Indoor Rowing

Exercise is good, in any form. But there are some forms that score head and tail over the others, and rowing, or more specifically indoor rowing, is one of them. If there ever was a complete body workout in one exercise, it’s rowing. It looks as if it’s just the arms that are getting a workout, but no, that’s not true at all. A surprising fact about rowing that not many people are aware of is that, contrary to popular belief, this exercise works your legs more than your hands – an indoor rower offers your legs three times more work than your arms. Rowing is a great workout for people of all ages, and here’s why:

It’s not weight-bearing: Rowing, unlike jogging or walking, does not put additional strain on your lower limbs, but still exercises your legs like running does. This prevents wear and tear on your knees, lower limbs and other joints, a side effect that appears when you jog regularly over a long period of time.
It exercises your whole body: Rowing offers you the double benefits of a cardiovascular workout and strength training all rolled into one. It exercises all the major muscle groups in your body. You get a complete workout with just one machine.
It’s safe for people of all ages: Rowing can be done as gently or as vigorously as you choose, which is why it’s a great exercise even for people who’re not in the prime of their life. Older people, especially those who have knee trouble, find it more convenient and less stressful than walking.
It’s great for rehab: People who have undergone a major knee surgery find rowing a safe and low-impact, yet energetic workout during rehab when they must exercise without stressing their knees. Rowing also helps smokers who have quit the habit to exercise their lungs and thus undo the damages caused by years of smoking.
It helps you lose weight: Because it’s a complete exercise, it helps you lose those unwanted pounds and also tones your body.
It’s an all-weather activity: You don’t have to worry about rain or shine; all you need is an indoor rowing machine and you’re good to go. Work out at any time of the day according to your convenience.

By-line:
This article is contributed by Sarah Scrafford, who regularly writes on the topic of Online EKG Programs. She invites your questions, comments and freelancing job inquiries at her email address: sarah.scrafford25@gmail.com.
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Nov 19, 2008

WaterRower rowing machine, here is another reason I enjoy rowing it.


I am drawn to use the waterrower, because it feels gentler on the body and the ears in comparison to other rowing machines. You can have a hard workout, but if you wish a lighter paddle at lower rates the strokes feel more connected through the finish then wind resistance machines.

Learn more here...
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Nov 16, 2008

Rowing for wellness and the reasons for this blog.

Hello readers,

My name is Xeno Muller. I am 36 years old, married and father of four children. I live in Southern California, Costa Mesa to be exact. I run an indoor rowing studio, called the Iron Oarsman, sell indoor rowing workout DVDs and I coach on the water.

My rowing background goes all the way back to when I was 13 years old. My first strokes were taken on the Seine river in France. Six years later, I rowed for Brown and competed at three Olympics. In 1992, I almost made the finals in the men's single scull, but missed qualifying by half a boat length. In 1996, I made it and won gold in the single scull. In 2000, I returned from Australia with silver.

There is plenty more to write about myself, but the point of this blog is to further help people achieve there personal goals. After five years running the Iron Oarsman, I gained a lot more perspective about rowing and its beneftis, which goes way beyond the competitive aspect of the sport.

99% of our members at the Iron Oarsman, have never rowed on the water. I learned of their personal reasons and motivations, as to why they started working out with us. In this blog, I will write about training for competition, but also on rowing's health/therapeutic & wellness benefits.

In my opinion rowing is still completely unknown to the rest of the world. Yet so many would love to row to feel better and improve their quality of life without ever planning to compete in their life time.

I am looking forward to doing research and blogging here on Row2K.

So for now I wish you a great fall/spring depending hemisphere.

All the best, Xeno www.ironoarsman.com


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

Nov 11, 2008

The latest with my WaterRower rowing machine on youtube.


On Youtube

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

Breathing technique while rowing.

Hello Rowers,

It came to my attention that breathing technique is not a commonly understood in rowing.

I had two Olympic coaches, Harry Mahon, and Marty Aikten.  They were respectively from New Zealand and Australia.

Harry and Marty taught me to row effortlessly.

Here is in words what such rowing technique is:  At the catch ready to engage the leg drive, the upper body is at a "forward body angle" with the lower back supported so that the tilt occurs by hinging at the hip joint.  The shoulders are set forward relaxed, arms are straight at the elbow, handle held in the finger tips.  The head neck and back form an ergonomic line.  The shins are vertical, and for most the ball of the foot is connected to the foot board, while the heels are off the board.  

The drive is started through the legs, the heels descend onto the foot board as soon as the first quarter of the seat travels on the track.  The body angle starts engaging the swing in the last quarter of the leg drive, when the legs are the most powerful and the seat travels the least.  Engaging the upper body swing in the last quarter of the leg drive is key to being able to lever the short yet powerful travel of the seat/body.

The finish position has a supported lower back.  The upper body is slightly beyond vertical.  The forearms are parallel to the ground/water.  Wrists are flush with the back of the hand, forearm, and first two row of knuckles.  Chest is "out" because throughout the entire stroke cycle the back is ALWAYS supported.  The handle travels to the body through the CONTRACTION of the latissimus muscle.

Recovery has the entire body relaxed.  Hands travel away from the chest.  Arms and upper body REST on the handle of the oars or the handle of the rowing machine.  As the arms straighten out at the elbow, the shoulders and then the upper body follow, HINGING at the HIP JOINT.  The knees stay straight until the hamstrings feel engaged, the rolling back into the catch occurs because of the contraction of the hamstring, AND NOT THE contraction of the hip flexor.

Key to efficient rowing is to HANG off the leg drive, letting the legs do the work,  while the shoulders and arms hang straight.  

Therefore breathing is key to the above technique:  Absolute relaxation occurs through exhaling.  With lose lungs, hanging of the leg drive is natural.  As the acceleration progresses and the upper body swings OPEN the lungs fill with air and provide a strong finish position.  

At higher intensity the breathing is doubled up.

Some rowers breath in on the recovery and exhale at the finish.  This leads to a shorter stroke length and early use of the upper body.  A the finish when exhaling the posture "crumbles" on the lower back, and usually knees buckle, instead of staying straight to connect through the foot board.

That is it for now.

Xeno

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

Nov 8, 2008

The sound of water, beautiful to listen to and quiet enough for family life.


This afternoon I "went" for a row in my living room. I wheeled my WaterRower next to the TV as my children and wife were watching Dancing with the Stars. The sound of the water swishing around, as I was rowing, created a peaceful white noise. Before, when I used a rowing machine with loud air resistance, I had to find a place different from our home's common area. I didn't like missing out on family time.

I like a daily routine, which encompasses two workouts. In the morning, I run a class at our indoor rowing gym, The Iron Oarsman. Later in the day, at home, I jump on my WaterRower for a tranquil 10 kilometer row. This daily workout rhythm makes me feel great and gives me a peaceful state of mine.

I absolutely love how I can simultaneously be with my family and push stroke after stroke enjoying my workout on the WaterRower.

Here is the information for WaterRower.

Story in a British newspaper.


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

Apr 25, 2009

New Workout 10 to 100 hard strokes rate 29/30 great for weight loss


Hello rowers and fitness seekers.

Most of you row on the water and wonder what the heck I am doing rowing the machine all the time.

I love to be fit and share the knowledge of rowing. However, rowing on the water is very restrictive to most people. Simply put, there must be an available body of water, a boat to row on and time to spare. I don't have time to spare, I have a family of six, including me and my wife.

For six years, we had a great time running indoor rowing workouts at our studio. Now I am taking these workouts to the internet. There are many "lone rowers" who would enjoy changing their routine around and see the time fly by the same way time flies by at the Iron Oarsman.

This morning we did 10 to 100 hard strokes with 30 strokes rest between. My battery pack ran out so I used a shot gun mic to record sound. Next time I will have a set of spare batteries with me. The angle of the camera is a little different this time. It was great fun. Become a non committed monthly member for $17/month. Always have a different workout to row to, as if you were a member at the Iron Oarsman. CLICK HERE
Sincerely,

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

Apr 24, 2009

Thursday indoor rowing workout calorie burning toning


Great workout 1 minute; 3 minutes; 6 minutes; 3 minutes; 1 minute

max rating is 32. Solid 7 to 10 kilometers depending on your fitness level.

Technical feedback.

We had another great time! This workout is available to the world wide row2go members. Membership is a low $17/monthly no long term commitment necessary.

Check it out here: row2go world wide
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 23, 2009

Wednesday's workout with new backdrop


Hello Rowers,
I cranked out another great row. These rows can be used at your home by subscribing to the world wide membership of row2go. It is only $17 per month and there is no minimum commitment. You get to tap in the growing archive of workouts without ever needing to do one workout twice and less you want to. I feel extremely passionate about this work and love every stroke of it.
All the best,
Xeno
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 22, 2009

New workout to download for your rowing machine


We had a great morning working out on our WaterRowers. I ran two classes, both of which were filmed. Stroke rate ranged from 24 to 32 with crisp intervals. Calorie burning is guaranteed. These workouts can be used at home by becoming a none committed $17 monthly member of the world wide row2go service. Click HERE for more information.
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 20, 2009

World Wide Membership for workouts live and on demand!


Hello rowers and fitness seekers!

We had another successful live stream on Saturday morning. We had a total of 40 viewers/active rowing participants geographical stretching across the globe from Perth Australia, where it was 11 PM local time, to Paris France 5PM local if my math is correct.

Feedback was absolutely terrific. Husbands and wives shared using their rowing machine for the two 45 minute workouts that I lead at the Iron Oarsman, our indoor rowing studio, in Costa Mesa, California.

The most common comments were that it was fun to row while following my lead and that 45 minutes on the rowing machine flew by in a flash. For those who did not row, great enjoyment came from using the chatting module and meeting one another and commenting on the different exercises that I showed during the broadcast. From the U.K. it was mentioned that being live is exciting, but may not always fit into people's busy schedule.

The solution to fit the workouts into people's schedule that I run, has been figured out over the weekend. Every workout is now recorded onto my personal page on Ustream.tv.

The URL to the page is as follows:

http://www.ustream.tv/channel/weight-loss-indoor-rowing-with-xeno-muller-olympic-gold-medali

As I was rowing in my first class, I mentioned to my friend John who sat next to me, that I was using a 3G USB connection to the wireless web. He asked me if I knew what my upload limits were in my wireless contract. I responded that I had no idea! Later that day I checked with my carrier and I was just under the limit. For this reason it is logical that I create a membership based workout service. At the Iron Oarsman our members pay $99 per month to row. For the world wide web indoor rowing "row2go" membership I made calculations that $17 per month would fit perfectly for 24 monthly fresh workouts on demand. This is a great way to push between 5000 and 11000 meters 24 time per month, depending on your fitness and torque level. The monthly membership commitment is under total control of the end user. There is NO long term commitment, not in this time and economic age.

The URL to sign up is:

http://web.me.com/xenoralfmuller/Site/ROW2GO_Live.html


My plan is to do one live rowing workout a week. It is fun to respond to peoples questions and comments as we crank out the meters.

I envision corporations using our stream to motivate their employees to stay health by following the workouts that we put out. Rowing with with me will always be interesting because the footage is as fresh as a bakers fresh bread coming out of the oven. After six years of running workouts at the Iron Oarsman, I have become a professional at entertaining rowers with all sorts of workouts. Inventing new workouts is similar to all the different ways to mix up a Rubics cube.

So if you know someone who needs a little motivation or instruction to row, I am the solution.

All the best,

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

Apr 14, 2009

Weight loss and a better life through rowing


Hello WaterRowers and fintess seekers.

I am sitting at my desk strategizing my next business moves. Over the past years while running my indoor rowing workouts at the Iron Oarsman, I got several clues and ideas which at the time did not rattle me as key, but now with thousands of rowing kilometers under my belt, I am getting it... it is never to late.

I am going to use a clearer message that describes what my business goal is: Weight loss and a better life, with rowing.

For this purpose I am renaming my world wide web streams on Ustream.tv.

Rowing is a great sport because of its zero impact on joints and full body exercise characteristics. The notion of weight loss and a better life, can be understood by pretty much anyone who can read.

Funny enough, I will always battle body weight, which in truth is a great advantage, it will keep me motivated to move and row until I am three hundred years old!

So stay tuned and help spread the word.

Let's row!

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

Apr 12, 2009

Great rowing weekend on the world wide web


Hello Rowers and Fitness Seekers,

I successfully used Ustream this weekend to stream our indoor rowing workouts to the world wide web. At one point we had 35 visitors, some followed both 45 minute workouts on their rowing machine. For variety purpose we changed the angle of the camera. Sound and video came through great.

On Sunday, I held a 30 minute Q & A via Ustream, it worked great. I had forgotten that it was Easter Sunday. I found myself talking to rowers in my parent in law's cul de sac making sure that my kids did not injure themselves on their scooters.

The URL to the stream that I use is:

http://www.ustream.tv/channel/indoor-rowing-with-xeno-muller-olympic-gold-medalist

I have gotten great reviews for my sculling technique DVD that you can find here:

http://web.me.com/xenoralfmuller/Site/DVD_Workouts.html

For those of you racing I wish you lots of speed. For those of you rowing for health and longevity, may every stroke be pure joy.

All the best,
Xeno

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

Apr 10, 2009

Travis' Mr. Griffin Video

Great acting!

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

Apr 9, 2009

Ustream.tv and 3G internet

Alright, I have an urge to express my newly aquired knowledge faster than I can type...

1. Below is my link to live web streaming of future indoor rowing workouts that I am going lead. I am using a free website called Ustream.tv it is available to anyone and it is GREAT.

2. Let's set up a question answer live stream Sunday afternoon at 5PM Pacific Coast Standard Time using the link below. You can use the live message board and I will answer orally to the questions that I read. Send me an email if you are interested in joining, so I know what to expect: xeno@ironoarsman.com

3. With the 3G internet, I can travel up to 30 miles per hour using SKYPE and not lose any quality of sound and image.... Guess what, we could do this for live coaching on the water. What you need for this is to hook up your video camera with better zoom to the lap top that has the 3G internet enabled and VOILA!!! I can witness the rowing as it unfolds while traveling on the water.

4. For those of you who want to share with others who live far away, I highly recomend SKYPE and Ustream.tv. Ustream is similar to youtube, except you have the live version and you can broadcast to an unlimited number of specators.

5. I am applying for the job of: "Head Coach of the Orange Coast College Men's Rowing Program." Orange Coast College is a two year program that is a springboard for rowers whose path did not take them directly into a four year school. The hiring committee may not be looking for the best possible rowing coach, but more a combination of coach/master degree in some other field so that whoever is hired, can teach a course of some sort on campus. I only have a degree in International Relations from Brown, that is one strike against me. In my cover letter I mention that I would start an indoor rowing wellness program on campus for, faculty, students, and OCC employees.

Ok, that is it for now. Below is the link to Ustream.tv

XENO

http://www.ustream.tv/channel/indoor-rowing-with-xeno-muller-olympic-gold-medalist

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

Apr 8, 2009

Cooking show day three at my house...


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

Apr 7, 2009

Day two of cooking show....




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

Apr 6, 2009

Swiss reality TV cooking show

This is a Swiss reality TV show that I was invited to take part in recently. It is a four part show, about home cooked dinners. We all have to try each others dinners. I cook in the third episode. This is the first episode and in Swiss-German. The show is called: "Golden Carrot goes Hollywood"... entertaining even if you don't speak the language.


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

Apr 4, 2009

Smashing Ustream Success


I want to outfit my rowing studio with a projector so I can do two things:
1. Be able to respond to written posts as they come in, which would make the whole more interactive.
2. Get someone else to run the workout from another part of the world. Ustream can bring more motivation to people to row worldwide.
Xeno Muller
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Apr 1, 2009

I got an email asking me what I like about the WaterRower in comparison to another popular machine.

Hi.
Thank you for writing me. Here is a link that summarizes my feeling for the WaterRower
I get as good of a workout on the WaterRower as I get on the C2. There are nuances. Rowing the WaterRower is more quiet and gentler on the body. At first you will find that the resistance is gentler and more evenly distributed on the WaterRower. The feet are closer together and it is more like pushing off the foot board of a boat, which after rowing on the C2 I had to get used to again. The handle and the seat are far more pliable to the fingers and gluts. The machine is very smooth to row and fun to watch the water change color as you accelerate the stroke. I really enjoy rowing the WaterRower and I do not miss the C2 whatsoever. No doubt that the C2 is a bullet proof machine, but I have done enough miles on it and feel at peace having found a great alternative. And yes, I am also selling the WaterRower, but I am not a salesperson by nature. I tell it the way it is and the way I feel about it.
I hope this helped.
Xeno
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

03-30-2009 Workout ready for download by Xeno


Synopsis of the workout. Xeno leads his crew through a great 45 minute workout. Peppered with intervals and technical exercises, the row is fun and let’s you forget that you are actually exercising. Xeno’s workout is great for a mental break and is physically invigorating!
This is a workout filmed during a scheduled workout at the Iron Oarsman, Xeno’s indoor rowing studio, located in Costa Mesa, California. Have a great time. Download the workout now for $4.99 Xeno Muller
Purchase here:
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Mar 9, 2009

New Pyramid Workout!!!


Today I finished another great workout. This one is a type of pyramid interval workout that starts at 10 seconds of power and 50 seconds easy, culminates at the top with a full minute of power, and gently reverses back to 50 seconds of easy paddle during the final interval. Have a great time. Stay tuned, because I am getting organized to sell such workouts individually. Xeno
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Mar 3, 2009

Questions and Answers from Emails.

Hello Readers,

I got a few emails in the past couple of weeks that I found interesting to answer and post on the blog.


Q: xeno,

quick question for you. Is there an advantage to rowing 6k and 2k erg pieces on slides as opposed to not on slides? If there is a difference, how many seconds do you think that is?

B.

A: The longer the distance the less of an advantage the slides by Concept 2 provide. However, if you burn up 100 or 500 meter sprints the story is different. Moving the rowing machine back and forth is "lighter" then moving your own body back and forth. We found out that if someone tries the sliders for the first time, the rowing stroke shortens up by a few inches at the catch. This is a technical issue that when mentioned is easily corrected, yet it turns out it requires a tad bit of an effort to get the right reach at the catch without rushing in.

If you are someone who does a lot of miles and hard work on the Concept 2, I highly recommend the sliders, because the turnaround points of the stroke are smoother on the body. I found that the WaterRower is very gradual in the resistance and feels as smooth as rowing on water. I hope you will have the opportunity to one day try both rowing machines side to side. When you use the sliders you can do the one legged rowing drill, which is extremely effective for learners to figure out that the rowing stroke is a push with a pull at the end.



Q:
Hi there! I have been watching your videos for a while and they are awesome have learnt a of alot. But I have decided to go from 8s to single sculls and just wondering if you have any extremely beginner tips for me :)

A:
A couple of thoughts come immediately to my mind.
Make sure you are rigged high enough to have clearance between the handle and the top of your thighs on the recovery. Make sure that you adjust yourself on the footboard so that you can pass your hands slightly past the rib cage at the finish. This enables you to lift the oar out of the water by hinging the forearm at the elbow joint and not by breaking the wrist and washing out.
Make sure that you get the forward body angle at hip joint, feel your hamstrings a little to make sure that you don't prematurely lift the knees. Make sure that your lower back is supported at the finish and maintain that feel all the way to the catch. When you roll in the catch, draw the single scull under with your heels. Train at really LOW stroke rates to get a feel for connection of the blade in the water. Strap a bunch of bungees around your hull and feel the nice stability you get and the development of more powerful rowing muscles. Bungees go between the footboard and the stern.


Q:
hello Xeno, i need your help, ive been trying to lower my erg score but i havent been able to, ive been in th erg almost everyday for the past 4 months and im still pulling 740 is there any help you can give me regarding this, i would much appreciate it, counting with the fact that i have an erg test at the end of march and im the only lightweight on the team, im 150 and my height is 5,9 thanks

A:
Hello. My former coach Marty, who helped me win two Olympic medals in the single scull, always said that it is never too late to build and maintain aerobic capacity. From the sentences that you are writing to me, it sounds like you are in a junior or collegiate rowing program. You are plateauing and that can be a result from too many hard workouts and not enough long steady state aerobic training. How have the other rowers been doing, have they increased their personal bests? There is a dangerous false positive that junior coaches use to believe that their training program works. Juniors, as they grow and mature, their physical ability increases. With the right training program, the physical ability increases more rapidly than with a program that focuses too much on hard and high intensity workouts. The result of the later approach to training is a physiological state called acidosis. Too much lactic acid too often and that leads to being overtired, mental exhausting, and to some degrees injury. The coaches find the excuse to such hard training that in order to succeed a rower has to be mentally tough... and use their mental toughness as the end of all ends to win races.
Here is what I would do in order to get ready for your March Erg test. If you can, only train hard every three to four days. In between, do 70 to 90 minutes on the ergo at stroke rate 18 to 22 at a higher resistance that you are used to. The goal is not to rip your arms out of your socket, but to move and find the groove. Train at your aerobic target heart rate which you can figure by using the Karvonen formula:
(MAX HR- REST HR)X80%+REST HR= Target Heart Rate +/- 5 heart beats.
Also make sure that you use carbs and electrolytes when you train in order to replenish the glycogen reserves.
Check out my pacing entry on www.indoor-rowing.blogspot.com

Q:
My name is R. and I am 17 years old. I am from Portugal. I have some objectives for this season.
(...) I know that you won the Olympics in 1996 and few more. I want you to tell me what you can make a difference between our goal and we can. and what you think is the most important one to win a championship rower in the world.

my English is poor or very poor but that does not even want to answer says something...

A:
R., No worries. Your English is good enough for me to figure out a good answer for you. While I was competing, I had rowing on my mind ALL THE TIME. At your age, I imagined rowing the last 500 meters in the single scull at the Olympics leaving the other sculler behind over and over. Through my imagination I could feel the tears of rage and joy trickling down my cheeks and the TV commentators yelling out to the world that I was on the right track to win the Olympic gold medal.

When I would do my endurance weightlifting I always tried to add a bit more weight, because I knew that if I do it in training I will be able to deliver decisive blows to the competition and make them regret that they chose to row the single scull.

I never passed out after a race, but I certainly imagined it many times. I wrote into my second single scull: Push to win, and Push to death. My wife knows I am dramatic... My outlook on rowing has certainly changed after the 1996 Olympics and certainly after becoming a father.

Finally, what makes you the best you can personally be, comes from long training sessions where you hold the target heart rate at the aerobic level. Out of the 500 Watts I was able to pull at the Olympics, 300 Watts were generated at stroke rate 21 for up to 90 minutes at a time. This is why it is so important to train torque at low stroke rates so that you develop you aerobic capacity.

Q:
I recently purchased a waterrower s1 and am really enjoying it. I did a half marathon 21097 a couple of days ago and managed 1hr 19 mins 13 secs. Afterwards my backside and hips were shot for a couple of hours! How would this time stand up to a similar time on the concept 2 online rankings ?
I have used both but find the waterrower a more pleasant place to be (relatively).
Thanks buddy, loving your stuff on youtube !
J. U.K.

A:
Make sure that you get your forward body angle at the hip joint. If the lift of the knees is the primary movement that makes you roll back to the catch, then you are overusing the hip flexor. When you hinge at the hip joint and wait to feel the tension in the hamstring, you can use the contraction of the hamstring to roll into the catch, that keeps the pressure off the hip flexors which is a much smaller muscle.
It is safe to say that the WaterRower measures speed faster than the Concept 2. Numbers have been tossed around and I feel pretty comfortable saying that WaterRower is 5% faster. So in your case it would have taken you 3 minutes 57 seconds longer on a C2.
I am at a stage where I don't care anymore what time I put in or how far I am going. I love a sweaty shirt, the feel of being worked out, and the duration spent rowing.


All the best,
Xeno Muller
Olympic gold and silver medalist, men's single scull.
www.ironoarsman.com
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Feb 25, 2009

You want to keep doing the sport that you love for the rest of your life?

You love to run, play golf, swim, play tennis, ice skate, ride bikes, motocross, ping pong, any sport you can think of. It is important that you cross train so that the joints you use the most during you favorite activity get a break. With rowing it is an easy way to keep fit for those activities without stressing the joints since rowing is a zero impact exercise. Cyclists have told me that during the cold weather season, the indoor rowing workouts made fitter for the cycling season. The same was true about runners. Even golfers found that their swing got more powerful, let alone being able to walk 18 holes.
Try rowing, it is easy to learn. My workout DVDs can help you.
Xeno Muller
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

From blogger to facebook, we are connected


Hello rowers and health seekers!
I interconnected this blog with my facebook profile. From now on, what you find here can be read on the facebook site. This will be great, because it allows me to promote my latest workout DVDs, and reach a wider audience when I publicize rowing tips. The other GREAT technology I possess is the ability to be wireless and blog from pretty much anywhere. This is also the case with SKYPE, no need anymore to be close to a local internet source. I am sitting in my car currently while the kids are dropped of on the school yard by my wife. Next to me is our little son Reid watching baby Einstein.
That is it for now.
Xeno Muller
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Feb 23, 2009

Laufen ohne Verletzung, ich weiss wie!!!

Ist Laufen Ihre Leidenschaft? Ich will, dass Sie fuer viele Jahre ohne beschwerden weiter laufen koennen. Ich habe waerend meinen Olympia trainings Jahre gelernt, dass ich Verletzungen fern halten kann mit CrossTraining. Desswegen moechte ich von Herzen den Rat von trocken rudern zu geben. Mit trocken rudern kann man die Kondition trainieren ohne die Laufglieder zuhart zu beanspruchen.
Gruss,
Xeno Muller
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Runners! I have a great idea for you!

Do you love to run? Believe me, I want you to run for the rest of your life. There is one thing that I learned from intensive training for the Olympics. You need to keep your workouts varied with cross training. Often athletes get little nagging injuries from overuse of a particular joint. So if you are a runner, I wholeheartedly recommend that you try rowing indoors to keep up your cardio and save your joints for many many years of injury free running.

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

Feb 22, 2009

Training program and why it is available.


Hello Row2K readers and others who stumble upon my little soap box.


I finished writing a second training program that is intended for master rowers who are going to compete at the US rowing master's national championship in August. If you are interested in getting the training plan, just add your email to the collection box on the first page of my website: www.ironoarsman.com.

Currently, I have two training programs going, the one mentioned above and one for club rowers who are competing in July.

I would like to explain why I am publicizing the training programs. As a former Olympic rower, with medals, the aftermath of competition is an unknown professional territory when it comes to building a business in rowing other than coaching a defined crew.

I consider myself a gun for hire for individuals who want to get the extra edge in high performance rowing. This market as you all know is very small. My two prodeges last year were the Graves brothers who barely missed making it to the Olympics.

On the other hand, I feel like I am a catalyst for none-rowers to discover health and fitness through indoor rowing. This health/wellness/fitness market is H U G E. At this point I have not yet figured out how to crack this nut. When I do, I will help sponsor rowing events :-)


So in the meantime, I need to spread the word about myself and my rowing capabilities. Tooting my own horn does not feel natural, after all I was born Swiss, where talking about "Going for Gold (like in the US)" is frowned upon.

Publicizing training programs which follow the training fundamentals that brought me Olympic gold and silver in the single scull seem to a natural. The key here is to mention that I have a great sculling DVD for sale which features me rowing my boat, while I am connected to a wireless mic. Spectators get to see how I interact with the single, they hear my thoughts on how to control the boat, and what type of exercises I do routinely, to stay efficient with my gliding and my power application.


In order to succeed at all levels in life I am a strong believer in the two way street.

I wish you all the very best,

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

Feb 21, 2009

XENOTV is now Online! Weightloss every stroke.

With great joy, I am announcing a workout download service for people who want to increase their use of their rowing machine at home. The workouts are 30 minutes long and can be downloaded onto a portable video device such as an IPhone. Go check out further information on our website: www.ironoarsman.com and click on XENOTV. You will have a great time burning more calories and feeling great about losing weight by rowing more!!!
Xeno Muller
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Gewicht verlieren, mit Rudern und Xeno Mueller, Ihr Olympia Sieger

Hallo,
Mit freude schreibe ich auf diesem Blog, dass ich jetzt einen Service habe fuer Rudermachinen Besitzer! Es gibt nichts langweiligeres als eine Fitnessmachine zu Hause alleine benutzen zu muessen... Dies ist jetzt Vergangenheit. Mein Name is Xeno Mueller, und habe 1996 die gold Medaille im Einer rudern an der Olympiade gewonnen. Nun filme ich Ruder trainings fuer Leute die einen Trainingspartner brauchen. Schaut mal bei meiner Webseite vorbei: www.ironoarsman.com und klickt XENOTV.
Alles Gute,
Xeno


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

Feb 20, 2009

Changing Gears going global with the Workouts!!!

Ok, that is it.
I am committing to weekly workouts that are "downloadable" to portable media devices. This makes it possible for anyone who owns a rowing machine to enjoy what we do so well at the Iron Oarsman, our indoor rowing studio, here in Costa Mesa, California. I will keep you entertained on a weekly basis. You will find me rowing the machine as well as pushing the single scull along on the water. I am very excited about my change of gears because it gives me the ability to attack a more global market.
As Facebook friends I will send you the first workout as a present.
The goal is to develop a membership base who enjoys using the rowing machine frequently.
Ah “JA” I will deliver the workouts in English for the Anglo-Saxons and high German for the German speaking parts of Europe.
Los gehts! Let’s go!
FOLLOW HERE:
http://gallery.me.com/xenoralfmuller#100422
Xeno
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Feb 8, 2009

Training for young and elder.

I am a husband and a father of four. For some this is old news, but I am excited to announce that our son Reid has now decided to let us sleep through the night. Amazing, how much more positive I am during the day with a little more sleep.

Being an involved husband and father, I rarely spend more than an hour on the rowing machine per day. Forget rowing on the water all together, it takes to long to haul the boat out and wash it off after the row, let alone the friendly conversations with fellow rowers, time is of essence, especially now with the current economic crunch time.

Back to the headline of this blog. Whether you are 16 or 70 years young, you need to take into consideration that the body produces energy the same way. It is therefore no surprise that the training methods ought to be the same. The belief that "no pain, no gain" is right, is dead WRONG, whether you are 16 or 70.

For twenty years as an athlete and now for 6 years as coach, I can assure you that pain is NOT the secret to winning races. Ten times 500 meters all out, followed by two 2000 meter all out pieces, WILL NOT make you better or faster. This type of training will make you plateau and eventually make you physically sick and injured.

At age 16 rowers are impressionable and less likely to listen to the wisdom of elders. They follow what their coach tells them, which is more often than not: "more pain, more gain, or the other way around". If the junior rower is lucky, he or she will enjoy the benefit of the false positive improvement curve, which is a positive gain in stamina just because of the body maturing into adulthood.

With age comes wisdom, not always the case, but in my example odler means smarter. Knowing that you only have one body, long and steady becomes more enjoyable of a workout than the short hard intervals. Here is exactly the secret to attaining above normal stamina. Whether your name is Rob Waddell, Thomas Lange, Marnie McBean, or even me, there is one SURE WAY to gain without pain. Now, don't read me wrong, you have to do a ton of work, but you do not need to puke your lung out and hate life at the same time.

The above mentioned athletes all had one thing in common. We all did a lot of steady state training. Our stroke rate ranged between 18 and 22. We looked for torque at every stroke we took. We wrapped bungees around the boat and did specific weight lifting. We were lactate tested at our earlobes once to twice a month during our rows or cross training exercise. We did our hard workouts too, but they would only be four to six times a month!!!!! We avoided the overproduction of lactic acid and thus avoided acidosis.

What I write about is no secret. This type of information can be found on www.fact-canada.com or in Volker Nolte's book Rowing Faster. Using a lactate testing device is as simple as a glucose tester. Yes it involves a tiny bit of blood, but with latex gloves, paper towles and alcohol wipes it is really safe.

Do most of your training below 2mmol of lactic acid, and you will see your stamina improve.

For the skeptics: Some "successful" coaches may not believe in what I write above, but look carefully at what type of athletes they coach. Often you find genetic monsters, or the last rowers standing, making the boat, while others crumbled after the endless sickening workouts which made them swim in their own lactic acid, all while being screamed at by their coach and teammates to questioning their commitment to the sport.
Well, I can assure you that brawn alone will not win the races all the time, you need brain for that. The best brains may not be with the most durable bodies that can sustain 10 times 500 meters and the extra 2 times 2000 meter pieces ALL OUT. Rob, Thomas, Marnie, and I are proof of that.

If you want to learn more about some of the stuff that I coach, you might be interested in the latest DVD that I produced. It has me row the single scull (yes I made time) while I am hooked up to a wireless mic. While I scull, explain the different, muscles I use to control and glide with the boat. In addition I show technical drills for blade work and body preparation. There is a second part on the DVD that has me break down the rowing stroke on the rowing machine.

All the best,

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

Feb 7, 2009

This is what has been happening:

Hello Everyone,

I hope your year has started well, despite the economic storm we are going through at the moment.

Things have been quite hectic with our family and that prevented me from writing about rowing in the last month and a half.

Here is a quick update on what is going on at our indoor rowing studio. 1. We switched all rowing machines over to WaterRowers, they are great to row. 2. I started a kids rowing class that is between 30 and 40 minutes long, every Monday at 430PM. 3. We have a new instructor, his name is Stefan and he is from Brazil. He is so well organized that he picks songs with a certain rhythm to which he adjusts the stroke rate to when he runs workouts at the Iron Oarsman. 4. We had a couple of Austrians rowers come visit us, turns out that my German coaching language needed some WD-40. In the end I got the message across no problem. 5. Reid is now pretty much sleeping through the night... Imagine 7 months of interrupted sleep, being woken up three to five times a night. Needless to say, that my outlook for life has greatly improved now that my brain is better rested.

Onto rowing and training: I have been coaching a junior rowing program in Minnesota via SKYPE. SKYPE enables me to communicate rowing ideas and training advice flawlessly with voice and video and all of it live. Seems like I do a fair bit of SKYPE coaching in colder climates, such as Yellow Knife, Northern Territory, in Canada. There the air temperature is -40 degrees.

We also created the first of its kind on the water sculling DVD with me. I hooked myself up to a wireless mic and I comment on how I row the boat and use different drills to help me control the single scull better. In addition to the on the water footage I have a session of indoor rowing in which I go bit by rowing bit through the rowing stroke explaining power application and recovery.

We are planning a new services membership program. If your fitness depends on rowing indoors we have the right stuff for you. As a member you will get to download my Iron Oarsman indoor rowing workouts. You will never get bored on the rowing machine again, you will feel as if you are rowing at the Iron Oarsman with me.

I wish you all a very good rowing continuation and I hope that all your wishes for 2009 will come true.

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

Jan 28, 2009

Lookin forward to tomorrow mornings workout.

Hello Rowers
I reorganized the WaterRowers at the Iron Oarsman this evening... read on

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

Jan 24, 2009

Xeno Muller Affiliate Program


generate income for your club or fitness website Now!

Take a look at our Shop & DVD page. All the workout DVDs are part of the affiliate program.

The affiliate program provides you with an HTML code in form of a purchase button that you can embed on your site. Your Customers can purchase the DVDs directly through your site. All the shipping and inventory is done on our end.

Every time 10 DVDs are sold you will receive a $50 commission check.

For international websites paypal will be used to pay commissions.

Write to xeno@ironoarsman for further information.
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Jan 20, 2009

Indoor Rowing COOPs, affiliate programs for rowing clubs, building stronger communites.


Hello Rowers,

After listening to our new president's speech, I am more motivated than ever, to help communities enjoy the benefits of rowing. I feel it is my duty to share my knowledge of 24 years of active rowing from beginner, to Olympic gold and silver medalist, and now, as coach and indoor rowing entrepreneur.

In my last blog entry, I spoke about marketing rowing and helping clubs meet their yearly budget, by teaching rowing clubs how to run indoor rowing classes to people who have never experienced rowing before. Since, the hamster in my head has been rowing his rower, and I edged out an affiliate sales program. This program gives clubs with a website the opportunity to generate revenue through retailing product without holding inventory or the need to ship it. My rowing workout DVDs can be a start. From there I am sure that other rowing companies will follow suit and make such affiliate programs available too. For more information, feel free to get in touch with me and I will gladly explain how to proceed.

At this point of my life, as parent and husband, I am interested in building better and healthier communities through rowing, the way we have with our own indoor rowing studio here in Costa Mea, California. I would love to see independent indoor rowing studio COOPs flourish across our great nation. These COOPs can run smoothly without putting too much responsibility on one particular individual. They are run similarly to water rowing clubs, without the need of boats or water.

What I get out of the indoor rowing growth. I can explain this by identifying my three passions: My family, rowing, and making the world a better place. Through the growth of the indoor rowing market, I will be able to produce more learning and motivational tools such as the DVDs that I currently make available to others. The revenue will help me provide for my family, who means everything to me. My second passion is rowing and every aspect of it. Rowing builds character and team work. It keeps people mentally and physically healthy. Rowing helps reduce stress, and empowers people to confront greater challenges. Staying mobile and fit through rowing, will help me chase down my great grandchildren, and feel useful to younger generations. My third passion, dates as far back as I can remember. I want to make the world a better place and provide opportunity and happiness to everyone. I consider myself an expert in rowing, and rowing shall be my mean to help the world to be a better place.

Sincerely,
Xeno Muller
Olympic Gold and Silver Medalist
xeno@ironoarsman.com
www.ironoarsman.com
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Jan 7, 2009

Letter To Alaska


Hello Alaskan Rower,

Here are a couple of tips on intensity and diet:

As far as heart rate goes. Here is a formula that can be used without too much outside help:

http://indoor-rowing.blogspot.com/2007/09/explanation-on-training.html

The most important is to find the routine to get on the rowing machine and put in time on the "water" figuratively speaking. The more strokes you take with the right technic you will find your stroke lengthening out and become more powerful.

Rowing is about efficiency for each stroke that you take. The torque part of the rowing stroke is what makes rating (strokes per minute) too high not necessary. You want the load per stroke to be such that your recovery is worth spending time on. The ratio between recovery and drive is 2 to 1 roughly. So when you drive the stroke, feel the effort, then on the recovery take your time to allow the arms to travel away from the chest until elbows are straight, then hinge at the hip joint to a forward body angle while your arms are still straight and your shoulders relaxed. At that point you raise the knees so that you feel the contraction of the hamstrings which draws you to the footboard. The rolling of the seat on the recovery is steady, whereas in the drive it is an acceleration. When rowing on the water, you actually draw the boat towards you.

Back to intensity: At our indoor rowing studio, I want to achieve two things: Smiles and sweaty shirts. When you achieve that at home in Alaska, you succeeded and will keep succeeding.

As for the weight loss, I am in the same boat as you are. I could lose thirty pounds, yet to do that I would have to row more. The family and business requirements have priority, so I don't get to row as much as I would want to. Therefore, it is important that I do not take in too many cheap and easy calories. Since March, I totally stopped soda pop, no more eating wrapped candy, no more fries and potatoes.

It was in March, that I used Nutrisystem to get myself jump started, with my weight loss. Nutrisystem showed me how LITTLE I needed to eat in order to lose weight. In a nutshell, every main meal would fit in one cup... There was a snack three times a day, which was small, and the anytime finger food were vegetables that you could eat as much as you wanted.

I hope this helps.

Good luck and happy new year.
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Jan 4, 2009

Neck and Shoulder Tightness

Hello Rowers and WaterRowers,

Yesterday at the Iron Oarsman, I had a conversation with a couple of our rowers. They mentioned to me that they felt tight between the shoulders and the neck. They were a little worried that the rowing would not loosen up that area. The advice I gave, was to warm up gently by rowing full slide one arm at a time. This allows the stretch and hang off the arm and shoulder blade through the back and finger tips during the leg drive portion of the stroke.

The shoulder and neck area are often tight without someone noticing it until that area is used for moving something or when exercise is being done. Those muscles and their mobility are often victim to stress. It is therefore important to start out any exercise, whether it is rowing or jumping with potato bags, in a gentle smooth manner. Be patient when you warm up. Love your WaterRower, it will give you amazing benefits back for all your life.

All the best,

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

Jan 1, 2009

A question from Norway:


Hello and happy new year.

This morning, I got an email from a Norwegian rower asking me for advice as to how I tackled 2K races on the ergometer. Luckily, I have it all written out for people to read. The URL for my race pace description is this:

http://indoor-rowing.blogspot.com/2007/01/pacing-for-2000-meter-racing.html

I do not believe that I am a glutton for punishment, therefore I always looked for the path of least resistance when it came to having to go all out in race situations. As I read my last sentence, it is a total paradox, but hey it worked for me. Trevor, a university friend, once told me that there were two types of athletes: Race horses and work horses. He clearly filed me under work horse. My vision for racing was to build as much armor as possible so I would not feel the pain, when it came to out-row others to the finish line. Spending hours building aerobic fitness, at a high torque per stroke ratio, and keeping the intensity below 2mmol of lactic acid, that was my calling.... WORK HORSE. I remember Trevor filing Jamie, another university friend and world champion single sculler, as a RACE HORSE. So the question I had for me: When would I become more of a race horse... At the 2000 Olympics I graduated as race horse, although I only walked away with silver. That race was a titanic battle with myself. I personally narrated it, follow this link:

http://indoor-rowing.blogspot.com/2008/08/personal-narration-of-2000-olympic.html

At different ages, rowing represents different solutions and challenges, keep it in perspective.

All the best to you,

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

Dec 28, 2008

BBC Health Check on Rowing and why it is good for you:


Follow the link HERE
The photo is of me and Reid doing kitchen chores and finding information the internet about the benefits of rowing
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Dec 25, 2008

Xmas row and thoughts


We had a very nice Xmas. My children got what they wished for and my wife and I are thankful for having a happy and healthy family. 
I have to confess that I did a few detours in my diet in the last few days. Quite often chocolate and other rich foods were offered to me and I did not have the discipline to politely decline... On top of this, my wife and I were busy organizing for the holidays and I did not get to put in my usual miles on my WaterRower. After opening the presents I took the opportunity to roll out my WaterRower to the living room. Reid just finished eating and was happy jumping in his bouncer. Erin, Reid, and I were watching a great show of aerial views of coastlines around the world in high definition. My WaterRower was set one foot away from the TV screen and I felt I was on a hang-glider rowing :-) The setting was perfect for a paddle. As I started rowing I felt a little stiff from sitting around and having interrupted sleep since the birth of Reid in July. In honor of Erin, I should just put up and shut up, because her sleep started being bad six months into “our” pregnancy.
25 minutes into my row I started loosening up and felt the air in my stomach magically disappear. This is when the breathing technique of exhaling into the catch made me think again about most people who row past their most competitive years. If you have a little extra cargo above your hip joint, you will find it far more pleasant to breathe and relax during your row the way I described above. As for the highly trim group, don’t think that my breathing is dictated only by my massiveness. In the contrary, when I was ultra fit, I exhaled rolling into the last half of the recovery and found the best possible effortless hang of the leg drive.
My other thought during my hour long row, which ended in a right-arm-only-pull for the last five minutes while my son Reid was riding in my right arm, was that I am addicted to exercise, but I am not a glutton for punishment. My motto in live is to workout long and steady, like a diesel engine pulling freight through the Mohave Desert. Even when I was training for the Olympics, most of my workouts were long and steady, which I loved. I did not care much about “ramming” into intolerable pain in order to win races.
My advice to the majority of rowers is to go long and steady for 90% of the time, after all you only have one body. Of course, it is OK to row super hard here and there... but you won’t catch me in a rat race for personal bests now that I consider myself a DIESEL ENGINE that is going for the long haul: “ROWING ROWING ROWING...ROWING ROWING ROWING...ROWHIDE!!!”
Over and out.
Xeno.
www.ironoarsman.com
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Dec 24, 2008

Dec 23, 2008

Stressed? Find time to row, difficult? Here is how I look at it:


Hello Everyone & happy holidays,
This morning I watched our baby Reid. He is so cute, our family loves him to pieces. I happened to be awake first and was planning to row my WaterRower in front of Good Morning America, when my wife opened the bedroom door and asked if I could come get Reid, since he woke up. No problem, I responded. I carried him in his electrical swing to the living room right next to the WaterRower. He gave me a whole half hour of happiness. I did not push the envelope and row until he would get bored. I stopped at a point at which I felt would be good for Reid and me to have a change of scenery. I changed him and dressed him with fresh clothes. He was totally happy. We walked back to the living room and I set him in his bouncer. I looked up on our DVR one of the stored baby shows and turned on Classical Baby and proceeded to row another 10 minutes. Had he stayed asleep I would have rowed 90 minutes at a leisurely pace. As I was rowing I started thinking of all the people who may not have rowing ingrained in their brain. People, to whom it must not be so easy to chose to exercise when things are not all perfectly in order with their schedules and lives. 
We hear in the news of all the financial and holiday stresses that exist and need to be coped with. How can anyone find time to move their body for their health and mental break. Here is how I see it. When you make the decision to exercise, start out easy. Be gentle to yourself and pick a low level of intensity. Let your body temperature rise slowly, no need to shock the system, at this point of the year, it already is with all that is going on in our world. Consider the exercise as therapy and not a ball busting workout from hell. With this attitude you will be more likely to repeat your exercise routine for a lifetime.
Fighting stress is done by finding peace and that is why I LOVE THE WATERROWER. I like to row the WaterRower leisurely. The resistance is evenly spread out through the stroke and the swishing sound of the water, totally therapeutic. While I was rowing, no one was woken up. The belt mechanism is sound free and the wheels of the seat whisper quiet, only the sound of water, just like rowing in a single scull. 
Believe me, I have found rowing nirvana with WaterRower. I break a sweat and feel rejuvenated. If you are on the fence about acquiring a fitness machine, give the WaterRower a good luck and a test row. Take my word for it, I am an addicted rower, and I need to break a sweat without losing love for working out. Me too, I need to find peace and quiet in my life! Cheers everyone!
Xeno
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Dec 18, 2008

I can make you faster with skype


Hello Rowers!!!

Today, I SKYPE coached as far north as YELLOWKNIFE, Canada. It was great. Can’t believe that there is no snow only between June and September. Currently the temperature is -40 degrees. As I was told -40 in fahrenheit is the SAME as -40 in degrees Celsius!

The other day, I coached in Sydney on the tenths floor of a building overlooking Circle Quay. I also help coach a group of juniors in Minnesota.

SKYPE proves to be an incredible tool, which enables me to be different places in the world without traveling. I am very effective with the webcam, it is an awesome feeling to be able to help someone improve their rowing technique within minutes.

My rate is $40 for 20 minutes of coaching.

All the best and happy holidays!!!

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

Dec 7, 2008

After college & the Olympics

Hello Rowers,

This post is about my passion for rowing indoors after college and the Olympics.

As I mentioned in an earlier post, I am 36 years old, and at the "beginning" of my life long rowing career. As I look back in time, rowing at the Olympics, is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to life long miles rowed. To people I meet, I tell them that I am rowing because I want to chase down my great grand children and regular rows will make this dream happen. In the same breath, I add that rowing is a sport that can be practiced until up to 300 years of age. Once I am of grandfather age, I see myself commuting in a class A RV with my wife to visit our grandchildren, for this I need to stay fit and row everyday.

"We" the rowers know of the zero impact/full body workout rowing is. In my opinion, it is the only cardiovascular sport to be practiced efficiently until advanced age. It is true, that cross country skiing and swimming are also zero "impact/full body workouts", BUT... Let's face it, for cross country skiing requires snow, ability to ski on slippery stuff, and enjoy cold temperatures. As for swimming, you need a pool, and efficient swimming technique in order to have a workout at all. In addition to the swimming option, you will get a soaked hairdo.

"The others" (pretty much the rest of the world) don't know anything about rowing, let alone, the high quality indoor rowing exercise option. As I see it, my job is to inform and educate the rest of the world to whom rowing is a foreign concept. While I write these lines, I am reminded of how many actual collegiate rowers passionately HATE rowing indoors... to them I say that sitting on a rowing machine is not that bad at all, if you have the right state of mind. From experience, I know, that if you learned to row at a boathouse with a coach, you were likely abused and mistreated :-) while being judged on your rowing ability on the ergometer. Therefore you are entitled to hate rowing indoors but keep your mind open to be rehabilitated to enjoy the sport off the water. Too often, unfortunately, the rowing machine is mainly used to compare raw endurance, which is wrongly equated to on the water boat moving ability. This last statement makes me want to scream.

So next time you climb onto the ergometer, whether it is the WaterRower or the Concept2, be mellow and find your groove. Love the ability to stretch out and smoothly move your body back and forth. Rowing is simultaneously a physical as well as a mental BREAK/workout.

Finally, my last advice is to be gentle to your body, you only have one, so don't freak out if an old friend from college is 50 seconds faster for 2K than you are. Use it as motivation to gradually get fit, OK?

Yours truely,

Xeno
www.ironoarsman.com
www.cafepress.com/gorow
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Nov 20, 2008

The Benefits of Indoor Rowing

The Benefits of Indoor Rowing

Exercise is good, in any form. But there are some forms that score head and tail over the others, and rowing, or more specifically indoor rowing, is one of them. If there ever was a complete body workout in one exercise, it’s rowing. It looks as if it’s just the arms that are getting a workout, but no, that’s not true at all. A surprising fact about rowing that not many people are aware of is that, contrary to popular belief, this exercise works your legs more than your hands – an indoor rower offers your legs three times more work than your arms. Rowing is a great workout for people of all ages, and here’s why:

It’s not weight-bearing: Rowing, unlike jogging or walking, does not put additional strain on your lower limbs, but still exercises your legs like running does. This prevents wear and tear on your knees, lower limbs and other joints, a side effect that appears when you jog regularly over a long period of time.
It exercises your whole body: Rowing offers you the double benefits of a cardiovascular workout and strength training all rolled into one. It exercises all the major muscle groups in your body. You get a complete workout with just one machine.
It’s safe for people of all ages: Rowing can be done as gently or as vigorously as you choose, which is why it’s a great exercise even for people who’re not in the prime of their life. Older people, especially those who have knee trouble, find it more convenient and less stressful than walking.
It’s great for rehab: People who have undergone a major knee surgery find rowing a safe and low-impact, yet energetic workout during rehab when they must exercise without stressing their knees. Rowing also helps smokers who have quit the habit to exercise their lungs and thus undo the damages caused by years of smoking.
It helps you lose weight: Because it’s a complete exercise, it helps you lose those unwanted pounds and also tones your body.
It’s an all-weather activity: You don’t have to worry about rain or shine; all you need is an indoor rowing machine and you’re good to go. Work out at any time of the day according to your convenience.

By-line:
This article is contributed by Sarah Scrafford, who regularly writes on the topic of Online EKG Programs. She invites your questions, comments and freelancing job inquiries at her email address: sarah.scrafford25@gmail.com.
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Nov 19, 2008

WaterRower rowing machine, here is another reason I enjoy rowing it.


I am drawn to use the waterrower, because it feels gentler on the body and the ears in comparison to other rowing machines. You can have a hard workout, but if you wish a lighter paddle at lower rates the strokes feel more connected through the finish then wind resistance machines.

Learn more here...
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.

Nov 16, 2008

Rowing for wellness and the reasons for this blog.

Hello readers,

My name is Xeno Muller. I am 36 years old, married and father of four children. I live in Southern California, Costa Mesa to be exact. I run an indoor rowing studio, called the Iron Oarsman, sell indoor rowing workout DVDs and I coach on the water.

My rowing background goes all the way back to when I was 13 years old. My first strokes were taken on the Seine river in France. Six years later, I rowed for Brown and competed at three Olympics. In 1992, I almost made the finals in the men's single scull, but missed qualifying by half a boat length. In 1996, I made it and won gold in the single scull. In 2000, I returned from Australia with silver.

There is plenty more to write about myself, but the point of this blog is to further help people achieve there personal goals. After five years running the Iron Oarsman, I gained a lot more perspective about rowing and its beneftis, which goes way beyond the competitive aspect of the sport.

99% of our members at the Iron Oarsman, have never rowed on the water. I learned of their personal reasons and motivations, as to why they started working out with us. In this blog, I will write about training for competition, but also on rowing's health/therapeutic & wellness benefits.

In my opinion rowing is still completely unknown to the rest of the world. Yet so many would love to row to feel better and improve their quality of life without ever planning to compete in their life time.

I am looking forward to doing research and blogging here on Row2K.

So for now I wish you a great fall/spring depending hemisphere.

All the best, Xeno www.ironoarsman.com


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

Nov 11, 2008

The latest with my WaterRower rowing machine on youtube.


On Youtube

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

Breathing technique while rowing.

Hello Rowers,

It came to my attention that breathing technique is not a commonly understood in rowing.

I had two Olympic coaches, Harry Mahon, and Marty Aikten.  They were respectively from New Zealand and Australia.

Harry and Marty taught me to row effortlessly.

Here is in words what such rowing technique is:  At the catch ready to engage the leg drive, the upper body is at a "forward body angle" with the lower back supported so that the tilt occurs by hinging at the hip joint.  The shoulders are set forward relaxed, arms are straight at the elbow, handle held in the finger tips.  The head neck and back form an ergonomic line.  The shins are vertical, and for most the ball of the foot is connected to the foot board, while the heels are off the board.  

The drive is started through the legs, the heels descend onto the foot board as soon as the first quarter of the seat travels on the track.  The body angle starts engaging the swing in the last quarter of the leg drive, when the legs are the most powerful and the seat travels the least.  Engaging the upper body swing in the last quarter of the leg drive is key to being able to lever the short yet powerful travel of the seat/body.

The finish position has a supported lower back.  The upper body is slightly beyond vertical.  The forearms are parallel to the ground/water.  Wrists are flush with the back of the hand, forearm, and first two row of knuckles.  Chest is "out" because throughout the entire stroke cycle the back is ALWAYS supported.  The handle travels to the body through the CONTRACTION of the latissimus muscle.

Recovery has the entire body relaxed.  Hands travel away from the chest.  Arms and upper body REST on the handle of the oars or the handle of the rowing machine.  As the arms straighten out at the elbow, the shoulders and then the upper body follow, HINGING at the HIP JOINT.  The knees stay straight until the hamstrings feel engaged, the rolling back into the catch occurs because of the contraction of the hamstring, AND NOT THE contraction of the hip flexor.

Key to efficient rowing is to HANG off the leg drive, letting the legs do the work,  while the shoulders and arms hang straight.  

Therefore breathing is key to the above technique:  Absolute relaxation occurs through exhaling.  With lose lungs, hanging of the leg drive is natural.  As the acceleration progresses and the upper body swings OPEN the lungs fill with air and provide a strong finish position.  

At higher intensity the breathing is doubled up.

Some rowers breath in on the recovery and exhale at the finish.  This leads to a shorter stroke length and early use of the upper body.  A the finish when exhaling the posture "crumbles" on the lower back, and usually knees buckle, instead of staying straight to connect through the foot board.

That is it for now.

Xeno

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

Nov 8, 2008

The sound of water, beautiful to listen to and quiet enough for family life.


This afternoon I "went" for a row in my living room. I wheeled my WaterRower next to the TV as my children and wife were watching Dancing with the Stars. The sound of the water swishing around, as I was rowing, created a peaceful white noise. Before, when I used a rowing machine with loud air resistance, I had to find a place different from our home's common area. I didn't like missing out on family time.

I like a daily routine, which encompasses two workouts. In the morning, I run a class at our indoor rowing gym, The Iron Oarsman. Later in the day, at home, I jump on my WaterRower for a tranquil 10 kilometer row. This daily workout rhythm makes me feel great and gives me a peaceful state of mine.

I absolutely love how I can simultaneously be with my family and push stroke after stroke enjoying my workout on the WaterRower.

Here is the information for WaterRower.

Story in a British newspaper.


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