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Endurance Training

Resistance Training
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Improve Your Technique
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You can swim a lot faster with the same effort when you use the right technique and effective skills.
The trick is to glide through the water like a fish.
Full body suits streamline your shape and reduce fatigue by minimising unwanted muscle vibration.
Stretch yourself as long as you can by reaching out forward with each swimming stroke.
Use these strokes for both your endurance and resistance training.
Each week do three endurance sessions for stamina where you swim for a given length or time, say 200 meters distance per session.
Also do three resistance sessions for strength where you aim to swim 50 meters in one minute or less, fully clothed.
Take one day off.
If you keep this up consistently, preferably with a training partner to keep you motivated, then you will notice the difference.
Efficient Swimming Strokes
An efficient stroke will significantly reduce wasted energy output through less drag in the water
and a cleaner execution of hand and arm entry and recovery.
When considering swimming technique for any stroke,
analysis should follow the format described below, in this order:
- Leg kick
- Arm cycle
- Timing
- Breathing
The leg kick will control the body position in the water,
while the arm cycle will provide the propulsive force.
The timing between the two is vital to the efficiency of the given stroke
for a greater speed through the water with minimum wasted energy.
Breathing
Finally, breathing technique should be analysed and improved to ensure
that when you breathe your overall technique is not disrupted
in any way that would reduce your efficiency.
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Get ready ...
... slide in ...

... and start your training.
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The Swimmingpool is Your Aquatic Gym
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You may have been to the gym or fitness centre and spent good money on monotonous repetitive exercises.
If you simply flap your arms about you may gain some extra muscle after a long time.
Or you could use some weights to get faster results.
Increase the weights over time and your results get better, until you get injured.
A Safe Alternative
Swimming pools are a safe alternative to repetitive gym training with less risk of muscle injury.
You can use wet clothing instead of weights, so the load is spread more evenly over your body.
Keep moving against sufficient resistance often enough and you gain strength no matter what you do, because your muscles get exercised.
This is fairly hard training, but you will notice the difference if you keep doing this persistently,
preferably with a training partner to keep you motivated.
Skill Refinement
In swimwear or speedy bodysuits you may get away with a bad swimming stroke.
You still move ahead somehow.
The moment you tow a casualty or wear clothes that slow you down,
you'll notice how bad your stroke might be and that you're not going anywhere fast.
Swimming in clothes will quickly highlight issues with your swimming stroke.
The added resistance requires that you adapt your swimming stroke and fine tune it.
Any adjustments you make will immediately result in a clear diffrence of speed and effort.
This gives you the right feedback you need to adjust your stroke.
As soon as you improve your skill, your speed picks up quickly.
Set Your Goals
If you are sleeping late every morning, start getting up earlier and earlier.
Get a post card, write your goals on it and tape it to your mirror.
Seriously, go and do it now.
Write on it things like "Do 5 push-ups every morning" or "Fast Walk for 30 minutes every night."
You need to look at your goal card every morning as a reminder of your commitment to yourself.
If you can discipline yourself to do this, you can achieve anything you want.
If you think this is a silly idea, that you don't need a goal-list staring you in
the face every morning, well then, don't say that you weren't warned!
Eat Well
Stop eating fast food, junk food, candy, soda, and all that other fatty food.
If you smoke - stop right away!
Cigarettes stink and are tactically unsound for resuscitation training.
Start eating potatoes, rice, non-fried home prepared vegetables and fruit.
Start drinking lots and lots of water to get properly hydrated.
Drink water before, during and after your workout to regulate body temperature.
Combine it with a high quality nutrition program.
See VitaminBiz.com for details.
Keep Warm
Keep your "heaters" (legs) moving vigorously to keep your body warm.
Drink water before, during and after your workout to regulate body temperature.
You can stay warm by wearing a lycra suit and/or an anorak.
Adjust your clothing to suit your fitness level.
It is a bit like weight lifting, you can just go up or down a notch by adding or removing a layer.
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