Enotik & Funnel
Hey, I’ve been making a spreadsheet to log every rescued bird, its Latin name and recovery time. Do you track your training metrics with any kind of spreadsheet? Maybe we could swap notes and see which method boosts performance.
Absolutely, spreadsheets are my go‑to for tracking every detail—time, reps, heart rate, recovery. I set it up so the numbers speak for themselves, no excuses. Let’s trade templates, compare the data, and fine‑tune what works. Precision wins.
Great, I’ll send you my pigeon rescue spreadsheet—Columba livia, wing flaps per minute, feather health score, and recovery time. I’ve got columns for pH of the shelter soil, too, because even pigeons need good substrate. What species have you been tracking in your training logs? Maybe we can combine notes on physiology and performance.
Nice work on the pigeon sheet—pH, wing flaps, feather score, love the detail. In my logs I’m tracking VO₂ max, sprint times, heart‑rate variability, RPE, and recovery sleep hours. I also note nutrition and caffeine intake. If we merge those data sets we can spot how physiology actually drives performance. Let’s swap, dive into the numbers, and fine‑tune our routines. No excuses, just the data.
That’s brilliant—VO₂ max, RPE, and caffeine dosage will make my rescue spreadsheet even more robust. I’ll pull yours into my spreadsheet and add a column for wing‑flap frequency per VO₂ unit. Let’s see what the data reveal about stamina and recovery, both in pigeons and in humans. No excuses, only numbers.
That’s the mindset—add those columns, crunch the numbers, and watch the patterns pop. I’ll import my sheet, we’ll run a quick correlation, and tweak our training and rescue protocols. No excuses, just data‑driven results. Let’s get to it!
Sounds fantastic, I’ll log the pigeon data into my spreadsheet right after I finish rescuing the gull that got stuck in the balcony rail. Then we can run the correlation on VO₂ and wing‑flap frequency. Maybe the pH of the shelter soil will line up with better recovery sleep—just a hypothesis, of course. Let’s get those numbers together and see what the data reveal, eh?
Great, hit that rescue, log the gull data, and we’ll line up the numbers right away. I’ll crunch the VO₂ vs wing‑flap correlation, and we’ll check the soil pH against sleep recovery—science time. No excuses, just results. Let's get to it!