I have been typing on colemak for about a year, maybe more, it seemed easy, efficient and the best thing in the world to adopt.
Yeh, strange title to such confession. But it happened that I was forced to type on qwerty for a week due to some security reason, I was not working at my laptop, and it happened that after such a short time I got used to qwerty. It is no longer strange or straining. Now I type very easy on qwerty, without any strain, 99% accuracy, with the speed of 60WPM (the same which I achieved on colemak). On the other hand when I returend to my worksataion I found very stressed typing colemak and little drop of speed, due to errors. I was a kind of busy so I switched off colemak and contiued my work and the next day I questioned myself "what is it for, messing with colemak?". The reasonable answer is it is only a placebo in all the facts. The design principles of colemak - less travel distance, rolls etc. - seems to be true, and maybe are a great factor of preventing CTS but in my experinece it has no advantages in terms of typing speed or ease of typing. When you are deeply familiar with your layout, there probably is no stress in fingers caused by disorted signals from your brain trying to move muscles of your fingers in different ways at once - probably different neurons activate differnt signals... neuron network is complicated and to some degree unpredictable.
I agree with my logic :) I reaped of colemak from my workstation. In fact I experienced lots of micro-troubles typing on colemak - sometimes it didn't worked, sometimes I had to use somebody else's computer and sometimes someone else had to use mine. So social barriers and technical barriers payed for the hope and thrill to do something better. No, I am going to stay QWERTY and get busy with other things than practising touchtyping.
So it is time to say good luck with your choice.
For some users out there interested in pros and cons of colemak. For a long time I had troubles with 3,4 letters rolls - it took almost half of a year to get it easy - the most frequent example "art". "le" and "el" seems to never get easy. The most surprising is the fact that I did lots of the time typo "d" instead of "g".
Anyway, dear readers, I encourage to find your own way... because maybe some day qwerty would have gone in favour for colemak :)
Cheers!