Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Hold On!


So this is week two (I may have cheated a little and actually started climbing last weekend) and I’m just back from a bouldering session at the wall.  In my last article I was talking about strength and in particular grip strength.  Well something else that is very closely linked to grip strength is stamina: the ability to hold every hold, hold after hold.


That was my main training aim today.  I started of with some really easy climbing around the wall, keeping it low, slow and on fairly comfortable hand holds.  Basically a warm up, and my advice to you is, you should always start your climbing session this way.  Its easier to avoid an injury than recover from one.

After spending about 15 mins warming up, I slowly started ramping up the intensity and the difficulty of my routes.  These are two concepts that you’re likely to encounter when you begin climbing.  For example you could climb a difficult route that is to say, it has a move or a number of moves which you find technically difficult.  By this I mean you have to move your body in a particular way or make the holds in a particular sequence.  On the other hand, an intense route might be said to be more sustained, tending towards your climbing limit for most of or all the route.  The individual moves might not be that hard but the hand holds could be open handed or ‘slopers’ for example.  This type of climbing in particular can be pretty sore on your hands and forearms.

Using these two ideas you can start classify routes.  You might overhear climbers talking like this: “its a nice route but there’s just an ‘interesting’ move above the fourth clip” - meaning you’ll most likely find it comfortable but will probably need to think about the ‘difficult’ part in order to get past it.  When talking about an intense route you could also overhear climbers saying this: “my arms are like jelly after climbing that! The holds look good from here but they’re awful!” - meaning this route is all about grip strength and endurance with maybe less emphasis on climbing technique.

As you might imagine, in order to become a better climber all round, you’ll need to work on both of these areas.  I spent roughly an hour at the wall and finished it off with an excellent training technique called repeaters.  This is a simple time based training exercise and is particularly good and building up grip strength and what I’ll call ‘grip endurance’ i.e the ability to grip repeated holds with little recovery time.

Ok that’s enough for today.  I’ll be back very soon with and update on how all this is helping my own climbing.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Back to basics

It happens to us all at some stage.  We find a new sport, we're passionate about it for years but then something happens and we miss a few days.  Then its a few weeks and before you know it months have gone by.  The frustration happens when you try and go back and suddenly realise that you've become weak.  You know "how to climb", how to move your body and you have all the rope techniques you could shake a stick at, but your body still says "no!".

This was the stage I was at when I decided that along with a new year I would start climbing again.  These are the thoughts I have put to digital paper as I continue along my journey from climbing washout to "Epic Climber of the Year 2013 Award", (I don't think such an award exists, but it should!)

There are a number of factors which come into play when it comes to climbing training.  As I said before, when I started I was very weak (I’m not much stronger, yet...), but when we’re talking about climbing this can mean a whole lot of things.  First there’s actual strength: can you do a pull up?  Well I could, but we’re not talking world record levels here, four or five at a push.  That’s all very well and good if you want to look half decent at the gym but its not terribly useful by itself for climbing.  That’s where factor number two comes in: grip strength.  Without the ability to hold on, being able to pull up is useless.  Training for grip strength is one area that can lead to injuries if not done properly, so I’ll need to take it easy here over the next couple of weeks.

Within the general term “grip strength” there exists a term unique to climbing: Contact strength.  This is the ability to apply maximum strength to a hold upon contact.  Its not something I’m going to worry too much about at this early stage in the game but there’s a great article about it here:http://climbstrong.wordpress.com/2010/02/03/training-contact-strength/ if you’d like more info.

That will do for the time being but I’m going to be back soon with a few more updates, so stay tuned.