gravsports
2010-05-24
| Reads 9
There's a lot of information on the web and in print about how to
get stronger for rock climbing, but very little on how to actually get
better at climbing. Those two aren't the same thing. Being
stronger will help, but really you need to climb a lot to get better
at climbing. Anybody promising that doing any form of non-climbing
training will make you a better (better means climbing harder) climber
is flat-out missing the point. I really mean that: If you want to
climb better then climb, and structure the vast majority of your
training around climbing or climbing-based skilled movements. Why this
is so hard for people to understand I don't know, but let's flip the
argument around for a minute: If you wanted to be a better Olympic
lifter would going climbing help you more than doing Olympic lifts?
No. So why would traditional weight lifting make you a better climber?
I have yet to see anyone fail on a route because they couldn't do
enough bicep curls, lunges, weighted pullups, or bench press. Not
once. But I have seen those with huge biceps, quads, and pecs fail on
5.9, which is a grade anyone not clinically obese, missing more than
two limbs or massively brain damaged ought to be able to climb on TR
after a few days of actual climbing. Enough said.
"Climbing fast comes from being good at climbing. And being
good at climbing comes from having a lot of routes under your belt. So
if you realise you are climbing too slowly on a redpoint, but
can’t seem to go faster without making mistakes, there’s
no shortcut unfortunately - if you clock up more routes, you’ll
slowly be able to make movement decisions quicker."
Lots more there, worth a good long read.
Now it's time to start rock climbing again. I'm in sad rock
climbing shape, but most of my winter injuries are healed up (I can
get my feet into rock shoes again, elbows healed up pretty much, etc).
I'm also paddling a fair amount through May and June, and have a
hideous travel schedule in June and July, so my climbing training is
going to have to be effective to get results. I'm going to post what
I'm doing with my overall and specific rock climbing training time on
here, which over the next six weeks will amount to about 6 hours a
week of actual climbing time at the most. I aim to be back to
onsighting at a reasonable (for me that's 5.12c or so more than 50
percent of the time) level by August 15, which is when rock season
gets really going for me, and when I have a few big rock climbing
goals to throw myself at. Giddyup.