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Eric Horst's Climbing and Training Blog

Stamina Training for Long Day Climbs and Big Walls

Eric Horst's Climbing and Training Blog 2007-05-17 | Reads 38 (cached version)
If your summer climbing plans include a big wall, alpine adventure, or some super-long days of cragging, then now is the time to begin some stamina training. Clearly, the best way to train for all-day climbing stamina is to frequently climb all day. For most recreational climbers, however, there is not the time or opportunity to do enough climbing to train stamina in only this way. Fortunately,

Pilates Cross-training for Climbers

Eric Horst's Climbing and Training Blog 2007-03-31 | Reads 36 (cached version)
As a climber, have you ever wished you were a little taller so you could make a big reach, or a little more flexible for a high step? Have you ever resorted to picking up your foot and placing it where you wanted it to go because you didn't have the flexibility to get there in the first place? By adding Pilates to your cross-training, you'll find that monster stems, killer high steps, and sketchy

Six Mental Tips to Improve Performance in 2007

Eric Horst's Climbing and Training Blog 2007-02-01 | Reads 37 (cached version)
In the last few articles you’ve learned how performance operates from the inside-out. Your beliefs, focus, fears, confidence, motivation, and for that matter every thought that crosses your mind, form the foundation from which you will either succeed or fail on a climb. Therefore, succeeding on a project or advancing to the next grade level is often more a matter of the mind, than it is the body.

Tips for Creating and Maintaining Long-Term Motivation

Eric Horst's Climbing and Training Blog 2007-01-18 | Reads 35 (cached version)
If you are reading this blog, then you are likely as passionate about climbing as I am. Still, it's not unusual to occasionally experience a drop-off in motivation, despite your love of climbing—do any activity on a regular basis for a long enough time and you will eventually experience periods of low motivation. Often times, such a lapse is simply the result of mental or physical fatigue,

The Importance of a Climbing "Off Season"

Eric Horst's Climbing and Training Blog 2006-12-17 | Reads 29 (cached version)
If you are like me and many other climbers, you are mildly obsessed (or worse!) with climbing, and you mind and fingertips are never far from the rock. However, over the course of a year, accumulating physical and mental fatigue grows to a point that you can no longer recover fully just by taking a couple of days off. This is true for serious athletes in every sport, which is why all professional

The Power of Proactive Positive Thinking (A Tribute to Todd Skinner)

Eric Horst's Climbing and Training Blog 2006-11-05 | Reads 26 (cached version)
Wolfgang Gullich, the first person to climb 5.14d, often remarked that the brain was the most important muscle for climbing. Unfortunately, many climbers overlook mental training since exercises are less tangible than, say, doing campus training for power or lapping routes for endurance. What’s more, thought control is hard work and takes a long term effort and lots of self-discipline. Surely it’

Solving "Impossible" Crux Sequences

Eric Horst's Climbing and Training Blog 2006-10-12 | Reads 33 (cached version)
When working on a route near your limit--often called projecting--you will sometimes hit a crux sequence that seems beyond your ability. Suppose there's a blatant lack of good holds, the sequence is uncertain, and that voice inside yourself is screaming to "back off!" What will you do in this frustrating situation? Fish or cut bait-or, in a climbers' lingo, climb on or take dirt? Hopefully

Becoming a Master of Your Domain

Eric Horst's Climbing and Training Blog 2006-10-12 | Reads 35 (cached version)
Climbing near your limit can be stressful. Desperate moves, risk of falling, and the uncertainty of what’s next can foster unproductive thoughts and physical tension that snowballs at a rapid rate. Left unchecked, such rising tension will cause you to pump out and fall. While every climber has this experience, it should become less frequent as you improve. Increasing confidence and experience

Study Shows "G-Tox" Accelerates Recovery

Eric Horst's Climbing and Training Blog 2006-06-29 | Reads 34 (cached version)
The "dangling arm" shakeout is commonly used to facilitate forearm recovery while on a climb. A few seconds or, hopefully, a few minutes of "shaking out" provides some recovery, but often not enough. The effects of a muscular pump can take frustratingly long to subside and, when hanging out at a marginal rest, it's possible to expend as much energy hanging on with the one arm as is being recouped

Researchers Show How to Accelerate Recovery Between Climbs!

Eric Horst's Climbing and Training Blog 2006-05-31 | Reads 29 (cached version)
Want to recovery faster between boulder problems and routes? If so, then "keep moving." That's the beta from several climbing researchers who have studied different recovery strategies. In my book Training for Climbing I explained the advantages of engaging in active recovery between climbs compared with the common practice of sitting down and resting passively. The effectiveness of active

Complex Training for Elite-Level Strength and Power

Eric Horst's Climbing and Training Blog 2006-05-01 | Reads 27 (cached version)
Complex training is a cutting edge training method used by elite athletes in many other sports, including most power-oriented Olympic events. Applied to climbing, the complex training protocol described below is one of the most advanced strength-training concepts available. Since introducing Complex Training to climbers in 2002 (in my book Training for Climbing), I have heard back from hundreds

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