I read Eric Horst's How to Climb 5.12....lot of good advice. But all the focus on "training" - doesn't seem fun. When I go to the red, I want to get on new climbs, and when I feel good get on something at my limit. I rarely project a climb. And at the gym I just want to get a quick workout in. Perhaps sucking is just my destiny?
I've been a gumby longer than you've been climbing.
Curious enough to read a book about climbing 5.12 but not driven enough to try any of it. What did you think was going to be in the book?
Did you think there was just going to be one line. KEEP DOING WHAT YOU ARE DOING YOU WILL GET TO 5.12 EVENTUALLY. THANKS FOR BUYING THE BOOK LOVE ERIC. Followed by many pictures of his wife exercising.
I personally think it is good advice for people who want to climb 12s, get a good base, get good technique and climb a lot...once you cross the level of 13 it is a personal approach, what ever works for you it will be the best. I am sure by the time a climber climbs 13s they know their body fairly well, how much to train, when to train and how to avoid injury. Also the age of the climber has to affect the way they train because it is not the same to be 18 or to be 51... I find as I age I need a lot more cross training than I did when I started climbing at 34. So I have to do more weight training to keep muscle tone to avoid injury...again, this is just for me and don't know if this will be any good for others but I sure hear of a lot of shoulder injuries and I can only wonder if cross training would have helped.
Margarita
The difference between bravery and stupidity is the outcome.
Curious enough to read a book about climbing 5.12 but not driven enough to try any of it. What did you think was going to be in the book?
Did you think there was just going to be one line. KEEP DOING WHAT YOU ARE DOING YOU WILL GET TO 5.12 EVENTUALLY. THANKS FOR BUYING THE BOOK LOVE ERIC. Followed by many pictures of his wife exercising.
I'm feeling the tough love JR! The book was loaned to me from a friend, I read it to learn some new stuff. And I am trying plenty of it, mostly the route reading and mental techniques. Maybe I'll get more ambitious and try all the training stuff.....someday....
you have almost justified my methods about building a base with this thread, now maybe my partners will get off my back about climbing harder and just let me be a wuss
Sand inhibits the production of toughtosterone, so get it out and send.
An ever growing pyramid is not the same as a block that keeps getting longer but not taller. By that logic, you could redpoint a 13 by simply climbing enough 10s and 11s.
The theory of evolution is just as stupid as the theories of gravity and electromagnetism.
The training paradox. I believe and practice much of what you are advising, and I have seen benefits. But why is it the strongest guys that I personally know really do none of this shit?