JR wrote:camhead wrote:Ok, I'll reply to the training/spray thread:
I've always been a REALLY bad redpoint climber. After moving East about three years ago, I had ample climbs at the Red and the New to just onsight/flash, so I did not project much. Had a pretty good spring, despite a pretty bad tendon injury, and decided that it was time to start [s]numbers chasing[/s] serious redpoint projecting. Did a lot of power-endurance training this summer in the sweltering bouldering gym, then moved to hangboard stuff by late August. I'm feeling really strong this season.
However, so far this season, no big projects have gone down yet. I think I've been spreading myself too thin, trying to give equal time to the Red and the New, sport and trad, and balancing out where I want to go versus where my partners want to go. And I'd be lying if I said that I miss masturbatorilly looking at my ascents list and seeing a whole bunch of flashes filling up my recent climbs; I gots nuthin'. Starting to get worried that the season will end before I get anything done.
We'll see how the season winds up; I've gotten really close on my two most engaging projects at the New and the Red (Apollo Reed and WTOK), but no cigar yet.
This would make a great question for Kris Hampton(Odub or 512OW) over at
http://www.powercompanyclimbing.com/ .
Your instinct is probably right camhead. You kinda stink at redpointing. With the info you gave a couple of things come to mind.
1 Tactics-Maybe your tactics could use refining.(PM me if you want to discuss this further)
2 Maybe your projects are too hard for you to Redpoint in the time allotted(basically I am restating what you already said). You put yourself in a position half way between doing what your good at (onsighting) and focusing on a redpoint.
Great post though. I do get the feeling that you are on the right track to improving your climbing! You are working on your weakness.
I
It was interesting to re-read this post. Thanks for resurrecting this thread, climb2core!
As I typed above, and about 16 months ago, 2010 was not a great year. I got really close on a couple projects, but my numbers-chasing of the elusive one-three was unsuccessful.
2011 was a super good year for me, however. Best I've ever had. More efficient training in the gym, getting better at climbing mentally, and climbing with stronger partners all helped me bust into 5.13 this year (after climbing for over a dozen years, yeah I suck!). I think that just increasing the volume of climbing outside was the most important factor, though. I began consistently driving to the New or the Red EVERY weekend in the spring, then I was lucky enough to be able to take a two-month Western roadtrip and climb a LOT of both sport and trad. A torn ab muscle sidelined me in late August/early Sept., but I managed to bounce back from it fairly quickly, and had a really good fall.
I'm now trying the "rockprodigy" periodization approach (along with everyone else on climbing websites, apparently), began around Christmas, so that I'll hopefully be peaking in fitness in late March. It's frustrating doing tons of hangboarding right now, and I'm not going to have a great winter bouldering season, but hopefully the payoffs will be worth it. I don't have any obsessive goals for redpoints this spring; there are plenty of harder routes at the Red and New that I've been on, remember the beta, and would like to see go down, and it would also be cool to onsight or flash a solid 12+. But I'm hoping to make the major goal a free ascent of Glass Menagerie at Looking Glass. We'll see how that goes.
So, yeah, that's all.