Page 7 of 8
Posted: Mon Mar 02, 2009 2:51 am
by 512OW
Shheeeeiiiit. I'll start removing more footholds from projects...
Posted: Mon Mar 02, 2009 4:35 pm
by dhuff
That's it! The ultimate training: routes with loose holds and no feet. That will get everyone pulling ten times harder in no time.
Posted: Mon Mar 02, 2009 9:25 pm
by ReachHigh
Bring the choss indoors!
Earlier Post
Posted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 7:25 pm
by Webbman09
My main point is I never climb with the training mentality. I just climb to climb, and climbing should never be training. Every day you get on the wall it is a learning experience, but I still consider it climbing.
Re: Earlier Post
Posted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 7:57 pm
by Izzy
Webbman09 wrote:My main point is I never climb with the training mentality. I just climb to climb, and climbing should never be training. Every day you get on the wall it is a learning experience, but I still consider it climbing.
Agreed, well said. However if you find a route outside that totally inspires you, say a wicked featureless slab climb, and you suck at slab climbing. Wouldn't climbing slab routes at the gym be an effective way of "training" to send the real thing. Isn't identifying your weaknesses, focusing on them and improving your abilities a key part of "training" in any endeavor?
I suck at steep jug hauls, so when I'm in the gym I spend most of my time climbing steep jug hauls and trying to improve. It's climbing, and it's fun, but it's definitely the most effective form of training, and that's the main reason I do it.
Posted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 9:30 pm
by charlie
You can call it climbing, training, funning, or sexually harassing nappy headed, cross bred battle toads if you want. What does it matter?
Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 3:54 am
by 512OW
Shut up charlie. It matters. Don't kid these gumbies...
Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 1:50 pm
by bcombs
If everyone just climbed to climb for the fun of climbing the top of YDS would still be 5.10. Sack up, train, climb harder, repeat....
Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 2:10 pm
by ahab
bcombs wrote:If everyone just climbed to climb for the fun of climbing the top of YDS would still be 5.10. Sack up, train, climb harder, repeat....
for some, the fun in climbing
is pushing the grades.
charlie wrote:...nappy headed, cross bred battle toads...
ran across a couple of those out at miguel's last fall.
Re: Earlier Post
Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 5:09 pm
by Webbman09
Izzy wrote:
Agreed, well said. However if you find a route outside that totally inspires you, say a wicked featureless slab climb, and you suck at slab climbing. Wouldn't climbing slab routes at the gym be an effective way of "training" to send the real thing. Isn't identifying your weaknesses, focusing on them and improving your abilities a key part of "training" in any endeavor?
I suck at steep jug hauls, so when I'm in the gym I spend most of my time climbing steep jug hauls and trying to improve. It's climbing, and it's fun, but it's definitely the most effective form of training, and that's the main reason I do it.
I would not disagree with you on that point, however as I said before to me it is climbing, even if I suck at that type of climbing. I have found for me if I call it training, I feel like I am at work and that is not what I want the experience to be.
I guess the key thing to think about is there are people who climb for competition/their job, and there are those of us who just love to climb.