Usolicited Advice Part I: Planning
Posted: Wed Apr 22, 2009 3:08 am
For some reason, most climbers seem afraid of the idea of planning anything, so I'll start out easy. Let's start with the very basic task of planning a day at the crag. Now, I'm not talking about sitting in the parking lot at Miguel's deciding what crag to go to right before you hop into the car...that would be the opposite of planning. For best results, you ought to think a little further ahead.
Before you even leave your house, identify what your goal is for the climbing day...is it a performance day, or a training day? If it's a performance day, are you working on on-sighting or redpointing? If redpointing, is it an existing project or are you starting a new one. These things should be determined well before you hop in the car. Decide which route you have in mind for the day, and what the right conditions are for that route (when does it get shade, etc.). Check the weather forecast. This will determine when you should arrive at the crag...as a hint "when your bros wake up" is not a good way to plan your day. If the route gets shade in the morning, plan on getting up early, which may mean you need to plan on getting some partners who are motivated enough, and care enough about you and your goals to accommodate you from time to time.
Figure out what your warm up will be. Make sure there are appropriate warm up routes for you nearby, or adjust the plan to warm up at another crag. You might like to do a progression of increasingly harder routes, or a couple laps on one route. Some folks always warm up on the same route that they have wired...either way, know what your warm up will be in advance.
How many burns do you expect to have, and how much rest will you need between burns? If the route is in the shade until 2:00, and you expect to get 4 burns, with an hour rest between burns, but you don't get warmed up until 11:00, then you've already blown it. If you're working a new proj, are you going to take a massive 2 hr first burn figuring out all the beta (if so, you better give your belayer a heads up if you ever want to climb with them again)? Maybe you would be better off taking two shorter burns? If the goal is a short burn, consider having your belayer enforce a time limit -- they'll be all too happy to do it. If it's a new project, are you going to try to on-sight it, then switch into project mode if you don't send, or will you just go bolt-to-bolt from the start? These things make a difference in how you approach it (more on this later).
You should probably plan these things out with your partner(s) to make sure everyone's goals can be met, but make sure you do some planning.
This may seem like a trivial thing, and it's "obvious" to many climbers, but most folks don't think about these things at all. Being deliberate about what and how you climb is one of many small steps towards controlling how you perform as a climber. You can float through life reacting to events as they unfold before you, and ending up wherever the currents take you, or you can steer yourself toward long term goals by making deliberate course corrections that get you to the destination you have chosen.
Before you even leave your house, identify what your goal is for the climbing day...is it a performance day, or a training day? If it's a performance day, are you working on on-sighting or redpointing? If redpointing, is it an existing project or are you starting a new one. These things should be determined well before you hop in the car. Decide which route you have in mind for the day, and what the right conditions are for that route (when does it get shade, etc.). Check the weather forecast. This will determine when you should arrive at the crag...as a hint "when your bros wake up" is not a good way to plan your day. If the route gets shade in the morning, plan on getting up early, which may mean you need to plan on getting some partners who are motivated enough, and care enough about you and your goals to accommodate you from time to time.
Figure out what your warm up will be. Make sure there are appropriate warm up routes for you nearby, or adjust the plan to warm up at another crag. You might like to do a progression of increasingly harder routes, or a couple laps on one route. Some folks always warm up on the same route that they have wired...either way, know what your warm up will be in advance.
How many burns do you expect to have, and how much rest will you need between burns? If the route is in the shade until 2:00, and you expect to get 4 burns, with an hour rest between burns, but you don't get warmed up until 11:00, then you've already blown it. If you're working a new proj, are you going to take a massive 2 hr first burn figuring out all the beta (if so, you better give your belayer a heads up if you ever want to climb with them again)? Maybe you would be better off taking two shorter burns? If the goal is a short burn, consider having your belayer enforce a time limit -- they'll be all too happy to do it. If it's a new project, are you going to try to on-sight it, then switch into project mode if you don't send, or will you just go bolt-to-bolt from the start? These things make a difference in how you approach it (more on this later).
You should probably plan these things out with your partner(s) to make sure everyone's goals can be met, but make sure you do some planning.
This may seem like a trivial thing, and it's "obvious" to many climbers, but most folks don't think about these things at all. Being deliberate about what and how you climb is one of many small steps towards controlling how you perform as a climber. You can float through life reacting to events as they unfold before you, and ending up wherever the currents take you, or you can steer yourself toward long term goals by making deliberate course corrections that get you to the destination you have chosen.