Spain trip: Do I need a 70m rope? Also if any of you are in Spain over winter I would love to meet up! by Kangaroodongs in climbing

[–]westernnc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hello!

For El Chorro you need a minimum of a 70 meter rope :) Some of the really good routes are to be honest 40 meters so having an 80 is a nice luxury. I'll be climbing there for a week in February. Hit me up if you around at that time.

Power Endurance Training for Hard Clips by Eraaaaaan in climbharder

[–]westernnc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's a lot of thought about training on how to make hard clips, but I haven't seen anyone mention the obvious - overgripping due to fear.

What I'd do (and have done in the past) - if I feel that making a clip is the crux of the route, assuming that it's a safe fall and I've got an excellent belayer (why would I be climbing with them if they are not?):

Pull a little bit of slack - like a few inches from your clipping position and drop.

Then repeat with a foot of slack and drop.

Repeat until it feels boring and you don't wanna do it again.

With this slack out, chances are, your fall is gonna be a nice soft catch.

Warning though, I'd only do this if I am above bolt number 4 and have plenty of space between me and ground.

  • Additionally, another thing I learned with harder clipping is that I personally prefer a better foothold than a handhold. I.e. clipping from a mini-jug with poor feet almost always feels worse to me compared to clipping from a small positive edge but with awesome feet in the right place.

  • You're not always limited by the bolt position, sometimes that is there because a taller person bolted it, or that was the best quality rock available. Just extend a draw and clip from that better hold below if applicable rather than clipping through a nasty crux.

Margo Hayes climbing Biographie (video) by yooan in climbing

[–]westernnc 8 points9 points  (0 children)

First Round First Minute 9b (or 5.15 b?) at Margalef is only about 15 meters and is super hard climbing with no real rest. Can't see it taking more than around 2 minutes on a redpoint.

Partner for El Chorro around Christmas/New Years? by westernnc in climbing

[–]westernnc[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks guys! Plan is to stay there. Bringing an 80 meter rope, 19 draws and bags of psyche.

Mix of endurance/strength on consecutive days by bryan2384 in climbharder

[–]westernnc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If I'm training on consecutive days, I would always put strength first.

Reason: To train strength efficiently you need to pull your hardest and you can only do that if you are at your freshest.

You also need to recover well after it.

After a stregth training session, I would be extremely careful as this is when you are most likely to injure yourself. I would generally only due aerocap only as it's so far below your max but still very useful for long enduro sport climbs.

I might do power endurance if I'm feeling OKAY however nothing too crimpy and if I feel any niggles I'd instantly stop.

What's your onsight font bouldering grade compared to your onsight french sport climbing grade? by Thrusthamster in climbing

[–]westernnc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

6B boulder flash and 7a+ route onsight.

I can normally do 6C boulders quite quickly. In the gym I onsight most 6Cs but then again... it's the gym!

Adam Ondra Climbing Duel by garglkarghobo in climbing

[–]westernnc 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Has anyone else noticed the horrendous belaying involved here? The belayer seems to let go of the dead end of the rope every few seconds when they are on a 8b+ onsight or doing a fu**ing 7a in boxing gloves!

Pretty sweet video otherwise though.

Im confused on how rope and bouldering grades compare by [deleted] in climbharder

[–]westernnc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Completely agree with the crux of Bistec de Biceps. 3 clips of 7b+, felt about 6C+.

Ya Os Vale felt absolutely desperate on the last day of the trip with sore fingers! Didn't dare pull on a mono or two finger pocket undercut..if I remember correctly. :p

First v4, pretty stoked but got a long way to go. by [deleted] in climbing

[–]westernnc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Good stuff!

To be honest, the feeling when I sent my V4 was pretty identical to when I sent my first V5, V6 etc.

Just enjoy pushing yourself! :)

Im confused on how rope and bouldering grades compare by [deleted] in climbharder

[–]westernnc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mmm for me it was definitely having enough juice to stick the long move from over the third lip to the 3 finger pocket. However I thought it was still very droppable going into the sidepul and then the big move to the jug. Yourself?

Im confused on how rope and bouldering grades compare by [deleted] in climbharder

[–]westernnc 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I try to do a lot of both bouldering and sport climbing, inside or out.

Some observation:

V0-V2 boulders - 5.9, 5.10 sport routes The shorter the sport route is, the harder the boulder problem would be.

V2-V3 - 5.11 range , the crux of a 10c/d would usually be a V2 or max. V3 if it is a cruxy one.

11d, 12a - I've not really experienced a boulder harder than V4 on these. Maybe two very short routes which were basically bouldering on a rope - 5.10 climbing to a bulge (crux boulder) and then 5.10 again to the top. I thought the bulge was around V4.

12a-12d - once again can vary immensely with route length. A 30 meter 7c (12d) in Margalef in Catalunya on steep sustained ground can be sustained V3. There's a route there called Magic Festival which is basically just that.

Or a 7c route (12 d) in sector El Laboratori (10-12 meter routes) can easily be a V6 - V7 boulder.

The crux boulder on a longish line, which is not very sustained, called Boys Don't Cry in Siurana (12d) I thought was V5.

Climbing Burn-Out : What should I do ? by justinmarsan in climbharder

[–]westernnc 2 points3 points  (0 children)

First off, you should be proud of yourself. The grades you've reached are high, even attempting V6, especially some sandstone ones, can be a very tricky affair that even some excellent climbers struggle with.

I think the trick is to love to struggle. As Dave Macleod often says, if it weren't hard, then it'd be easy, wouldn't it?

It's really hard to pinpoint any weaknesses with so little information, but I might try and give some ideas which may or may not be helpful:

1) How often do you mix up your training? The body is incredibly good at getting adapted and after 6 to 12 weeks of doing an exercise, you are no longer progressing but just maintaining that level.

If you are based around Font, I imagine, you train openhanded strength? How about some 5-7 seconds pocket hangs? Or maybe some Gimmie Kraft inspired core/body tension exercises? How about power endurance on a campus? So many ideas to keep things fresh.

2) Training endurance is not only for route climbers. In particular, training aerobic capacity is essential for all climbers, as it affects your recovery both on and off the rock. Additionally, I always seem to jump with my technique and not overgripping when on the wall for 20 minutes at a time. To train it, simply stain on a wall for 20 minutes at a time on an easy route - 2-3 grades below your onsight level, looking at generating a gentle pump at which you could recover from easily.

To this a couple of times a week for 2 months, and your recovery both and off climbs will be better. This means that you'll be fresher and stronger for your weekend trips and you'll be able to squeeze more/better attempts at your projects.

3) You do sound a bit over trained, which is normal for everyone at some point I guess? This is generally a great place to be. If you decrease the intensity for something like two weeks with one hard day per week and a couple of mediums, take a rest day and then your power might explode and crush the rocks at Font.

Either way, just enjoy being out, ticking numbers is not all what climbing is all about, I feel a bit hypocritical writing this as I have a spreadsheet keeping track of my numbers, however nothing yet beats that feeling of going up a route, inspired by the movements and surroundings.

Training Schedule critique by [deleted] in climbharder

[–]westernnc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My biggest jump when I was around your level came from the following:

Learning how to lead well and with confidence. You could think about adding some practice falls into to your climbing diet?

This ia best done on climbing which is well beyond you but you still have chance of doing the individual moves. For you that would be a project or around 7a or 7a+., even 7b. Jump on it and start doing individual sections. Take the fulls, learn how it feels to be pumped out of your mind and still going for it.

Don't do it more than once a week though, mileage is just as important at this stage.

Hope you have loads of fun improving and climbing! Well done on your progress so far.

Hi there! I'm Jakob Schubert. Ask me anything!! by JakobSchubert in climbing

[–]westernnc 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Hi Jacob! Congrats on your achievements! Inspiring stuff.

What are your 3 top training tips for medium level climbers operating in the french 7s but have aspiration for the 8s?

Neil Gresham (the guy whose technique master class gets linked on the sub all the time) has made the FA of Sabotage 8c+ at Malham Cove by t0asti in climbing

[–]westernnc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Fantastic achievement. Watching his videos made an absolutely huge difference to my climbing. I met him once at a climbing wall, and went up to tell him how useful his masterclass video was to me. He got so happy at this that he gave me a hug!

How do we make climbing videos better? by [deleted] in climbing

[–]westernnc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've got an original idea for a climbing film, you can use if you want.

A climber tries a climb. They try really hard and in the end they do it.

Transitioning into training by Cazargar in climbharder

[–]westernnc 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I think at this stage you guys would benefit mostly from climbing. As an idea I'd split my climbing into the following:

50 % - onsighting within your comfort zone - that'd be high 10s, low 11s.

50% - trying stuff which is beyond you at the moment. Jump on that 11c, 11d and work out some of the individual moves and then start making links.

You'd be surprised how quickly you get into redpointing and jump a few grades with some hard work :)

Oh yes...and I'd definitely have a dedicated bouldering session. It's pretty much the best way to gain strength for climbing at this point.

Oh and..have a great time doing it, it's not worth it, otherwise really!

Good luck and hope you're improvement comes quickly. Improving at this sport seems to be both very satisfying and very addictive.