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Following are some training routines that have been developed through our own
experience as well as that of our friends and associates. We are not
professional exercise people. We are serious about our climbing and have seen
the benefits of making training an integral part of our activities for many
years. Our beliefs concerning training for climbing are the result of years of
asking questions and searching for answers.
From
our perspective, the single most important thing to keep in mind is that each of
us has a very unique and complex body. To be most effective, your training
program starts with a critical and complete assessment of your strengths and
weaknesses along with your goals for climbing. If you use this realistic list as
a filter for all the information available, hopefully you will end up with an
individual program that is ideally suited to you. There are now many sources of
information out there that pertain to training for climbing. Try to keep in mind
who you are and who the information is targeted to, a person who can afford to
climb and train full time or the weekend athlete who wants to make some gains in
strength and confidence.
The bottom line in training is that you must be responsible
for your own body and your own training schedule. Research the available
information, listen to the "experts", take the time to experiment, and then do
what works best for you.
Contact Strength or Finger Training is a
Crucial Part of Improving Your Climbing
With the popularity and increased access to indoor climbing
walls, fingerboards are becoming a second line method of training. However, we feel
that there are some great advantages to the convenience and specificity of
training boards. Having a board mounted in a doorway to a spare room or your
garage makes it easy to schedule a quick workout if a little time is all you
have. The specific nature of fingerboard training enables you to gauge your
progress much more effectively than bouldering at the rock gym or your home
wall. It is easier to control if and when you fail doing a set exercise on a
particular hold on a board, than if you are desperately thrutching for the last
hold on your latest plastic bouldering test-piece. This factor will hopefully
permit you to work to your limits while minimizing the chance of injury to your
fingers.
Finger training programs can be difficult to figure out. Keep
in mind that what you are strengthening is essentially connective tissue,
tendons and ligaments. It takes a long time to notice gains in strength in this
tissue and a very long time to heal once it has been injured. If you are using
fingerboard training in addition to indoor climbing on plastic, be aware of how
much stress you are putting on your fingers and arms, and be careful to not
over-do your training. If you start having problems, allow yourself time to
heal. If problems continue, specifically long-term pain and swelling in your
fingers, consult a sports-oriented physician.
The Training
There are two general categories of exercises that you can do
on your Metolius training board. In simple terms, they are exercises that build
power or exercises that build stamina /endurance. Endurance-oriented exercises
are a set of tasks that put your muscles in a more or less aerobic state; that
is, training your muscles to function for extended periods. They generally are a
longer duration and a lower load exercises and you are maintaining a lower level
"burn" in the muscles than the pump you get at the limit of your strength.
Power-oriented exercises focus on short duration, higher load tasks that your
muscles can’t maintain for very long. With these exercises, you are building
strength (muscle fiber size ) and the capacity to recruit more muscle fibers for
short, quick bursts of movement.
Any of the training that follows assumes a good base strength
level. Most of the work or exercises that follow are power-oriented for a couple
of reasons:
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We feel that you can develop some endurance from a power
workout, but you cannot develop good power from an endurance-oriented workout
and in fact, it is best if they are trained independently. |
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It is hard both physically and mentally, to hang on a board
for the extended periods required to totally target endurance. |
The amount of load you use for each exercise is up to you to
determine. We feel the most gains happen if you use a safe maximum load for the
cycle that you are in. Try to pick a load that allows you to barely hold on for
the time indicated in the exercise. Load is determined relative to your body
weight. If you need to add weight, use a weight belt. If you need to reduce
weight, use a chair or step stool set back from and under the board that allows
you push with one leg. Make sure your other leg stays below you, so that if you
fall, you land on your feet. You can use a bathroom scale on a chair to give you
a more accurate idea of how much weight you are taking off (see illustration).
If you don’t feel safe using this method, have a partner lift you instead.
Use Partners
Partners can check your time and remove
or add weight as well as give you assistance and cheer you on when you’re trying
to get that last bit of effort out. Having a partner spot you when training to
absolute failure is highly recommended.
Setup A Workout Schedule & Stick To It
Make a chart and use it to keep track of your training. If
you keep a detailed record showing amounts of weight and/or assistance for each
segment of an exercise, it will be much easier to slowly increase your workload.
These records will help you get the most benefit from your training time.
Use Any of the Holds For Any Exercise
You will probably find that certain holds are better suited
to certain exercises than others. For example, you would probably do pull-ups on
different holds than short duration hangs. It is also important to look at your
weakest points and train those first. For example, if you have a hard time
holding onto sloping holds, focus your training there early in your workouts. It
is also a good idea to change the holds you use for a given exercise every few
weeks, to maximize the effectiveness of your training.
Dos & Don'ts
Avoid doing an excessive number of pull-ups on your board. A
lot of pull-ups on a static bar can lead to elbow joint injuries..
Avoid range of motion exercises for your fingers on any
training board. Once you place weight on a hold do not attempt to move your
fingers (don’t do mini pull-ups with your fingers) as this can lead to injury.
Avoid using crimp or cling grips. A very important aspect
concerning any hold is how you hold on to it. It is extremely important that you
do not use any kind of cling technique regularly. Because of the increased angle
of your fingers while clinging, the load on your finger joint is far too high to
be safe for training purposes. We have found that if you keep your hand more
open, you will be safer and still can strengthen your fingers for both
open-handed and cling holds. The illustration pictured shows both types of
holds. Use chalk when training and occasionally clean your board with a nylon
brush to maintain a consistent surface.
The Tasks
Following are the basic elements of exercises that can be
done on your training board:
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Hangs - either straight arm or bent arm, one arm or both. When
hanging straight, there should still be a slight bend to the elbows. |
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Pull-ups - can be done with the hands parallel or offset ( one
of your hands on a higher or smaller hold than the other). Offset pulls put
more training stress on the higher or smaller hold arm and can more
effectively simulate certain climbing situations. |
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Knee Lifts - Hang on good holds and bring your knees to your
chest, bending at the waist and knees. This task works the often overlooked
abdominals for that solid mid-body connection. |
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Shoulder Shrugs - Hang as above and raise and lower your
body without bending your elbows. This exercise works several different muscle
groups in the shoulder girdle. As with pull-ups, we would recommend keeping
repetitions low. |
Cyclic Periodization
As an overall strategy, cyclic periodization allows you to be
at your peak when you want to be. Whether this corresponds to a big road trip or
pushing your limits when the weather is the best is up to you. If properly done
chances of injury and mental burnout are minimized and gains in strength and
power are optimized.
The concept is simple; build a base of endurance then work
toward maximum power. By pushing your body in these cycles you strike a balance
between letting yourself be fresh and strong within the cycles and not letting
yourself totally adapt to the stresses of the workouts. This keeps you from
stalling at different plateaus and makes the gains possible much greater than
doing the same sets of workouts month after month. Immediately following the
peak cycle you should be ready to climb strongly. The Cycle Shown Below Would
Start Again In June.
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Peak Cycle
Intensity = 80-100%
Volume = Low
Loads = High
Repetitions = Low
Frequency = 2-3 days a week
Maximum strength and power. Most exercises done to failure. Taper
training and focus on climbing midway through the cycle. After cycle ends,
no gym time. You should be in peak condition for the crags for 4 to 6 weeks. |
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Load Cycle
Intensity = 75%
Volume = Moderate/High
Loads = Medium
Repetitions = Moderate
Frequency = 3-4 days a week
The foundation, endurance, connective tissue strength, some muscle power
building. |
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Conditioning Cycle
Intensity = 60%
Volume = Moderate
Loads = Low
Repetitions = High
Frequency = 2-3 days a week
Warm-up and active rest cycle.
Preparation for more strenuous cycles |
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Recovery Cycle
Intensity = 50%
Volume = Low
Loads = Light
Repetitions = Low
Frequency = 2 days a week
Rest and recovery, prep for peak cycle. |
2 weeks
November
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10 weeks
December - January
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2 weeks
February
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8 weeks
March - April
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Definitions
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Intensity = A percentage of your maximum effort, as applied
to a single set or an overall workout. As an example; when you are fully
rested and it is all you can do to hang on a particular hold for one minute,
then 65% intensity would be hanging for 40 seconds on the same hold. Picking
an easy to measure test such as this and getting to know the level of "pump"
that corresponds to that intensity, then allows you to tailor other exercises
to your particular goal. This is the crucial element of any workout program,
one that determines the other elements and one that needs the most attention
and adjustment. Think of intensity as a set point that you need to adjust
upward as you get stronger or adjust downward if you are not recovering
between workouts. |
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Volume = The length of your workout or how many sets or
exercises. This is one of the easiest elements to adjust according to where
you are in your training regime ( up as you get stronger, down if you are not
recovering). Remember volume is not the same as intensity. |
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Load = How much weight relative to body weight. This
assumes that for many of the exercises with certain holds you will need to add
weight ( by using a weighted belt) or subtract weight (by having a spotter
lift you or by placing a footstool under the board to lightly put one foot on)
to hang for a particular time for a set intensity. |
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Repetitions = How many pull-ups or separate movements in an
exercise. |
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Frequency = How many days per week to train. |
Other Elements to Consider
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Warm-up: Take plenty of time to stretch and lightly work
all the muscles you are going to use in your workout session. Drink plenty of
water during and following workouts. |
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Know the difference between a healthy muscle ache and pain
associated with connective tissue damage. There is no quicker way to sabotage
your climbing goals than to try to train through injuries. |
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Rest : figure out what you need for the different cycles
and take it! You should go into each workout without muscle pain. |
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Micro-cycles: These are incorporated into the longer,
harder main cycles (load and peak ) to keep you from plateauing within the
cycle. Usually done in a hard day! easy day! moderate day. This is intended to
break up your routines enough that you stay rested, but still are not letting
your body settle into one medium mode. |
The Exercises
These exercises can be added to or used instead of the ones
shown in the following example workouts. The 10-minute sequences especially lend
themselves to experimentation. They are good combinations of endurance and power
work and can be adapted to training for a specific climb. Keep in mind some
general guidelines when thinking about adapting exercises to yourself. Power
exercises keep durations of tasks short, with heavier or harder loads. Endurance
exercises are longer, less intense; you should feel like you are maintaining a
low-level pump. The easiest element of the exercises to change is generally
load; be familiar with the various ways to do this. In the exercise sequences
that follow, if a 2-minute rest is not indicated, proceed immediately to the
next task.
Warming Up
One of the most important steps in muscular development and
injury prevention is a thorough warm up. Generally, the best way to do this is
to warm up the large muscles that will be used first, and then move to the
smaller. There are various ways to accomplish this; start with low level
aerobics, then general calisthenics or weight lifting. You can follow this with
a series of one or two pull-ups or a 10 to 20 second hang on each hold on your
board, with a 30s rest between each task. Take time to stretch after you are
warmed up, once again starting with the large muscles and working your way to
your fingers. After you are completely warmed up give yourself a rest of 5 to 10
minutes before starting the workout.
Extra Training Tips
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Always give yourself enough time for a thorough warm-up.
This is undoubtedly the best thing you can do to keep yourself injury free.
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Take some time before you start each hang to work your
fingers into the hold. This "milking the hold" enables you to get a more
powerful grip and mentally prepares you for the task ahead.
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When you are ready to hang for a time and after you have
set yourself on the hold, let your body down directly below the hold, so that
when you raise your feet your body does not swing. Swinging makes it a lot
harder to hang on.
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To be most effective, once you have milked the holds and
started your hang, don’t move your fingers on the hold. This is especially
true when hanging on slopers.
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Brush the holds on your board frequently, even between
exercises. Knowing the holds are clean and grease free is a big boost
psychologically.
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Chalk your hands and fingers well before each task. For
superior performance, on plastic or rock, use Metolius Super Chalk.
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Personalize your training regime and then stick to it. If
you have a balanced program, with enough variety to keep you motivated you
will get stronger. It takes time to see improvements, patience will make the
gains come sooner.
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If you feel stuck on a major plateau, go back over your
original expectations and make sure they are realistic. Often, stalling may
indicate you need more rest or a break from some part of your routine. Or it
may mean take a look at what you can do to improve your motivation. Find a
good partner to train with, dream about your next trip, or think about how
good you will feel once you’re done with your workout. Anything you can do to
maintain your positive attitude will pay off big!
Warning All Training Board Users: Training on a hangboard
carries risk of injury to fingers, arms, shoulders and the joints connecting
them. Take every precaution to avoid damage to yourself; warm-up, stretch,
don't overtrain and listen to your body. Remember, even under the best of
circumstances, injuries can occur. In addition, however you mount your board,
be sure that it cannot move in any direction. There should be no possible way
for the board to come down while training.
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