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5 Tips on How to Train on Climbing Routes

What to Train On?

The most significant performance gains come from training that is sport specific. Runners run, swimmers swim, and, of course, climbers climb.

 

However, just as trail running requires a different set of strengths than running on a track, and swimming across the English Channel requires a different set than swimming in a pool, effectively improving your performance in climbing requires training on problems or routes that most closely fit your long-term goals. 

 

Luckily, choosing training problems is actually one of the simpler things to do in climbing. The following guidelines will help you choose the best problems to put into your workouts. 

#1: Train what you know.

The most basic rule of training is one many climbers, including high-end climbers, neglect far too often. When trying to build strength, endurance, or any related system, it is better to climb routes you know well than ones you don’t.

 

Why? Because unfamiliar routes mean unfamiliar moves. Unfamiliar moves are more likely to spit you off when you are tired, or lead you to reinforce sloppy habits while you desperately flail to stay on.  

 

When trying to overload your muscles during training, you want failure to occur because you are genuinely out of gas, not just because you made a simple mistake or technical error. Training on problems you have mastered reduces the chances of a poor choice, or poorly executed move, leading to a fall before we have truly maxed out our physical efforts. 

 

The one exception to this is a project session, where the whole point is to explore and send new problems that you can train on later. Projecting, incidentally, is one of the most effective ways to train technique. 

#2: The Rule of Threes

Many experienced and novice climbers alike have trouble building their list of good training problems. The Rule of Threes is an effective method for keeping that bucket full. The basic idea is below.

 

Once you have sent a new problem–whether it was a project or a warm up–you aren’t done with it. After your initial send, your next goal should be to send it at least two more times (for a total of three). Once you have done that, you likely know it well enough to use it as part of a workout, though probably one of your harder workouts.  

 

But you aren’t done yet! 

 

After you’ve sent it three times, your next goal should be to send it three times in one night (for a grand total of 6, or 2×3, sends). Once you can do that you have likely mastered all the moves and the problem should definitely become part of your workouts. 

 

But wait, there’s more! 

 

After you’ve sent it three times in one night, your final goal should be to send it three times in a row, with little to no rest (for a total of 9 or 3×3, sends).  

 

Once you have completed this task, you have not only mastered all the moves, but mastered the problem as well. It can still be used as part of your workout, but is most valuable for hypertrophy or conditioning work. 

#3: Train on steeper walls.

Rock climbing involves a large range of angles. From low-angle slabs, that rely on balance and finesse to make it through, to fully horizontal roofs, that require gymnastic trickery.

 

Experience indicates that the best angles to build strength and endurance are between 10 and 40 degrees overhanging. Lower angle walls put too much weight on your feet. While this is a great way to improve your technique, finger and forearm development will be extremely slow due the difficulty of truly overloading them at this angle.  

 

On the other end, walls that are steeper than 45°, put too much emphasis on finger strength. Therefore they are not great training angles until you are climbing grades that are fairly high on the scale.

 

Even then, evidence shows that strength and endurance gains translate well from 20-40 degree walls to steeper angles. However, the opposite is not generally true. Why that is true is beyond the scope of this article. In short, until you are regularly sending V8 and above, you will see reliable and more finger-friendly progress if you focus your workouts on 10-40 degree overhanging walls.  

 

#4: Vary your climbs!

We all have a tendency to stick with what we can do well and choose problems that cater to our strengths. It you are good at crimpers you tend to stick to sending crimp-heavy problems. If you are good at dynos, you prefer climbs with big moves.

  

The whole point of training, though, is to improve your climbing, so if you avoid training your weaknesses, you will slow that process down considerably. Perhaps more importantly, training the same style of movement over and over on the same types of holds will increase your risk of injury considerably. 

 

To avoid both of these issues, choose a wide variety of problems, on multiple angles, with as many different hold types as you can find. Slopers, pinches, crimps, jugs, underclings and side-pulls. Learn to love them all. 

#5: Aim for consistency.

While being consistent is generally a nice character trait, our final rule refers to the difficulty of your problems.

 

Training is all about overloading your muscles so they are forced to adapt to handle that load. Unlike other sports where consistent effort can be controlled precisely by speed or weight, climbs come in many varieties. From ultra-long endurance slogs where every move is as difficult as the last, to one move wonders where everything other than the crux move is trivial. And every combination in between! 

 

The ideal workout consists of climbs where every move is exactly as difficult as every other move. This is, of course, an ideal and therefore rarely achievable in practice. For our purposes, however, it is enough to avoid cruxy climbs with stopper moves. Also avoid “low percentage” sections where success is less likely. Instead aim for climbs where the difficulty remains reasonably consistent over the entire climb.  

 All material is reprinted with the permission of the author. Copyright 2022 David H. Rowland. All rights reserved.

Dave Rowland

Dave is an Owner & COO of the Philadelphia Rock Gyms and Program Director & Founder of the PRG Climbing School & Climbing Team. For over 25 years, he has helped world-class and aspiring rock climbers alike pursue their passion and achieve their goals. When not at work, Dave is out at the crag--climbing and cleaning new routes, eagerly awaiting the day his son is big enough to be his rope gun.

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Philadelphia Rock Gyms (“PRG”) provide membership plans to allow customers access to our various climbing facilities during normal operating hours.

By accepting these Terms and Conditions, which govern our membership plans, you (“Client”) agree to the following:

  1. Membership

    • For all membership plans, provided that you, the Client, are not in default and subject to these Terms and Conditions after the initial term commitment of your membership plan has expired, your membership will automatically renew monthly until terminated. You will be notified of rate increases at least 30 days before automatic rollover renewal.
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    • Suppose you wish to cancel your membership before your membership plans’ initial term commitment. In that case, you may cancel by delivering in person or by mailing by certified mail, return receipt requested, or written notice to the Philadelphia Rock Gym (PRG) at your home PRG facility’s address. The notice must say that you do not wish to be bound to the membership Terms and Conditions and must be delivered in person or mailed before 12 midnight of the third business day after you agree to the Terms and Conditions of your membership plan.
    • In some cases, you may also cancel your membership before the initial term commitment is expired if you accepted these Terms and Conditions before the home climbing facility was completed, if the facility moves or goes out of business, if you become permanently disabled, or if you move outside of an additional forty-five-mile radius from your home PRG facility. If you cancel, PRG may be entitled to collect and/or retain a certain portion of the total membership plan price.
    • i. Client can cancel their membership without penalty within three business days of purchase and accepting the Terms and Conditions. Upon receipt of the cancellation notice under this paragraph, PRG shall refund the Client all monies, including any initiation fee paid under the membership plan.
    • ii. Client is permitted to cancel their membership if PRG closes for more than 30 consecutive days and PRG fails to provide a comparable facility within ten miles of the location designated as your home facility. Upon receipt of notice of cancellation under this paragraph, PRG shall refund to the Client all monies paid more than an amount computed by dividing the full membership plan price, including any initiation fee, by the number of weeks in the membership term and multiplying the result by the number of weeks elapsed in the membership term.
    • iii. Client or his/her legal representative may cancel their membership if the Client dies or becomes permanently disabled. A permanent disability means a condition that precludes the Client from using one-third or more of the facilities for six consecutive months or more, and the condition is verified in writing by a physician. Upon receipt of notice of cancellation under this paragraph, PRG shall refund the Client all monies paid more than an amount computed by dividing the full membership plan price, including any initiation fee, by the number of weeks in the membership term and multiplying the result by the number of weeks elapsed in the membership term, less a predetermined fee not exceeding $100.00, or if more than half of the life of the membership plan has expired, a predetermined fee not exceeding $50.00. In case of a permanent disability, PRG may require the Client to submit to a physical examination by a physician agreeable to the Client and PRG. PRG shall bear the additional cost of the examination.
    • iv. Client may cancel their membership if he/she moves more than 45 additional miles from their PRG home facility and cannot transfer the membership to a comparable facility within ten miles of his/her new residence. The client must provide proof of a new address. Upon receipt of notice of cancellation under this paragraph, PRG shall refund to the Client all monies paid more than an amount computed as of the date of relocation by dividing the full membership plan price, including any initiation fee, by the number of weeks in the membership term, less a predetermined fee not exceeding $100.00, or if more than half of the life of the membership plan has expired, a predetermined fee not exceeding $50.00.
    • v. To cancel your membership according to paragraphs (i), (ii), (iii), or (iv), the Client shall notify PRG of cancellation in writing by personal delivery or by certified mail, return receipt requested, in either case to the address of your home facility; all money to be refunded upon cancellation of the Membership plan shall be paid within 40 days of receipt of the notice of cancellation. If the Client has executed a credit, lien, or automatic funds transfer agreement with PRG to pay for PRG services, any negotiable instrument or credit of lien agreement executed by the Client shall be returned, and any automatic transfer shall be canceled within 40 days after the notice of cancellation.
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    • Under these Terms and Conditions, no further payments shall be due to anyone, including any purchaser of any note associated with or contained in these Terms and Conditions, if the home facility ceases operation and fails to offer a comparable alternate location within ten miles of your home facility.
    • If PRG temporarily closes for less than 30 days, the Client shall receive an extension of the membership term equal to the period during which the facility was closed.
    • The Client is permitted to extend the term of the membership plan at no additional cost for some time equal to the duration of a disability where the Client has a disability that precludes the Client from using one-third or more of the facilities for less than six months, and the disability is verified in writing by a physician.

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