The Citadel, 11b
Dec 31, 2009
The Year in Review: 2009
Dec 30, 2009
Sweet Sticky Thing
2) Work, New Problems
3) Open Hand, System Board
Lower Left
1 lap on the minute for 10 minutes
rest 10 minutes
4) 1/2 Crimp, System Board
#2
1 lap on the minute for 10 minutes
5) Wide Moves, System Board
Skip 1 Up & 1 Over
6) 1-Arm, Dynamic Effort
7) L-sit scissors
20s X 3
8) Sited Russian Twist w/ Heavish Kettlebell
3 sets
Still Fires My Ass Up!
Notes: I got outside today and cleaned up a bunch of lines on the boulder I found yesterday. Several of them are hard. One is futurist, it follows the black streak on the right side of the video. The futurist line got me syked to push it hard in the gym. I had to work a couple of new problems in the gym because they exposed a continuing limiter, fat pinches. I have a three-try "rule" for gym problems. If I fall on the same move three times, without improvement, I move on. Otherwise, I'm training strugglin' and falling.
The rest of the session focused on building capacity (something I don't do enough). #3 and #4 were simple density training. Next time I do the laps every 50s. I need to add weight to #5. #6 training to be fast. Finished the session with one stabilization and one rotational/nonlinear ab exercise. I superset those with prehab work.
Dec 29, 2009
Inter Alia
1-4-1 X 3
2) Campus, Throws, Small Rungs
1-4-1 X 2
1-4-1 X 2
3) Campus, Throws, Medium Rungs
1-4-1 X 3
1-4-1 X 3
4) Technique, Perfect Climbing, Adv Problems, 30 minutes
Notes: I'm trying to campus 2 x week, 72 hours between sessions. I'll back off at the first signs of injury. Switched it up again with Throws. I increased the volume of #4 by 10 minutes this session.
I abandoned my most recent training plan, focusing on Technique/Long Power Endurance. Training Long Power Endurance was awkward because of my current facilities. I'm rectifying that by building a home wall. It is slow going because I want it to be good. I was hoping for upcoming sport climbing trips to keep me syked. Those fell through. They are turning into bouldering trips. I'm in limbo right now. I'll continue to focus on technique and getting stronger. I'm trying to align my training with my goals, my limiters, current outside conditions, and training facilities.
"Endurance routes get easier.
Hard moves are always hard moves."
Jerry Moffat
HGT Boulders, Winter Projects
It is the size of a house. There is low easy stuff, high easy stuff, low hard stuff, and high hard stuff. Something for everyone. It is embedded in hillside which makes the descent a mellow walk-off. Finding this came just in time, I was getting a little case of Seasonal Affective Disorder and losing some training syke. Now I have a excuse to play outside and train hard.
I plan to publish (in some form) all my climbs when they are finished (I need to buckle down and finish areas). In the meantime, I'm keeping my nicknames private. I climbed two lines above, both warm-ups. I worked a project on the left hand side.
Dec 27, 2009
Operation Flea Collar
2) Open Hand, Systemboard
Upper Left, Pull Through (with regular feet)
3) Open Hand, Hangboard
Large Edge, 1-arm
3) 1/2 Crimp, Systemboard
#1
4) Wide Moves, Systemboard
Lower Right, Skip 1 Up & 1 Over
5) Front Lever, Straddle
3 sets
6) Corkscrew, 45 lbs
to failure
Notes: My Open Hand performance surprised me considering I campused hard yesterday. Getting stronger every session. Faded quickly during #3 and #4. I rarely train to failure, but it has value.
I have enough General Physical Preparation, GPP, to do my daily activities and recovery from my training. In the last week, I moved my stuff easily, pushed a car up a snowy driveway, and did basic construction building my woody. I don't need anymore. For a while, I was going to let my GPP slip down to Level 3. The more I let it slip, the less I realize I need. The plan is to let it slip to Level 2 and reassess.
Dec 26, 2009
Running The Rack
1-4
1-5 (fail X 3)
2) Campus, Medium Rungs, Doubles
2-1
3-1
3-1
3) Campus, Large Rungs, Ladder
1-3-6
1-2-6
4) Campus, Medium Rungs, Ladder
1-5
1-5-6 (f)
5) Technique, Perfect Climbing, Adv. Problems, 20 minutes
6) Prehab, Elbows & Shoulders
Notes: I tried to leave for Texas, to get my outdoor fix, but less 1 hour into the drive it became unappealing. I'm settling into a training cocoon and will emerge a beautiful strong butterfly.
Max effort day, time to break PRs. I use the conjunctive system, thanks Louie. I constantly rotate exercises. This session I used doubles up and down. I could make the distance on the 1-5 double but I couldn't latch it. It appears to be a mental/coordination issue. I was hitting the middle of the rung during 1-5-6.
I'm not sure about accessory work for climbing. The goal of accessory work is add muscle mass. Actually, I'm trying to lose muscle mass to improve my climbing. I give due diligence to prehab. Prehab takes on some of the characteristics of accessory work but is relatively low intensity. The most prominent candidate for accessory work is "core". But my core is strong enough, i.e. not a limiter. In fact, I might over rely on my core strength. Still investigating. That is why it is the Climbing Lab.
Dec 24, 2009
Get Behind Me, Santa!!!
Upper Left, Match then Pull Through
Upper Left, Pull Through (with bigger feet)
2) 1/2 Crimp, System Board
#1, Pull Through
#0, Match
3) Wide Moves, System Board
Lower Right, Skip 1 up & 1 over
4) 1-arm pull-ups
Left X 2, Right X 1.99
Left +5lbs, Right +2.5 lbs
Notes: Feel better than yesterday and performance is also better. Still not firing on all cylinders but getting stronger. Surprised myself with the 1-arm pull-ups. I might try a 31 lb 1-arm for my Birthday Challenge.
I'm heeding Dan John's advice and doing myofascial release on 6'' piece of PVC. It is hell but I feel much better after. I focus on my forearms, especially outside near my elbow. There is tightness that might be the start of elbow tendinitis. I had a problem with it in the past but don't currently feel the conscious symptoms. I also focus my left shoulder, an old injury. Afterwords there is more "space" in my shoulder. Someone saw me rolling and asked, "What is injured?" I replied "Nothing, I'm trying to keep it that way." I view it like car maintenance. I rather invest a little time and money now to prevent my timing belt breaking in the middle of the Utah desert.
Dec 23, 2009
What Would Buddha Tweet?
Notes: I suck at climbing after a rest period.
Dec 18, 2009
A Scheduled Rest Period
Now is the perfect time.
Dec 17, 2009
Technique Steroids
1-4-6
1-3-6
1-2-6
2) Campus, Medium Rungs, Ladder
1-4-6
1-3-6(f)
1-2-5
1-3-6
3) Campus, Large Rungs, Ladder
1-5-6
4) Open Hand, System Board
Upper Right, Match then Pull Through
5) 1/2 Crimp, System Board
#1, Pull Through
Notes: Campus and System Board on the same day. OUCH. Not too bad since I have built up my capacity for the last year. The gains in Campusing are harder to see because there is a big distance from one level to the next higher level. I can see the smaller gains in the System Board. Either way, I'm becoming objectively stronger.
Dec 15, 2009
The Sessions, #3, They Call Him Sensi For a Reason
I have noticed in the past my climbing feels binary, either I hike a line or it feels impossible. Justin suggested a boulder problem that fit into the "impossible" category for me. The grade was not extreme, but the problem was a problem for me. It started with a couple of reasonable moves which lead to hand/foot match heel straight into hand match on a weird sloper/pinch. I was shut down.
Dave Tate
From a physical prespective, I could have weak hamstrings and weak open hand/pinch grip. Form a a technical prespective, I could lack the engrams for hand/foot matches and hand matching. From a mental prespective, I flipped my send switch to off. Justin focuses on mental aspects. I tend to focus on the technical aspects. Both are the quick path. Strengths gains take weeks, months, or years to manifest. Technical and mental gains are more immediate and longer lasting.
In addition, I don't fall enough. I'm not afraid of falling but a fall relaxes me. I flow better afterwords.
Dec 13, 2009
Boyfriend Experience
5s X 3 (Each Side)
14s X Right
17s X Left
2) Full Crimp, 2-arm, Easy Side Crimp
5s X 3
10s X 1
Notes: Outside climbing was a good warm-up for training. You can never be too strong. Moon Climbing is the best workout I have found for maximum finger strength. Basically - variety of hand positions, hang short time (<10s),rest long time (>1 minute). There is a couple of tweaks I make to address weaknesses in the template. There is a lack of specificity, an individual might need to focus on different grips, and progression, systematic improvement over time.
I'm interested in transforming a workout into a training plan. I take additional cues from Westside Barbell , one max effort per week and undulating periodization. Currently, I'm tweaking my program by incorporating a method from Wendler's 5/3/1. The program advocates straight sets for the first sets than max reps for last set. If you blow through lots of reps (or time) during the last set, add weight next time. It is a simple method to assure volume and progression. I'm adding weight to both hangs next time.
The Palace, Defining Success
The Scepter/Sceptor, 10a, onsight (started to snow, had to fight)
Notes: Got outside today. I was missing it. I hoped to finish up my FA projects, but there was too much snow to access the parking for the cliff. Settled for The Palace. It was warm, beautiful, and quiet, not another climbing party at the entire area. During my second warm-up, it got windy, dropped 10 degrees and start snowing. I agree with Upskill Climbing and won't complain about conditions. Let's just say it felt "hard." The jams felt "really hard." I have a goal of climbing every route at The Palace. Today was a success, I ticked two off the list.
Dec 12, 2009
Movement Gym, One of the Best Crags in CO?
Notes: I'm usually anti-indoor cragging. One primary reason is I get bored very easy. Indoor routes are too easy or too similar to make the climbing engaging. That is not the case with Movement. They set dam fine routes. So good in fact, that they might make you a better outside climber. Another reason is I have a lifestyle that allows for plenty of projecting/hard onsights outside. I use the gym as a path, not a destination. However, the weather in CO is wicked cold and snowy. I now have an indoor project.
Dec 10, 2009
Get Your Recess Outta My Study Hall
2) 1/2 Crimp, Systemboard, #1
3) Full Crimp, Systemboard, #0
4) Flash, 1 Adv+ & 1 Open Problem
5) 2 rounds
Rhythm Intervals, Level 2
35 on/25 off
rest 4:00 between rounds
Notes: Feel stronger, even though the strength metrics were the same. I need to make #3 harder. I could make it more difficult by decreasing rest (not conductive to strength gains), increase hold distance (would throw off 1/2 crimp training), decreases hold size (not possible since I'm already using the smallest holds in the gym), or increase load. The plan is to increase load but I forgot the weight vest.
I almost got sucked into the "gym climbing social bouldering game", #4, because a bunch of people I knew were climbing. Regardless of their goals or ability, everyone was projecting the same problems. For some people, the project climb was hard/impossible. For others, it was easy. I think the problems were suboptimal training for everyone. Are you playing your friend's game, the routesetter's game, or your game?
Keep to the plan - Get Strong, Get Skilled, Get Fit, Send Climbs (outside).
I'm fascinated that people go immediately into project mode. They have a mind set that every problem has to be solved. On the other hand, I try to stay in send/crush mode. I might not flash everything but I try. If I don't flash, my mental paradigm still focuses on quick sends.
I always want to train more. When it comes to Strength & Conditioning, quality and intensity almost always triumphs quantity. Today I trained hard and went home. I have almost eliminated all junk “mileage”. Every move I do in the gym has a purpose.
Dec 9, 2009
Pink Boxing
2) Mobility Drills
Training: 1) Flash, New Problems, 10 minutes
2) Technique, Hoover, 20 minutes
Notes: An easy day after hard day. Still working technique. These days are important. They get me training, solidify new skills, but keep me from getting hurt. The hallmark of a good program is low/no injury rate.
Dec 8, 2009
The Sessions, #2, Better Training Through Technology
Even though training is structured at the individual level, being in an environment with better climbers will encourage me to raise my game. Movement, the gym itself, also encourages progress. The routes and boulder problems are wonderfully set, thoughtful without being contrived. In addition, they set hard problems and routes in a variety of styles. Something I find lacking in most gyms. I finally have a quality coach, training partners, and facility. Let the real training begin.
Dec 6, 2009
You Say Stressed I Say Desserts
2) 4X4 (Adv+, Adv+, Adv, Int+)
rest 2:20 between sets
rest 10 minutes
2) 4X4 (Adv+, Adv+, Adv, Int+)
rest 2:20 between sets
rest 6 hours
3) 8 rounds
~30 moves
rest 1:1
A good day to be training and setting
Notes: I loaded the 4X4 heavy to light, to train downregulating. The goal was to finish the last problem with my breathing under control. The only thing that sucks more than intervals is lots of intervals. One day I will excel at resistance climbing.
Dec 5, 2009
Tauntaun Sleeping Bag
2) Sloper, Systemboard, Match, Upper Left
3) 1/2 crimp, Systemboard, #1
4) Technique, Hoover, Up to Adv+, 20 minutes
Notes: Technique work is progressing. Strength work felt hard, 2nd day on. Progress on Sloper strength. Skipped full crimp.
New Routing Disclaimer
Part of my bias comes from my background as a scientist. Secret science is not respected. People discover things, publish them, and science progresses. There can be controversy, but science, as a whole, benefits from public records. The history of science is littered with examples of independent discovery, such as Calculus. History is the ultimate arbitrator.
I would rather focus my energy on new sport routes. That is not always possible so I pebblewrestle. I'm interested in development, which includes finding, cleaning, sending, and publishing climbs. The actual first ascent is just one part of the process, a part that doesn't hold too much interest for me. Anyone who has climbed with me knows that I freely giveaway first ascents and give credit where it is due. I'm not claiming any first ascents of boulder problems on this blog.
In the future, I will make a clearer distinction between "Exploring" and "New Routing". I will use the label "Exploring" for boulder problems and the label "New Routing" for climbs I'm bolting. I have climbed 75+ boulder problems in Northern Colorado that are not listed in any guidebook. I nicknamed them so I could uniquely identify the problems and facility remembering them. If I knew the established names, I would use them. I leave comments open and unmoderated for this purpose. In addition, everything I have published is on public land. No one person owns the public land. This is my blog and my opinions. To clarify this position, I have added the following disclaimer on the right-
If I got something wrong or if I'm out of line, please contact me."
Dec 4, 2009
Epistemological Blindness
2) Threshold Bouldering, 20 minutes
3) 10 rounds
~30 moves
rest 1:1
Notes: I went to a gym that I typically don't go to, trying to stay out of a rut. I flashed most of the problems. They put extra holds on the wall so you can make up your own problems. They still don't have enough holds, especially feet and small holds, to make it a good training facility. They also set nice 30+ move traverses. I flashed all of them. I got down to business and ran laps on the hardest one using only small feet. Climbing there is like cumin, it is nice but not a daily thing.
Dec 3, 2009
Pecked to Death by Baby Ducks
Warm-up: 1) Rec, Up & Down x 10 (Don't Rush)
2) Mobility Drills
3) Int, Up & Down x 5 (Don't Rush)
Training: 1) Technique, Decompress, 20 minutes
2) Flash, New Problems, 20 minutes
3) Technique, Hoover, 20 minutes
Notes: I almost want to count today as 2 technique sessions. It was fun but felt long. Justen gave me some tips on relaxing while climbing. It worked so well, I felt like curling up and falling asleep on crash pad. The technique work immediately carried over to the flashes. I'm still amazed how little improvements in technique translate to huge improvements in performance. It is the quickest path to better climbing (or any sport). I progressed from easy to hard problems. By the time I got to the hard problems, they felt easy. I wasn't training stamina but came along for the ride.
Dec 2, 2009
New Training Cycle
After the feedback from Justen, I'm entering a new mesocycle, Technique/Long Power Endurance. The last cycle, Performance/Power, was a success. I got objectively stronger, sent my hardest boulder problem, and did all the moves on my bolted project.
There are some physical constraints. CO turned into a version of the Hoth ice world, so performance days will be few and far between. In addition, I've to do some traveling. I don't exactly know where or when, but I won't have great access to crags or gyms. That is LIFE. That makes strength training not optimal, but strength is not my biggest limiter. The idea behind a microcycle is that I complete each session type (in any order) before starting over. I can drop the training if the weather gets good or I end up in Hueco.
Dates: Dec 3- Jan 10
Per microcycle
4 Climbing Technique
3 Climbing Power Endurance, Long Interval
2 Climbing Power Endurance, Medium Interval
1 Climbing Power Endurance, Short Interval
1 Climbing Strength
0 Climbing Power
0 Crosstraining
Gymnastics and cardio when appropriate
Seth Godin
Dec 1, 2009
The Session, #1, "You climb like Rob Miller"
Notes: I attend my first session of The Sessions with Justen Sjong. Like all good training programs, it started with an assessment. My assessment was consisted of bouldering, lead climbing, and top roping. I was a wreck from yesterday - I set a route, did a climbing photo shoot, and got on hard FA projects. Although I wasn't in a peak state, I still climbed in my style. I won't get into all the details, but I received quality feedback about my climbing. Justin has amazing visual perspicacity. Most of the session focused on improving my mental game. There was little discussion of specific technique improvement and no talk of strength improvement. In addition, I got some homework to improve my climbing. I'm looking forward to finally having a coach.
On a side note, he decided to skip GPP assessment just by looking at me. Then I told him a little about my CrossFit-type background, which promoted the "You climb like Rob Miller" comment. Rob Miller is a former CrossFit guy and a great climber. While I'm not in the same league, I have same style. It is a blessing and a curse for climbing. I'm skipping all GPP work and might not do any climbing specific strength work.
Random notes - 4 types of breath, down regulation, heels, see texture, dig in
Nov 30, 2009
PMA Wall, Wreck Yourself Monday
1) Set Route - 6am
2) Lab Meeting - 9am
3) Climbing Photo Shoot- Noon
4) Work FA projects - 2pm
5) Cardio - 6pm
Notes: Today was long and hard. But I won't have it any other way. The new guidebook to the Poudre Canyon is coming to fruition. I was able to contribute by wearing tight, bright clothes and climbing cruxes (over and over). Afterwords I somehow convinced the crew to check out PMA wall so I could drop rocks on their heads while they froze to death. I did all the moves on "Free is Everything", the link up between "Free but Not Cheap" and "Stupid Happy with Everything." It goes and its hard. Reasonable climbing sets up a deadpoint to a credit card edge. RAD.
"Stupid Happy with Everything " is still a little loose. The crux is an even bigger deadpoint from worse holds but you latch a flat edge. I wasn't able to stick it but it is possible. I'm syked on contributing to hard climbing in Poudre Canyon. It is a race between the weather and guidebook deadlines.
Nov 28, 2009
Walking On One’s Eyeballs
2) Open Hand, Systemboard, Upper Right/Upper Left
3) 1/2 Crimp, Systemboard, #1 (!!)
4) Full Crimp, Systemboard, #0
5) Technique, Perfect, 15 minutes
6) 3 rounds
Straddle Front Lever, 7s
Technique, Heels down
7) Shoulder Prehab circuit
8) Practice Handstand/HSPU
Notes: The concept of "Perfect Practice" was inspired by a recent Climb Strong post. It discuses Economy Climbing, repeating easy problems with perfect technique and efficiency. I feel like my Economy Climbing is good. I wanted to improve my ability on relatively difficult problems. I repeated an Advanced problem, roughly my flash level, 3 times. Improving each time. Not drastically, a millimeter there and an initiation there. I super setted that with heels down training. My calves are still tight and weak.
I'm following undulating periodization with my strength training. I always train grips from weakest to strongest, slopers-1/2 crimp- full crimp. I maintain with two grips and try to set a PR with one grip. I recently set a PR with full crimp. This time I set a PR with 1/2 crimp. Next time with sloper. It is rad getting measurable stronger.
I picked a bunch of different Adv problems for #5. My left elbow was a little angry when I tried to 1-arm pull-ups (originally from the 2-a-day at BRC).
Nov 27, 2009
Miss Galaxy Pageant
2) Technique, Over Speed, 10 minutes
3) Technique, Dynos, 10 minutes
4) Campus, Doubles, Large Rungs
3-1
4-1(f)
5) Campus, Ladder, Large Rungs
1-2-6
1-3-7(f)
6) Campus, Ladder, Medium Rungs
1-4-6
rest 15 minutes
7) Threshold Bouldering, 20 minutes
8) Technique, Over Speed, 10 minutes
Notes: I got #2 from a Vern's post. I think it would better with short sections of roped climbing compared to bouldering. I was tired from 2 days ago so I worked on solidifying my current campus training, #4-6. Doubles down are scary. I'm not inspired to project any of the bouldering so I made up my own moves. I grew bored with that too.
Crag To Be Named (By You)
The gem of the area
Slightly overhanging blank face
Simply Dreamy
I don't have a name for the cliff or the route. I'm turning the naming process over the loyal readers of this blog. It is your chance for immortality. Please post name suggestions to comments.
Nov 25, 2009
Robotripping
2) Flash, Distillation, 15 minutes
3) Work, Hard Problems, 15 minutes
4) Treadwall, Long Intervals, 1:1
5) Sited Muscle-ups, 3X4
6) 1-legged deck squats, 3X4
7) Plank stars, 3X1
8) 3 rounds
Weighted sit-ups, 45lbs, 10 reps
Reverse wrist curls, 12lbs, 10 reps
9) 3 rounds
Sited Russian Twist, Light kb, 10 reps
Shoulder Scarecrow, 5lbs, 4 reps
10) 1-arm pull-ups, light band assisted, 3X3
Bonus - I went back in the evening to "crag" with my girlfriend and still could flash their 12s.
Notes: I usually advocate 50% rule for roadtrips, take the half the length of a road trip as a recovery period. I'm not taking my own advice because the last road trip was very mellow. I was going to step up by training at CATS, but it is closed this whole week. NEGATIVE!!! I hit up BRC.
I'm seeing good results from my current approach of hitting technique, climbing, sport specific strength work, sport specific conditioning, and general conditioning. I'll keep it up until it stops working. "Everything works for some of the time. Nothing works forever." I'm always looking for something better and have a couple of leads.
BRC has a pretty good crack setup for training. #2 is a trick I picked up from Timy Fairfield. The better bouldering section was closed for setting so I forced to climb in the older, shorter, more awkward section. The idea is to "distill" boulder problems to their essence, reduce superfluous holds and movements. It is makes old problems new and easy problems hard.
I did #3 in the newer section. I was not able to flash everything. However, I was able to send problems with feet that fit my body size. Are all routesetters micro? #5-7, 10 was my gymnastics training, seeing nice linear gains. #8 & #10 were Mountain Athlete inspired.
I'm tired and looking forward to Thanksgiving. I'm thankful for a lifestyle that allows to me to pursue my adventures and this blog.
Nov 23, 2009
Taos, NM, Questa Dome
Damnation, V2, flash (stand, weird possible sds)
Girl Scout, V2, 2nd go (Wizard-style)
Betty Crooker, V1, flash (I heart pockets)
The Bean, V0, flash (1 move wonder)
The Be-In, V0, flash (HARD, nearly broke my frozen wrists on the mantle)
Unnamed, Vo, flash (slab, no hands)
Problems Tried: Pan Flute, V3, 1 try (stupid fall)
Chef-boy-arte, v6, 1 try (pile of small, sharp pockets)
Varisty, V7, 2 tries (slabish, cranked so hard on the nothingness I hurt my hand)
Nov 22, 2009
Taos, NM, Dead Cholla Wall
Unknown, 10-, Onsight (trad, between games and corrida del norte)
Corrida Del Norte, 11, Onsight (slab)
Unknown, 10+, Onsight (trad, left of corrida del norte, hardest trad to date)
Routes Tried: Games, 10+, Bailed (half up realized I needed gear, didn't try again)
Dead Cholla Wall
My Favorite Cam
It shows
After we went to Taos Pueblo, the oldest continuously inhabited community in the USA. What stood out most was the contrast between my life and what I observed. My life is technology heavy, e.g. laptops, internet, and remote working. While the Pueblo is still evolving, e.g. propane tanks, it appears technology light, e.g. wood burning stoves. I was fascinated by the amazing art, a common theme for the entire Taos region.
Nov 21, 2009
Taos, NM, My 1st V10 & Other Adventures
All problems on Warm-up boulder
Righthand Arete, V1, flash (easier to jump start but did 1 hardish move into jugs, sds is double digits)
Unnamed #1 R2D2 boulder, V3, flash (still warming up, hard to try)
Unnamed #3 R2D2 boulder, V5, 2nd go (sds, varied, R2D2 makes no sense)
Problems Tried: Good roadtrip tactics sent everything
C3P0 is my first V10 and suited me perfectly. It starts on a bad pinch and crimp, make a large move to fair-sized mono, followed by several hard crimp bumps and with a chill top out. I played the game well, broke it down and put it back together. I quickly did all the individual moves and refined my beta. I rested for about 5 minutes before taking burns from the start. It took 3 burns, in total all under 1 hour. It might be soft but I'm taking it. Just another step along the journey.
Nov 18, 2009
All Adaptation is Undulating
2) Technique, Heels Down, 15 minutes
3) Technique, Dynos, 15 minutes
4) Work, hard problems, 20 minutes
5) Open Hand, System Board Ladder, Upper Left/Upper Right
6) 1/2 Crimp, System Board Ladder, #2
7) Wide Moves, System Board Ladder, Skip 1 up & 1 over
8) Technique, Heels Down, 15 minutes
9) A bunch of gymnastics at home.
Notes: Last workout before the roadtrip and I dropped the hammer. I'm still fired up about Vern's blog. I tried to design a session in his style. I was able to flash all the new problems as a part of an extended warm-up (expect for a couple of dabs). I surprised myself during #4 by linking several very difficult sections together. Seeing the results of simple, progressable strength training. #5-7 basic climbing strength, I do a ladder of 4 moves and rest 1:00.
I was really tired by #8. Perfect time to reinforce technique. I want to climb well when I'm tried so train it. I choose a dead vertical slopey traverse with micro feet. I got PUMPED. The gym got crowded at the end, 5:00 pm, making further training difficult.
Nov 17, 2009
Pillow Queen
5X10s
2) 1/2 crimp, 2-arm, Hard Side Middle sloper
5x10s
Notes: At my home board, Pusher Power Junkie (the best hangboard). I felt like increasing the volume (increase sets and time under tension) and lower the intensity (increase hold size), intuitive training decision. I need a big change, e.g. a great project, a roadtrip, or a homeboard. I'm dangerously close to a plateau.
An offhand remark on Military Athlete lead me to Vern Gambetta. His whole blog, especially this post got me thinking about strength and conditioning for climbing. For example, another climbing strength and conditioning coach advocates 20 minute pull-up only workouts and 4 minutes on/4 minutes off climbing interval. What are you training with that? Who needs to do that many pull-ups? Whose redpoint burn lasts 4 minutes? This guy redpoints a 9a in less time, including shaking out. In addition, he barely does anything resembling a pull-up. Most climbs are little bits of serious business (with some medium bits before/after), then onroute recovery. Your train should reflect that.
Arthur's Rock, i hate places without guidebooks
Last Resort (?), V5(?) (not hard, not a good 2nd warm-up)
Unknown, V6(?) (pile but dry, lowball dab fest that didn't top out)
Problems Tried: Double Clutch, V7/8 (66.66% wet, including a puddle in one of the jugs)
Notes: I haven't climbed at Arthur's Rock despite the fact I can see it from my bedroom window, the primary reason being there is not a guidebook. When I go climbing, I actually like climbing. Weird. I decided to sack up and climb anyways with the scant information gleamed from the internet. It was still wet and icy from the recent storms and gets almost no sun. The rock is solid but low quality, better than Carter Lake/worse than anything I'm developing on the Poudre. I spent most of the day wandering/sliding around. It was a fun day outside but devoid of meaningful climbing.
I plan to improve the lack of information situation.
Nov 15, 2009
Volume over Reason
2) Open hand, 1-arm switches, Flat Sloper
3) 1/2 crimp, System board ladder, #2
4) Circuit of hard problems, all repeats, 30 minutes
5) 7 rounds
Rowing, 30 on/30 off
Notes: 3rd day on but felt fine. The last two days were diagnostic and found I should deprioritize full crimp training. I didn't push too hard but still got a dose. I want to stabilize the new 1-arm training before pushing to the next level. Compare #3 to full crimping.
I throw in some high intensity interval training, HIIT, #5 at the end. (Sidenote - I pull like a mother from all the Oly training.) I have been doing Steady State, SS, cardio on "rest" days in an effort to lose some weight. Along with tightening up my diet, I have lost 5 pounds since my final Weightlifting Competition. My goal is to lose another 5 pounds by the start of my Thanksgiving roadtrip.
Nov 14, 2009
Leet Speak
2) Boulder, 1.5 hours
3) 4x4 (Adv+, Adv-, Adv, Int+)
rest 1:1 (2:30)
4) Muscle-ups, sited, 2X3
5) Back lever, pike bicycle, X3
6) 3 rounds
Plank, 1-arm, X2
Pull-ups, 1-arm assisted, X3(2)
Last Round, #6
Notes: Switched it up and went to Boulder Rock Club. I spent the beginning of the session working underclings, which was hard because there very few underclings (mostly juggy start holds).
I was able to flash most of their "elite" problems. I didn't top out all the problems. I have a double-overhead rule for training. I won't boulder higher than twice my height because IT IS STUPID TO HURT YOURSELF TRAINING. I didn't even try the token fat pinch problem. I feel like I have graduated to training at CATS.
I'm starting a gymnastic cycle. Dan John advocates lots of exposure for novice weightlifters, aka "If it is important, do it everyday." I'm taking the same approach to my novice gymnastics. I'm creating a "gymnastic routine". #4 is designed to take the kip out of my mu (a bad CrossFit habit). I suck at #5 compared my front lever.
Nov 13, 2009
Postage Stamp Rule
Notes: Friday night at The Spot, boulder's/Boulder's version of Mt. Meru. I'm hoping campusboard, fingerboard, and doses of hard bouldering will have a synergistic effect on my climbing. I was able to flash a couple 5 spot minuses and 5 spots (their grading scale is 1 spot-5 spot). More important than the problems I flashed were the problems I sent 2nd or 3rd try, after I improved my climbing movement. I did find a new weakness - underclings, or undercuts if you are British. Another one to add to the ever growing list.
Nov 12, 2009
PMA Wall, the PJs
Stupid Happy With Everything, Project, Red (clip first 2 bolts of FBNC, bust right into powerful climbing)
Coffee & Angst, Project, Green (traverse along the lip of cave, then up)
Look Who They Let In The Backdoor, 11d, Yellow (sustained climbing leads to a CRUX, then mellow climbing to the chains)
These projects are hard (for me), I can't even do all of the moves. The direct lines, denoted by the dotted lines, are futurist.
Nov 11, 2009
Shouldn't They Call It Department of Offense
Left Hand, 0, 0, 0, 0
Right Hand, +5, +5, +5, +5
2) 1/2 crimp, 2-arm hang, small edge
+75, +75, +75
3) Full crimp, system board ladder, #0 (!!!)
4) Wide ladder, skip one panel up/skip one panel over
lower right, upper right
5) 1-arm pull-up
6) 4 rounds
Climb cave Adv. problem
up & down x 2
rest 1:1
7) 4 rounds
Systemboard
lower right, up
jugs, down x 2
rest 1:1
Notes: I'm starting to become "locked-in" into the current training, 1 on /1 off. Increase strength and maintain technique and fitness. The hangboard is hung too low to add more weight to #2. That pissed me off and I harnessed my rage during #3. My training goal was to do a ladder with #0 by Christmas. I need a new goal.
I hate pull-ups. I can barely motivate myself to 1 or 2 1-arm pull-ups. I'm a believer in doing the opposite. I see climbers in the gym doing pull-ups all the time. I see the same climbers pull(up) themselves off problems and routes. I'm throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
The conditioning work basically sucked, #6 & #7. It was too hectic, peoplewise, trying to down climb in the cave. I'll just stick the systemboard.
Nov 9, 2009
Verschlimmbesserung
1-4
2-1-3
2-1-4(!)
2) Drops, Medium Rungs
4-1-4
3) Ladders, Large Rungs
1-4-7(f)
1-2-6
1-3-7(f)
4) Ladders, Small Rungs
1-3-5 X 2
5) System Board, Crimp Ladder, #1, Pull-Through (!!)
6) 1 Arm pull-up, System Board Jug
7) Metolius Hangboard, Flat Sloper, 1 Arm switches
8) 4 rounds
30/30 Continuous Hangboard Movement
Notes: I hit the peak of humanity at the gym and had to stick to the apparatuses. Re-introducing drops. I believe the science but I still don't know if they are good for me. I suck at pulling through on the campus board. I barely pulled 1-2-6. My fingers feel strong, #4 , and are getting stronger.
The Metolius Hangboard was rehung perpendicular to the ground. It makes scientific training difficult when the training equipment changes. I will have to add lots of weight for hangs, but I can do stuff like #6 & #7. Rob Shaul has his athletes do 10 rounds. 4 rounds is enough for me, the quality of effort decreases too much for rounds after that.
Fable Boulders, Asgard Sector
Projects abound:
In addition, I found another entirely new crag with potential for 30-50 new routes. I'll write about that in another post. Simply, the potential is mind blowing.