Sunday, August 25, 2013

A Tale of Two Sports

First, a warning: I'm pretty caffeinated and I'm about to write something about the differences between Gym and Rock Climbing.

Second, I use the word "Sport" loosely and mostly because it makes the title sound nice and might trick you all into thinking I am well-read and witty.

Here we go...


I went to college in Colorado. I was able to climb rocks almost every day. Blah, blah, blah, it was great, then I graduated, now I've been living in Maryland again for over a year. Since moving back to Maryland I have probably spent less than 20 days rock climbing and at least 200 days gym climbing. Compare that to the year before, in Colorado, where those figures were pretty much flipped. In the past 2 years the pendulum has swung dramatically, giving me what I think is an interesting perspective (not unique, just interesting). Especially as I look forward to my imminent move BACK to Colorado in 2 weeks, where the pendulum will hopefully begin to settle somewhere in the middle.

It seems obvious to me, but I'll go ahead and say it just so we're all on the same page:

GYM CLIMBING AND ROCK CLIMBING ARE DIFFERENT.

(Okay, I shouted it. Because every so often I need to remind myself too.)

Sure, they're pretty similar: You grip, you pull, then repeat, and I'm sure your feet are probably doing something too. Though I would submit that this is where the similarities end and the two activities diverge, sharply.

Lets explore.



Yay plastic!
Gym Climbing:  It is so fun! Especially as a routesetter. You get to grab and step on ergonomic shapes,  rip your body through space, and explore any move you can imagine. It is climbing, simple and distilled. Every hold protrudes obviously from the wall, brightly colored and marked with tape (usually). Each route and boulder problem was set for YOU, to be comfortable, relatively safe, and fun. Oh yeah, and difficult. Gym climbing is difficult. Whether you are squeezing the juice out of a pinch or bruising your fingertips on small crimps, gym climbing will WORK you. Gym climbing will make you a strong climber. It will even make you a good climber, a good gym climber at least.



Yay rocks!
Rock Climbing: Even more fun! Not just fun though. Interesting, frustrating, scary, painful, uncomfortable, all the good stuff. Though, what constantly and consistently strikes me as the most defining characteristic of rock climbing is the SUBTLETY. Shifting a hand position by a few degrees can make an impossible move easy. Adjusting the amount and direction that pressure is applied to a foot can make a small, seemingly insignificant, rough patch of rock the key to unlocking an entire boulder problem or route. You know all those crazy moves you imagine and set in the gym? Those moves are already out there. Along with a ton of other moves and holds you can't imagine, but can only discover. Rock climbing will make you a stronger climber, a smarter climber, and a better climber...a better rock climber.

I recently had a conversation with my girlfriend who was frustrated because she didn't feel like the gym was preparing her properly for outdoor climbing. She went to the New River Gorge, was working on a certain grade, came back to the gym, got stronger, went back to the NRG, and was still working on the same grade! How could that be?!

My response: How could that NOT be?

Training in the gym and then expecting to be a better rock climber is like spending hours perfecting your Guitar Hero skillz, picking up a real guitar, and expecting to be able to play the same songs. It just doesn't work like that. Guitar hero might help with your coordination and finger dexterity, and you need those things to play guitar, but you are missing everything else. And it's everything else, that makes playing the guitar, playing the guitar.

Training in a gym will make you strong. It will help you with basic sequencing. You will learn general technique and grip positioning. You'll learn how to try hard, how to heel-hook, how to toe-hook. You get the basics. And you NEED the basics, but what you're missing is everything else. The uncomfortable holds, the cryptic sequences, the minuscule foot holds, the weird body positions, the awkwardness, the fear, the SUBTLETY. It's all of those things that make rock climbing, rock climbing. It's all those things that the gym won't prepare you for.

Routesetters are constantly berated for how their work compares to rock climbing:

"There is NO WAY that is 5.9!"
"That would be 5.12a at The Red!"
"Yeah, but you would NEVER do that move outside!"
"All the grades in here are SO sandbagged compared to outside."
"All the grades in here are SO soft compared to outside."
"Yeah, that would be V2 at Horsepens."
"Dude, that V8 would be V11 at Hueco!"
"Bro, have you ever even BEEN to The Red!?"

Hey guys...chill. It's different. If you want to go rock climbing, go rock climbing. If you want get strong, train for comps, not lose all of your technique, have a good time, get pumped, satisfy your addiction until your next trip, flex at the girls on the treadmills, then come on in to the gym.

I hope it doesn't seem like I am bashing gym climbing, because I LOVE gym climbing. Hell, I even like comps! But I recognize and accept that it is not rock climbing.

I've been training in the gym for the past year. My body is stronger than it has ever been. But my last few bouldering excursions have been frustrating. My mind is weak. I feel uncoordinated. I have trouble seeing and feeling the body positions. It takes me longer to adapt to novel movements. I don't trust my feet enough. The list goes on... The only way I can improve these things it to climb on rocks more. For the ExPhys nerds, it all goes back to the SAID Principle. The Specific Adaptation to Imposed Demands. The body can only adapt to the demands you place on it and it adapts very specifically. Rock climbing and gym climbing are different stimuli and you body adapts accordingly.

Is this horse dead enough? I sure hope so. I'm going to go work on my van.





Monday, August 19, 2013

A Bit of Boulderin'

     Ross and I went out into the wood to try to climb Nicodemus (V12). This was my second session on the boulder and Ross' first. We both got close, but there is one stopper move that we just couldn't get with any consistency. The crimps are very small and skin intensive. After a few tries it is really hard to make yourself bear down enough to make the move.

The crux of Nicodemus

Ross, gettin' his "Ggrrr" on.


     I was able to send the right start variation though, so that was nice. From Tim Rose's blog I think the problem is called "Right Hand of the Leper" FA by Fernando. I did the problem in essentially 2 moves. One giant move off 2 decent crimps to a bad-ish right handed crimp, then I put my left foot by my left hand and cranked straight to the jug flake. The left hand moves about 7ft in a fraction of a second, super powerful, and wicked fun. My total guess on a grade would be V9 or V10, but I think the most accurate grade would be Vcrimp-jump. Whatever that means.

Move 1
Move 2

Done. Jugs to top out.

After my skin thickens up again I plan on heading out at least one more time before I leave MD to try to get Nicodemus DONE.

Almost Done!

Well, I'm 2 1/2 weeks out from my departure date and the van is almost done! All of the major construction is finished. All that remains is:

- Some minor trim work around the vent fans and the back door
- Attach the curtains to the back windows
- Rig the insulated divider to separate the living area from the driving area
- Attach the awning storage to the ladder racks

I decided to wait on adding an auxiliary battery due to budget restrictions. I'm not too worried though, this is still an outrageous upgrade from my coffin-like Tacoma living area. Here are some pictures of the nearly finished product.








I think I am most proud of this super-classy mahogany counter/workspace/storage shelf. The bungee cords are removable and do a great job of restraining the contents of the shelves while still allowing ease of access.