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Can climbing be too safe?

Dom Caron · · Welsford, New Brunswick Canada · Joined Dec 2007 · Points: 1,370

Crazy how gyms in North America make you jump through hoops to be able to climb Meanwhile in France, the gyms I went to didn't require a belay test and everything was lead only.

What pisses me off with Insurance companies,(someone from that domain correct me if I'm wrong) is they put Mountaineering, trad climbing, soloing, sport climbing, gym climbing, etc. in the same equation. There's a world of difference between Walking on Snow at 25 000 FT. and climbing a bolted route.

Rob Baumgartner · · Niwot · Joined Jul 2009 · Points: 196

Ryan, did you drop Elena AGAIN?!?!

Ryan N · · Bellingham, WA · Joined May 2009 · Points: 195

^^^good one Rob. Elena is fine. Though I did consider dropping her to prove a point once. She's safe for the moment...

H BL · · Colorado · Joined Feb 2006 · Points: 95

I think gym rats have to treat everyone the same. I've been tying my figure 8 the same since 1991, taken many falls and never had an issue with it. (I may have bounced off ledges and banged some ice, but never an issue with the knot). I went to the fairly new gym here in the Springs once and had my knot questioned.

Back in college I worked at a gym back on Long Island. Me and 3 other people had "real world" climbing experience. (I liked the pro deals) The rest of the workers never climbed outside.

Don't take it to heart. If you've survived this long you must be doing something right.

H BL · · Colorado · Joined Feb 2006 · Points: 95
Dom wrote:Crazy how gyms in North America make you jump through hoops to be able to climb Meanwhile in France, the gyms I went to didn't require a belay test and everything was lead only. What pisses me off with Insurance companies,(someone from that domain correct me if I'm wrong) is they put Mountaineering, trad climbing, soloing, sport climbing, gym climbing, etc. in the same equation. There's a world of difference between Walking on Snow at 25 000 FT. and climbing a bolted route.
Insurance companies do just that. I'm in the business. One of the questions they ask... "In the next 2 years will the proposed insured engage in any motorsports racing, boat racing, parachuting, skydiving, hang gliding, base jumping, rock or mountain climbing?" Even hiking a 14'er is considered "mountain climbing."

They live by statistics and want to minimize their risks. I can't blame them, but it leads me to wonder how statistics on climbing accidents are gathered. Reason I'm curious is generally the news will call some tourista who got hurt a "climber." Happens quite often in GofG's. To me if that is counted then the #'s will be skewed.

When I got new health insurance, I guess there was something in my medical records about ice climbing. I've never been hurt climbing to the point it required a hospital visit or doctor's visit. They questioned where I climbed, how high, gear/ropes used, how long i've been climbing and some other funny questions.
Bootz Ylectric · · Las Vegas, NV · Joined Apr 2012 · Points: 165
Buff Johnson wrote:What did they say when you pulled out the belay knife?
LOL!!!!
KevinCO · · Loveland, CO · Joined Mar 2006 · Points: 60

Last time I went to a gym, they taught my partner (a beginner) to hold the rope forward at an unbraked angle. Later, she almost dropped me...fell almost half the distance of the wall.

I had explained to them that it was keeping the rope unbraked most of the time, but they said that they would not certify us any other way. This was in Boulder about 11-12 yrs ago.

slk · · Reno, NV · Joined Jan 2011 · Points: 130

3 words. Fuck the Gym!!!

ChristopherAust · · Ohio · Joined Jul 2012 · Points: 25
KevinCO wrote:Last time I went to a gym, they taught my partner (a beginner) to hold the rope forward at an unbraked angle. Later, she almost dropped me...fell almost half the distance of the wall. I had explained to them that it was keeping the rope unbraked most of the time, but they said that they would not certify us any other way. This was in Boulder about 11-12 yrs ago.
Sorry, my life is worth more than being certified to climb at a gym. The interesting thing is there's the main gym I climb at and they teach one method but certify all sorts of methods, so if you really want someone to belay you that takes their brake-hand off the rope and switches hands a lot to belay, you can do that. Buyer beware sort of thing I guess. But it makes it tricky because you have to really watch someone belay first before you want to go up on a wall with them catching. If you're new and you don't have any friends, it can be quite daunting I guess. But why would you go to a gym in Boulder? Aren't there real rocks out that way?
KevinCO · · Loveland, CO · Joined Mar 2006 · Points: 60
swordfishes wrote: Sorry, my life is worth more than being certified to climb at a gym. The interesting thing is there's the main gym I climb at and they teach one method but certify all sorts of methods, so if you really want someone to belay you that takes their brake-hand off the rope and switches hands a lot to belay, you can do that. Buyer beware sort of thing I guess. But it makes it tricky because you have to really watch someone belay first before you want to go up on a wall with them catching. If you're new and you don't have any friends, it can be quite daunting I guess. But why would you go to a gym in Boulder? Aren't there real rocks out that way?
The exact answer I gave to my prospective partner the day before when he didn't want to climb outside in the cold. Back then I was climbing with my step-daughter in December. I had taken her climbing outside a few times before, so had given her the intro lessons. The gym instructions contradicted those previous lessons and she followed that 'authority'.
ChristopherAust · · Ohio · Joined Jul 2012 · Points: 25
KevinCO wrote: The exact answer I gave to my prospective partner the day before when he didn't want to climb outside in the cold. Back then I was climbing with my step-daughter in December. I had taken her climbing outside a few times before, so had given her the intro lessons. The gym instructions contradicted those previous lessons and she followed that 'authority'.
It's hard for most people to go against authority, even if they know it's wrong. For instance: Milgram Experiment
Tony B · · Around Boulder, CO · Joined Jan 2001 · Points: 24,665
Ryan N wrote:^^^good one Rob. Elena is fine. Though I did consider dropping her to prove a point once. She's safe for the moment...
No point required. Just do it.

On a more serious note... With relevance to the OP: What is probably going on there is like ISO 9000. They have a procedure, their insurance requires that they follow it. They do not allow jr staff to waive or make deviations from the requirement.

I was given all kinds of belay advice from a teenager working the counter at a Swedish climbing gym once. I'd suspect I've been leading and belaying trad since her parents were in their teens. Anyway, she didn't like me wrapping the rope on my brake hand (ice climbing style) by way of example, so I quit doing it for her. She watched Jo and I like hawks for a while and eventually figured out that we were OK.
Sometimes it will be about a back-up knot on your figure 8. Whatever... it's not actually safer, it's just a condition of their insurance, and they are required to do it 'just so.'
John Husky · · Unknown Hometown · Joined May 2011 · Points: 5

The gym is a place where maybe you have to go in order to climb once in a while. It is definately not a place to go learn how to climb.

Try having a thicker skin and assume that some spotty college kid is going to give you a silly critique.

Ryan N · · Bellingham, WA · Joined May 2009 · Points: 195

I get it the point. I'm at a gym I gotta deal with gym rules. No big deal. Is this not the place to come and bitch about absolutely nothing to people I don't know?

Blissab · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Dec 2009 · Points: 5
Dom wrote:What pisses me off with Insurance companies,(someone from that domain correct me if I'm wrong) is they put Mountaineering, trad climbing, soloing, sport climbing, gym climbing, etc. in the same equation. There's a world of difference between Walking on Snow at 25 000 FT. and climbing a bolted route.
It's because insurance companies think that its all "Mountain Climbing".

Ever try to obtain life insurance, when the insurance agent has seen your pictures on the wall and knows that you "Mountain Climb"...oh by the way, my O2 bottle is empty.

On another note, has anyone experienced Carabiners in New Bedford, MA...their registration form is more extensive than signing mortgage papers.
Tradiban · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Apr 2004 · Points: 11,610
Ryan N wrote:I've been climbing for some years now. I have come to accept the risk that my adventure seeking behavior comes with. During a recent trip to a climbing gym both my leading style and my belaying style were put under heavy critique while taking a lead test. I'm not an unsafe climber myself, and while climbing rock, ice, and alpine routes all over the western US I have never had an accident. I have had a number of close calls and mini epics but have always got myself and partner out with no physical harm( sometimes a hurt ego), but always got home safe. There are many different ways in climbing to do it the "right" way. So is it more important to use the method that you are more comfortable with, or the newest "accepted" way of climbing? My point is I believe that climbing can become too safe at a risk to the climber by putting too much attention on mundane details and not enough on the situation at hand. Being able to be versatile in my climbing techniques allows me to choose certain methods for certain situations. Thoughts? I know I'm gonna die.
Ignore the bullshit in the gym, employees just gotta do as they are told. BTW, the insurance excuse for this behavior is a lie, it's just as excuse to make you comply. I know, I've used it to make uppity "climbers" from CO STFU about how they know how to climb because they are from ColoRADo. Must insurance companies understand that they don't understand climbing and don't push specific practices, they just want to see that a standard has been created and taught to the peon staff.

That said, YES the strict attention to mundane details causes people to worry more about those details and how to do them step by step, rather than actually using their brains. The key to being a safe climber is about judgement and no instruction booklet can teach you that.

I was once in a gym somewhere and wanted to lead but yea, had to take the test, but it just so happen that one of the mags had a sweet shot of me sending due to an article about my local area. So I picked it up out of the display on the counter, flipped to the appropriate page, stuck my gnarled climber finger onto the page and snarled to the hapless teenager behind the desk, "Here's my fucking lead test." Then smiled and happily took the convoluted test belaying the way he wanted me to and passed with flying colors. In other words, feel free to fuck with dopey gym employees a bit but ultimately just take the test and belay they way they want you to and STFU.
Guideline #1: Don't be a jerk.

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