One Month 'til Indian Creek: can you help me plan my last month of training?
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I'm a (Squamish) 5.10 climber, never been to the Creek, never climbed sandstone splitters. This will be my eighth season, so I've had lots of mileage on crack climbs and am not so much worried about training my crack technique as getting my endurance up. Most of my crack failures last year were from endurance and the mental game, not strength or technique. |
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powercompanyclimbing.com/20…
Here is a good place to start. I really like the writing on this blog and the training plan he proposes seems really solid (though I have little experience with sandstone splitter, so take my psyche with a grain of salt) |
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My first lead at the creek did not go well. I hung several times. After a day or two, you figure out the keys to climbing at the creek: |
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Mark Roberts wrote:b) increase my ARC output. Once or twice a week I've trained endurance for the last few months, and I've gotten up to 36 minutes on the wall. I started moving on to 4x4s, but am starting to reconsider. 36 minutes is good for me, but I feel like this still isn't good enough, and I want to probably be doing 2x30min or 3x30min by the time we hit the road? I generally train this in a bouldering gym with an emphasis of moving perfectly statically, using small holds until I get pumped, then shake on jugs every few minutes.Aim for 10 20min. ARC sessions a week for the 3.5 weeks you have before you rest. The most efficient way is to do 20min. ARC, rest 20min., then another 20min. ARC and call it. Climbing statically is inefficient so you probably don't want to practice it. Mark Roberts wrote: . . . I think if I can get more used to lead falls it will help me climb higher above my gear, helping my efficiency on the wall. (I decked a few years ago after some gear popped, and still struggle with leading as a result...This is the biggest thing climbers can do to improve their performance. |
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frankstoneline wrote:http://www.powercompanyclimbing.com/2013/02/reader-questions-clock-is-ticking.html Here is a good place to start. I really like the writing on this blog and the training plan he proposes seems really solid (though I have little experience with sandstone splitter, so take my psyche with a grain of salt)I actually did read that blog post already, but thank you. It does seem to be tailor-made to address my questions. However, I thought it was strange that he mentioned that people don't have all the time in the world to train, then suggested a six-day-a-week training regimen, with some sessions being five hours long. I do not have six days a week to train. I have a girlfriend, non girl friends, etc. I also found the emphasis on hang-boarding counterintuitive for prepping for 5.10s in the Creek, but I'm no expert. |
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Mark Roberts wrote: . I also found the emphasis on hang-boarding counterintuitive for prepping for 5.10s in the Creek, but I'm no expert.I generally agree with that criticism of the article. I think that the author has fallen a bit too in love with his hangboard, and is reccomending it for a situation where it doesn't make too much sense. At this point, the emphasis on endurance is good. Being able to do a hard, crimpy move is meaningless for creek 5.10-5.11, so don't wory about power; every hold will be a hand jam. Forearm endurance and core fitness, along with good technique and tactics, are what matters. Since you are a Squamish climber, we can assume that your crack technique is solid. The most IC-like pitch in Squish that I can think of is the Split Pillar, just to give you an idea of what you are preparing for. At 5.10 in IC, you'll basically only be climbing hands, tight hands, wide hands, and fists; don't worry about training for fingerlocks (or crimps, for that matter), since all the IC finger cracks are 5.12 anyway. As such, what you really want work on is forearm endurance and core strength. For a variety of reasons, I think that IC climbs steeper than it is. Although it is generally dead-vertical, it climbs like it was 15-20 degrees overhanging, in the way that it is pumpy, and works the back muscles. This is especially true of routes that require laybacking. As such, prepare as if you were training not for vertical crimp routes, but more for slightly overhanging endurance jug hauling. A hand jam really isn't all that different than a jug. Anyway, you'll get the most benefit out of --ARCing for pure endurance --Leading routes in the gym on a slightly to moderately overhanging wall for power endurance and mental/leading training. This will also work the back and core. Take some falls. --Some cardio, to drop some weight and for leg fitness (calf pump and fatigue can definately be a factor on long IC routes). Do soem core work too (planks, levers, etc etc). --If it ever stops raining, get up to Squamish and run laps on a steep, straight-in crack --Don't worry about it too much. The great thing about the Creek is how unique it is, but it also makes it harder to prepare for. No matter what you do, there will be some learning curve when you arrive. That is why you go to the Creek, after all. However, if you show up with good jamming skills, good endurance, and good general body fitness, you'll do just fine. If you are solid on steep 5.10 hand cracks in Squamish, you'll feel right at home on Creek 5.10. |
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As an aside, I assume you've climbed the Split Pillar? If so, that's pretty similar to a creek 5.10-. That's the closest thing to an IC corner I've personally come across except for the routes down here at Trout Creek. So how you've handled the Split Pillar will probably be a good prediction of how you'll handle many 10-s at the creek. |
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don't waste time placing right off the ground climb ten feet then place . have plenty of cams . don't be worried about falling. get on climbs that suite yer style . and just cuz it's not in the book don't not get on it.go to out of the way crags that have less people an you might have the crag to yer self. |
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Losing 5 pounds - agreed! Go there leaner is a big part of it. Instead of switching from wine to beer - consider take more nights off drinking. I love to drink! - but would rather send! |
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Train power endurance more than general endurance. Cut down on the ARC sessions and get a forearm pump going much faster. IC pitches are short. It sounds like you're training for a marathon when you need to train for sprinting. |
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i think probably the most important thing you can do at this point is to do some foot preparation. first, and foremost, make sure you have a pair of comfortable shoes that aren't tight. if you can't put as much weight on your feet as possible, you are going to be in for a rough time. luckily, you probably climb at squamish a fair amount, so your feet are probably used to climbing cracks, and you probably have some loose shoes. |
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Mark Roberts wrote: I actually did read that blog post already, but thank you. It does seem to be tailor-made to address my questions. However, I thought it was strange that he mentioned that people don't have all the time in the world to train, then suggested a six-day-a-week training regimen, with some sessions being five hours long. I do not have six days a week to train. I have a girlfriend, non girl friends, etc. I also found the emphasis on hang-boarding counterintuitive for prepping for 5.10s in the Creek, but I'm no expert.Many of the workouts he proposes could be tailored to your time. Hangboarding doesnt have to take 2 hours, could be done in 45 minutes while cooking dinner or when you wake up. Also he suggests building a crack hangboard, so it seems to me it would be quite applicable. That said, "not a lot of time to workout" is a very relative thing, as is whether or not you are willing to sacrifice some socializing in favor of prepping for a trip (note: I'm not trying to pass judgement). That said, if you want to avoid a hangboard and squamish is still...well, squamish it seems like the outlined ARC'ing and general cardio if you wish to drop some pounds are a good idea. |
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step 1) Ditch gym membership for working out in garage. Buy more cams. |
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If most of the stuff you'll be climbing is straight in stuff (vs. liebacking a corner) and it's too soggy outside, just build a crack machine and make sure you're not neglecting your arm and upper back strength. I find modest use of dumbbells really helps when I'm not at the gym all the time. Really the most critical thing is making sure your crack technique is solid. Lots of folks waste lots of energy (and skin!) with sloppy jams and footwork. As long as you're reasonably fit and know how to jam, 5.10 at the Creek isn't that bad. The most painful part is springing for all those cams. Some easier .11s like Pente and Excuse Stations take huge racks. |
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Mark: |
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Thanks for the feedback everybody. Yeah, I don't have room for a hangboard or anything like it in my place anyhow, all the door frames are weird that way. It's frustrating. |
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you are going to have a blast down there! |
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Slam your hand in a car door. Drink a PBR. Now your foot in the door and another barley soda. Repeat the process until it doesn't hurt anymore. Maybe sand the skin off your knuckles and the backs of your hands if your looking to really push it. And fried chicken-and probably whiskey. I'm pretty sure they're involved. And somebody said something about tape; fuck that shit though-it's aid. |
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Mark Roberts wrote: I thought the most important advice that I'd never considered was that about training at 10-20% overhang. This actually makes a lot of sense, as if I'm training on vertical then I'm hanging on crimps and slopers, both of which I can do for a long time and won't be useful in the Creek.Yeah, there is a physicallity to Creek climbing that you generally don't find on vertical face climbs; overhanging jug hauling gives a better approximation. |
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One word. Tabata. |
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Take a hammer in one hand and smash the other hand repeatedly. You'll be climbing 5.11- in no time. |