I'm bouldering at 7A now and I know I'm strong enough for the moves up to F7b/+'s it's just the harrowing pump and powering out stopping me progressing.
5 x 40 moves, 2 minutes rest between. 5 sets with 10 minutes rest between, doing this twice a week. Really helped on my last trip and something I'll be continuing to do, I don't find it too boring really. . .
Apologies if this isn't you but sorting your head might help? I found that teaching myself to climb effectively when pumped was really important, to be able to breathe and not panic because the lactic was coming on. I've always been jealous of my mates who 'ride the pump' and love the fight so I'm trying to embrace it. I don't know how you'd go about this on your fingerboard setup though.
Quote from: GuyVG on April 09, 2013, 11:27:17 am5 x 40 moves, 2 minutes rest between. 5 sets with 10 minutes rest between, doing this twice a week. Really helped on my last trip and something I'll be continuing to do, I don't find it too boring really. . .Thanks for the reply, that workout sounds good, as I tried the 3mins on 3 mins off and I could only manage 1 minute 10. Think I'd manage the 40 moves. Sounds good, surprisingly I don't find it boring either, feels quite addictive actually...Do you complete the whole workout (feeling boxed I imagine) or go until failure?
as I have a tendency to go a bit scrappy with the feet when I'm on the edge!
I'd be struggling to finish each set, after the 2nd or 3rd, but do finish them which seemed about right. I used to do 1min30 on with 4/5 minutes rest and do this 4 times but I couldn't really complete this at all, also got told the rest was too long.
Hi LukeI started doing this about 3 weeks ago leading on from the two month endurance thread. I started pretty much where you are, (sets of about 1.30-1.40 and totally blasted). I changed my target to 2 mins on 3 mins off, after about a week and a half I achieved a full set of 3 x 2 mins, then have been adding 15 seconds as I have got fitter and am now doing sets of 3 x 2.30 on 3 mins rest. The transfer to outside has been the amazing and I have found it has given me the extra bit to finish things off, rather than powerout and fall off the last hard move.
This look pretty good to me.You have a fitness period which will help build and base followed by a higher intensity period.I'm a believer that what you are training needs to be strongly aligned with your goals, otherwise you may loose direction/motivation. I say this because you are trying to train everything at once in the second 4 weeks when perhaps you could be more focused towards a goal?Your sessions add up to 6 a week. this is a lot. Rest is important and 1 day a week doesn't seem a lot. Aerocap can be done at the end of a session giving you more rest days.The adaptation times that racksteady quotes seem very long. I would say 4 weeks of laddering on a campus 3 times a week and you see a significant improvement.go to it!
Regarding the adaption times, if what Rocksteady has quoted rings true would that mean you would need to consistently train AnCap for 4 months for it to have significant improvement?
This look pretty good to me.You have a fitness period which will help build and base followed by a higher intensity period....The adaptation times that racksteady quotes seem very long. I would say 4 weeks of laddering on a campus 3 times a week and you see a significant improvement.
I'm not an expert, just quoting what I understand to be the foundation of most British climbers' understanding of this stuff.
Just to clarify what the point of AnCap is, am I right in saying it's getting the body used to flushing out lactic acid much like interval training in running and other sports?
That's how I would describe aerocap.
I thought (and i'm probably wrong):
2 x (30 moves 2 mins rest x 3 - Rest 5 minutes)3 x (40 moves 2 mins rest x 3 - Rest 5 minutes)Took about an hour in total.
Quote from: Luke Owens on April 11, 2013, 08:55:42 am2 x (30 moves 2 mins rest x 3 - Rest 5 minutes)3 x (40 moves 2 mins rest x 3 - Rest 5 minutes)Took about an hour in total.So doing the backwards math to figure out rest/work ratio, this comes out to about 45 minutes of resting and 15 minutes of work over the course of an hour? And the 15 minutes of work is broken into 15 different segments, meaning you're doing 30-40 moves in a minute followed by 2 minutes rest? Was this on a hangboard or campus rungs? If so, go to timed instead of moves as the moves are very fast due to no or very little foot movement. If not, then my math/understanding must be off, because 30-40 moves a minute is wicked fast climbing.From a generic standpoint, anaerobic capacity should be long work at hard intensity followed by long rest. I would say generally a 1:1 to a 1.5:1 work to rest ratio, with the work being between 2-5 minutes depending on fitness, and the rest being 2-3 minutes depending on fitness. As you get fitter, you can decrease the rest to increase the workload or increase the work.
5 x (1:30 on, 2 mins rest x 3 - Rest 6 minutes or longer if needed to depump)or 5 x (2:00 on, 3 mins rest x 3 - Rest 6 minutes or longer if needed to depump)