When I just bouldered, I kept on bouldering - shady bits of Caley, Brimham. Almscliff on breezy days. Moorland grit if there was a dry forecast and I felt like a walk. Looking at my old logbooks, most of my very hardest ticks were in July/August. It took me until then to get my outdoor climbing knack back after only climbing indoors over Winter- early Spring (Reynauds sufferer - "grit conditions" never did it me). Grit can feel unpleasant in direct sun, but any cloud / shade and you'll be surprised at how hard you can climb. Humidity is the real killer so hunting out breezy spots reaps real rewards - I always found Almscliff in direct sun but on a windy day, better than a shadier, stiller spot.
Train indoors mainly?Limestone bouldering?Go sport climbing?Eat pies?
Fell running. The more I read about it the more psyched I'm becoming.
Whats with the climbers going fishing thing? I've nothing against it - but come summer my facebook feed becomes full of pictures of Tench (or whatever) instead of bouldering... why?
Quote from: tomtom on July 31, 2014, 11:26:09 amWhats with the climbers going fishing thing? I've nothing against it - but come summer my facebook feed becomes full of pictures of Tench (or whatever) instead of bouldering... why?The recession, sign o' the times. lovely bit of smoked tench.
Didnt you do slopey traverse (that 7B+ to the right of Morells wall) on a hot August day?
Quote from: Monolith on July 31, 2014, 10:51:47 amFell running. The more I read about it the more psyched I'm becoming.There are some classic races in the summer to go at; Burbage Skyline, Castleton and Salt Cellar (tomorrow night in fact) all of which take in some fantastic local trails. Since I don't climb as much as I used to I find it a great way to keep the weight off so when I do go bouldering at least I don't humiliate myself any more than I need to.