Basic principles for ancap training:1) climbing time about the same as rest time2) around 1.5-2 mins duration 3) hard enough to (not quite) fail on last rep of last set. So something that’s worked really well for me in the past is to set a 15 move Boulder problem on a steep board and do 4 reps with ~2 mins rest. This is one set. 3-4 sets, with 5-6 mins between sets. But basically anything that hits the principles above.
Thanks Alex, that fits more with what I’d understood. What I have been doing is 4 reps of 40seconds climbing (approx 15 moves) with 5 mins between sets.Still don’t get why each rest between reps would not be longer, with harder moves on the reps.Alasdair- cheers, I’ll heed that, especially since my elbows make Michael Owen look like Iron Man
My peak form just now is around the f7b o/s level and I'm looking to up that to f7c, but had a session (after 2 weeks no climbing due to tweaked wrist in a silly fall walking back from a winter route..) but I got pretty shut down on a f7a+ at ratho on Friday, and one of the f6cs felt pretty hard!
I would not describe what Devonshire is doing as an cap at all really. Unclear to me if this is simply an issue of nomenclature.
I thought i was working on power endurance as the rests were so short but i am probably wrong, certainly was brilliant when needing to power through sport cruxes when pumped
My understanding is that after 45s anaerobic respiration starts to wane and you depend increasingly (and after 120s totally) on aerobic energy systems ie the krebs cycle.
My recent training so far has been:1) long boulders ~15 moves/45s duration. x4 reps per set. 2 mins rest between reps, 5 mins rest between sets.2) short boulders ~6-8 moves: 2a) 6 sets of 3, 30s rest between reps and 5 mins rest between sets. 2b) 3 sets of 6, 1min rest between reps, 5 mins rest between sets
Naively I would think the best way to stimulate the glycolysis system is stress it fully, allow sufficient recovery, rinse and repeat. However, most training methodologies don't leave sufficient recovery between reps. Or is that the point?
Another question. The cycling methods are based around Functional Power Threshold. This is a measure of average top output over 45-60 mins (albeit measured in a 20 minute burst). This has nothing to with the timings of most boulders or sport routes, so what is the climbing equivalent measure?
Another question. The cycling methods are based around Functional Power Threshold. This is a measure of average top output over 45-60 mins (albeit measured in a 20 minute burst). This has nothing to with the timings of most boulders or sport routes, so what is the climbing equivalent measure? Seems like the FRC training is based on a very different baseline output to climbing. Any thoughts Stu? Thanks.
Stressing the system as hard as possible isn't necessarily the best way of training it, otherwise (for example) we'd just do aeropow and not aerocap/arc! I think most exercises aim to go to (near) failure but not necessarily per-rep. If you went to failure each rep you'd need long rests, but not so if you aim to approach failure each set.