MOONBOARD
Thinking about the outcome of intensity and volume is interesting. My non-expert assumption is that training over a variety of sub-maximal intensities is the way, without knowing how to pin that down more precisely. I doubt there’s one ideal combination. One thing I’m confident of however; established power sports like Olympic lifting don’t just train by attempting a small number of 1RMs each week.
I think you're missing the point a little, you wouldn't just do 6c/+s for 6 months. You'd do the 6c/+s for a period of time and eventually the 7as would feel easier, then the 7a+s would also feel easier/possible and you could do 6c+/7a until 7a+ felt easier and so on. But rather than trying 1 or 2 things and bashing your head against it until you do it, you could try that thing, then lower the intensity to an achievable intensity so you can do reps rather than a single rep and then once those reps feel easier to achieve you can retest your 1 rep max, in this case being harder board problems. Given you said it was 6 months if you just did a session like this once a week that would be 26 sessions, you don't think you'd make gains on a board doing 26 sessions of 10-15 problems 1-3 grades below your max? Given how strong your max hangs have been in the past I'm not suprised you managed to go from 7A to 7B on a board, regardless of how you approached it! More gains to come I'm sure for you Wellsey!
Quote from: teestub on February 09, 2023, 03:52:49 pmQuote from: Wellsy on February 09, 2023, 11:06:36 amI personally only use the board for max effort on the day and I found that pushed my capability in the area I was working on very effectively.It’s interesting that people seem keen to think about board climbing differently from weights or fingerboarding for example, where a lot of time is spent sub max, probably in a similar 80% effort level to gain strength.I guess it's that difficulty of defining what actually is 80% effort in a sport that's so technical. Not that it's any easier to define 100% effort either!
Quote from: Wellsy on February 09, 2023, 11:06:36 amI personally only use the board for max effort on the day and I found that pushed my capability in the area I was working on very effectively.It’s interesting that people seem keen to think about board climbing differently from weights or fingerboarding for example, where a lot of time is spent sub max, probably in a similar 80% effort level to gain strength.
I personally only use the board for max effort on the day and I found that pushed my capability in the area I was working on very effectively.
I think you might be misunderstanding? No one is saying that max efforts, e.g. trying project-level boulders or project-level individual moves, aren't useful, or that you can't get stronger by just doing that. People are just saying that:- There are good reasons to also do more volumous sessions on hard but slightly sub-max boulders (even if you only boulder, and even more so if you route climb)- This corresponds much better with how other strength athletes would train- That they have tried this approach and seen good results, in many cases mush better results than just throwing themselves at maximal moves all the timeAs with all training responses to exercises depend on the person. On the whole I've found I make better gains with long problems (e.g. 10-15 moves) or by doing a bunch of 7B+-7C+s than by trying super hard moves for sessions on end. Ditto for repeaters vs max hangs (though my fingers can't take many repeaters nowadays so I do far less of them than I'd like).
Quote from: honroid on February 08, 2023, 12:03:55 pmI've just started using it as Steve Maisch suggests in various podcasts. He has a couple of ideas for using it for strength based around the idea that when lifting weights for strength you work in an 80% - 85% effort zone, doing 5 reps rather than working at 100% effort and at 1 rep. He mentions that most V15 climbers will spend the majority of their time cruising around on V12 and V13 problems and working in the 80% - 85% zone. I can confirm from decades long experience, albeit at 8 grades lower, that this got me (relatively) pretty good at working in the 80%-85% zone and seemed to make absolutely no progress whatsoever in pushing the 100% / 1RM zone (except that when I try, I get injured). Not sure what the science is behind that though.[/quoton Maisch mentions this in the podcast. He reckons that outdoors you're going to find that problems from maybe 7A+ and up are going to have hard moves that train strength. Certainly 8As and 8Bs are going to allow someone to get a good work out. Your 8C climber is going to be training stength while they're cruising around on 8A+s but a 7A climber is not going to be getting the same stimulus on a load of 6Cs. Obviously this would depend on the area and rock type massively.
I've just started using it as Steve Maisch suggests in various podcasts. He has a couple of ideas for using it for strength based around the idea that when lifting weights for strength you work in an 80% - 85% effort zone, doing 5 reps rather than working at 100% effort and at 1 rep. He mentions that most V15 climbers will spend the majority of their time cruising around on V12 and V13 problems and working in the 80% - 85% zone.
Maisch mentions this in the podcast. He reckons that outdoors you're going to find that problems from maybe 7A+ and up are going to have hard moves that train strength. Certainly 8As and 8Bs are going to allow someone to get a good work out. Your 8C climber is going to be training stength while they're cruising around on 8A+s but a 7A climber is not going to be getting the same stimulus on a load of 6Cs. Obviously this would depend on the area and rock type massively.
Drew Ruana said something similar on his recent Careless Talk podcast appearance. Asked about his lack of training and just going climbing instead, he said that (paraphrase) climbing V14 boulders every time he goes out is enough training on its own, but at a lower level, climbers wouldn't get the same effect and supplemental training might be more beneficial. Like the posters above, I'm skeptical, unless it's something specific to the bouldering in Colorado, e.g. at V14 the climbing is sufficiently steep and sustained on single pad edges in a way that it isn't at V8?