Slather your hands in E45 before bed and wear cotton gloves overnight. Less-followable advice (but advice that seems a big factor in me never having split a tip, even when I actually went bouldering): Play guitar and bass from your mid-teens onwards.
I played guitar and still do from the age of 10 so 23 years now and it’s made no difference I don’t use the pads of my fingers, I use the tips so sadly no calluses built where I need em :p
Quote from: Dingdong on January 26, 2024, 09:26:10 amI played guitar and still do from the age of 10 so 23 years now and it’s made no difference I don’t use the pads of my fingers, I use the tips so sadly no calluses built where I need em :pSounds like you need to switch to bass then! I’ve always known wearing skin on the pad away from sliding off slopers as “going through” rather than a split but a good way to toughen up your pads is to sand them a bit every day that you don’t climb.
Possibly mentioned already and certainly mentioned by me at every opportunity...25% urea heel balm works great for splits in hard dry skin. Also good for split and messed up nails (hands and feet). I assume that all medical trials have been on feet, but climbers hands get into a similar state. Spread thinly at night. Improves noticeably overnight.You can buy 40% urea cream which is good for softening any bits of nail or hard skin that you need to soften up to the point where you can peel it off after a night of being marinated.
I had a perma-split heal
an athlete's foot cream that actually works (Scholl)
Out of interest do you also avoid finger injuries.
Quote from: JamieG on January 26, 2024, 01:04:32 pmOut of interest do you also avoid finger injuries. No But I’ve never really had a pulley injury, whenever I’ve hurt my fingers it’s been collateral ligaments or the dreaded cartilage-in-the-knuckle-that-everyone-initially-thinks-is-a-stress-fracture-and-takes-ages-to-heal thing. No idea if that’s related to playing music, probably not. I think the length of your fingers is a more of a factor in what sort of tweaks you get.I should add that I’m not the sort of practices for hours every day sort of musician but I’ve definitely carried thick finger skin through with me from the periods in my life when I played all the time.There’s crossover the other way too- having less weedy fingers from climbing absolutely makes playing the guitar and bass easier in some ways. I couldn’t really do hammer-ons on bass or those Hendrix-style trills before I climbed and when playing the piano/ keyboard I’ve found I can now hit single keys really hard if required without any wrist input