Ah well, you've learnt a bit but still not understood. I don't climb to improve or achieve; I climb to climb. Hence no reason to train.
Just one thing, for Paul B to clear up, now we're talking about the joy of training. Is it true that:"Malcolm went from climbing F7C+ to Hubble in one season due to climbing on boards..." (I'm running for it now...)
Quote from: a dense loner on May 07, 2009, 06:11:26 pmi fail to see what this exercise has to do with latch to crimp ability? just jump to a hold open-handed and then crimp itwell, you say that, but it's not that easy, is it? If you throw for a tiny hold on a steeply overhanging wall, latch it in a half-crimp and then your hand peels off before you can get the crimp on and game over, summat's gotta be done in da training room. Either that or patience, which I haven't got, because whatever. Very interested in da training science, even if I never win even one piece of chicken in a raffle.(Although I've heard pork scratchings are all the rage at the moment).
i fail to see what this exercise has to do with latch to crimp ability? just jump to a hold open-handed and then crimp it
are you throwing for the hold because... the move is too hard in isolation so you're throwing? can you hold the geometries in isolation?
...it's probably your core as opposed to crimping ability. ....get yourself off to albarracin
Contact strength...Earl had an exercise where he'd hang a rung on the campus board open and bump both hands simultaneously to crimp then reverse and repeat. If I was you I'd just get the contact strength open that way things won't go snap crack and pop as often.
If he can do v10 in 3 goes and is a route climber I'm pretty surprised he's not climbing harder than 8b..
I now realise I'm not worthy of the name boulderer. I kind of knew it anyway, and it's okay. This realisation comes out of somewhere. I was at the wall when a French guy came along and without showboating, gently did a boulder pyramid peaking at V10 onsight. (Actually, tell a lie, that one took him three goes.) I know it was onsight because the routes had only just gone up.I asked him what grade he bouldered and he said he didn't, 'just' sport-climbed 8b. He put this down to 'being lucky' to have been born near Volx, although he doesn't climb there. Anyway, relevance to my OP is that this guy answered my question. He demonstrated, by crushing a problem very similar to the one I posted about, that you just need to be three times stronger than I am and move in ways that 8b sport-climbers have discovered the hard way are the efficient way to go. I'm not bigging up sport climbers per se, but it's a no-brainer, really, that to operate at this level you need to sus movement very well indeed. He kept doing that levitation thing - not the one demonstrating poor body tension, but just the opposite, the one that looks like magic.
I'd suggest (and this is a guess) that this level is attained from lots and lots of climbing (primarily outdoors)..
I now realise I'm not worthy of the name boulderer. <other stuff snipped> you just need to be three times stronger than I am
I hope you're just being flippant ...
i'd gladly trade a couple of vs's for the strength to do an 8b