- is there anything I should be doing to alleviate the immediate situation? ie. to relieve the creakiness in my fingers
- does anyone have any suggestions for a gentle training regime aimed specifically at improving finger strength? It would need to suit someone who won’t/can’t go bouldering, is susceptible to injury (or is it hypochondria?) and is inherently lazy when it comes to structured climbing training (beyond going down the wall in the winter, to do a bunch of routes and have a laugh with my mates)?
It would need to suit someone who won’t/can’t go bouldering, is susceptible to injury (or is it hypochondria?) and is inherently lazy when it comes to structured climbing training
Basically do what you like if you're lazy when it comes to structured training. No point in giving advice if you ain't going to follow it. Just take rests after you've worked your fingers climbing.
Here's the link:http://www.climbingworks.com/download/files/Articles/beastmaker_fingerboard_article.pdf
it's well worth spending some time today icing the fingers. Put them in a jug of water with 3-4 ice cubes for 20 mins or so, and do that a couple of times today. They should feel much better in the morning
Forget a beastmaker then. If you think pull-ups are boring I struggle to see how dead-hanging would be better.
Creaky feeling fingers are par for a the course after a fingery (crimpy) session, i wouldn't worry about it too much. It shows you've had a good session, and if you're not injured then you're winning.
the natural lubricant in joints (there must be a more technical term), is only produced when the joint is moved.
Thanks for your initial feedback everyone. Please keep it coming!Quote from: Scraggadoo on August 03, 2010, 12:39:04 pmBasically do what you like if you're lazy when it comes to structured training. No point in giving advice if you ain't going to follow it. Just take rests after you've worked your fingers climbing.Fair comment, Scraggadoo, but I was really just trying to give a proper context / history to where I am now. It was more "I have never done structured training in my life (which might be down to laziness!) rather than "I don't want to consider structured training". So some encouragement / pointers on how to start would be appreciated, in the context that it would be for a beginner to such a world (albeit one who has been regularly shimmying up the occasional route for the last 30+ years).
Synovial fluid and its there all the time as its constantly replaced by secretion, although putting pressure on the joint may force the fluid out of certain key areas and result in "creaky" finger-syndrome (pure conjecture I know nothing about how joints work).
Quote from: slack---line on August 03, 2010, 03:30:11 pmSynovial fluid and its there all the time as its constantly replaced by secretion, although putting pressure on the joint may force the fluid out of certain key areas and result in "creaky" finger-syndrome (pure conjecture I know nothing about how joints work).It says in that Wikipedia article that the fluid is squeezed out mechanically onto the joint surface during movement. And Wikipedia is never wrong.
Plus it says that synovial fluid is non-newtonian. I wonder if it gets less fluid when force is applied? That would be clever.
Make some custard and punch it
Quote from: Ru on August 03, 2010, 04:06:41 pmPlus it says that synovial fluid is non-newtonian. I wonder if it gets less fluid when force is applied? That would be clever.Make some custard and punch it to see if it gets more or less fluid with increased pressure.
I think alternating ice-hot can be risky cos you can bust bloodvessels in/under the skin if you're not careful. I've recently been doing some icing for a finger niggle and seems to be doing the trick.