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Aug 24, 2006
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I've noticed how in the winter months my training, goes a bit off. So can anyone tell me what an average week is like for them, training wise? Do you follow a certain pattern or cut out certain foods to help?
 
Hi,
im currently trying

mon rest
Tue bouldering
wed bouldering power endurance
thur routes
Fri rest
sat outdoor projecting/wet option indoor bouldering
Sun outdoor projecting/wet option indoor bouldering/fingerboard

Cheers
Tim
 
Mon - Bouldering
Tues - Bouldering plus one hour of skipping
Wed - Bouldering
Thu - Bouldering plus one hour of skipping
Fri - Bouldering plus 5 hours of drinking
Sat - Bouldering plus drug-taking and 6 hours of twitching like a spastic to grinding beats
Sun - Bouldering plus one hour of skipping

Hope this helps.
 
Presume some jesting there mate? :-\
My tendons currently feel like they will explode if i do any more than 4 days hard bouldering a week.

Cheers
Tim
 
Starting next week, my plan is...

Mond-Frid - Lunchtime session at Climbingworks
Sat & Sun - Hit the grit. Try not to break knuckles.
Day 8 - Rest

Not many people know about the eighth day. It pops up once a week, hidden between the normal days. I call it Octoday.





Eighth - what a strange word. Just look at it. Only the last two letters make any sense.
 
Jesting? Indeed, I lied about the drinking. And I like to leave at least one day free to formulate strategies on the destruction of Homo rapiens.

Currently doing the indoor bouldering thing quite a lot, but then, never routes (haven't tied on for 7 years). Shamra was right, just a little every day. Long warm ups/downs. Good rest between problems. Lots of water. A bit of arnika on the biceps afterwards. But the dancing is crucial.

Try glucosamine sulphate for those tendons.
 
Houdini said:
Mon - Bouldering
Tues - Bouldering plus one hour of skipping
Wed - Bouldering
Thu - Bouldering plus one hour of skipping
Fri - Bouldering plus 5 hours of drinking
Sat - Bouldering plus drug-taking and 6 hours of twitching like a spastic to grinding beats
Sun - Bouldering plus one hour of skipping

Hope this helps.

i suggest you need to do more twitching else you're likely to end up muscular inbalances.
 
timb said:
Presume some jesting there mate? :-\
My tendons currently feel like they will explode if i do any more than 4 days hard bouldering a week.

Cheers
Tim

The more you climb, the fitter you will get, and the less broken you will feel on consecutive days. Your body just adapts. Like Houdini said, the key is quality not quantity - do an hour or so, then stop before you start feeling tired, and you'll be able to climb ache-free the next day. After a while you'll be able to do longer and longer sessions for 5 or 6 days in a row.
 
webbo said:
i suggest you need to do more twitching else you're likely to end up muscular inbalances.

I do plenty of stretching and general floor gym exercises.  My posture is pretty good at time of writing.

Trigger points?  I get a heavier man to break those down with his thumbs.

But you're right about the twitching.  Once I'm on a roll, I find even two days off sends me backwards.
 
r-man said:
timb said:
Presume some jesting there mate? :-\
My tendons currently feel like they will explode if i do any more than 4 days hard bouldering a week.

Cheers
Tim

The more you climb, the fitter you will get, and the less broken you will feel on consecutive days. Your body just adapts. Like Houdini said, the key is quality not quantity - do an hour or so, then stop before you start feeling tired, and you'll be able to climb ache-free the next day. After a while you'll be able to do longer and longer sessions for 5 or 6 days in a row.

aye already climb a lot but i mean bouldering that many days. Its more intense. If you add a day routing here and there it is less intense on your tendons i feel. Like the idea a bout a little each day but every day. May give that a try.

Cheers
Tim
 
???

Outside at the weekend weather permitting. :lol:

Dicking around in the office coffee room on lintels and trimmings during the week.

Looking to cut down.
 
timb said:
aye already climb a lot but i mean bouldering that many days.

So do I. When you first start doing it, you will ache, but stick with it and your body will soon adapt. Be sensible though - stick to short sessions or you risk injuring something.
 
hmmm I'm dubious, you simply cant be training as effectively after an extended period as you were at the start, imo its necessary to rest much more than your post suggests. Sometimes I can still feel tues's session on a thursday!
 
Paul B said:
hmmm I'm dubious, you simply cant be training as effectively after an extended period as you were at the start, imo its necessary to rest much more than your post suggests.

Well, quite possibly. I'm not just going on my own instinct though, I'm copying others who climb much harder than me. My training this summer consisted mostly of the cemetery park boulder, which is perhaps not the same as cranking on a 45 deg. woody. But still, after several days on I found I was still improving, and managing problems that I previously found impossible. Perhaps this is also a lot to do with refining the engrams, and just getting things more wired, but it seemed to work.
 
Hi,
well that's my intention this winter anyway to increase the power and strength training. But i have found in the past that the more power based activities you do (rather than endurance) the more likely you are to injure yourself. Certainly appears to be the score in my own experience. Definately gonna keep one session as routes to keep the stamina going (im a sportclimber/boulderer rather than a boulderer/sportclimber so endurance is also important to me :))

cheers
Tim
 
Since the summer I've been training a lot more than previously: An average of 6 days (2-3hr sessions) per week rather than 4. It has definatly given me a kick up the jacksie and I've improved rapidly. Whether this is just through shock factor etc I'm not sure - but I'm sticking to it for now. I often find that my best session of the week is on day 3/4 etc.
Having said that Paul's training plan is obviously working for him!
 
It depends what you mean by an extended period. If you mean one long session than I'd agree, but daily short sessions are the norm in other sports. I got good results a few years ago bouldering every day, but each session was really short: warm up, 30-40mins intense bouldering (with good rest between problems), warm down. I was stopping well short of fatigue, but when you add up the number of problems at my target grade it was higher than if i'd done fewer, but longer sessions.
In the summer I allways take July and August off, and I'll climb 3 days on 1 day off, then 2 days on 1 day on. On the last day on I train at home on my board, after I've been to the crag. Pretty well all of my hardest redpoints this year and last were done first day back on, even though I still felt sore from the training session, I also felt really strong.
It usally takes me about 3 weeks to adapt this amount of volume.
 
When you guys talk about adapting to a higher or more intense workload, are you saying getting less stiff or feeling less tired in a muscular manner? Presumably if the more intense training is making the fingers feel sore this is not something to work through?

I have no problems pushing myself in a muscular pain day after day type manner but feel i need to know if any finger tendon (tenderness) is part of the game or a sign to back off?

Cheers
tim
 
My finger tendons ached like hell after the first few sessions on my new board, but after a week or so they got used to it.
When I say they ached - this was hard training ache as opposed to injury ache. Injury ache is a sign to back off. I had never really pulled on small holds before so it took a while to get used to it.
 

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