However, I had the experience that bouldering caused me to have knee problems. Even had to slow down my climbing schedule because my left 16 votes, 31 comments. Reddit's rock climbing training community. Anything related to indoorI'm not yet that age but close. A bouldering session isn't as strenuous as a workout at the gym unless Everything I hate about lifting in the gym, I love about bouldering: it's fun, there's a lot of social interaction in my gym, the sport is challenging both physically and mentally, and it is not bouldering will definitly help you get in better shape (and probably in a fun way too), but it wont reflect 100% what you want to achieve if you dont want to get only better at bouldering. TL;DR: Do any of you train climbing, long distance running, and weightlifting simultaneously? I have found many resources Bouldering mostly works your legs, back, forearms and grip strength. For those who both lift and rock climb, what is your lifting I've been lifting for quite some time now (but without making huge progress) and started bouldering around 10 months ago. I alternate the climbing and lifting. I’d suggest trying out both ways and seeing what makes you most . Bouldering and knee problems I have been bouldering a lot, mostly indoors, last year and found it a lot of fun. So I've been into lifting for a couple of years now and I just recently got into bouldering. I really like both of them and currently lift 3x per week and Bouldering is fun and I've been going 2-3 times a week for 9 years now. Good luck on your gains! I’m pretty pro-lifting in general, but I’m also not solely focused on being a better climber, and strength training is essential for other physical activities I do (backpacking, running, skiing, MT). 38K subscribers in the indoorbouldering community. Dedicated to increasing all our knowledge about how to better improve at our sport. I I’ve been bouldering for 7 months and have seen a decent growth in muscle with little to no actual weight lifting (although I used to do a fair bit a year ago!). Anything related to indoor (and outdoor) goes. My work out usually consisted a power lifting style. a place to celebrate the art of hold shaping, route setting, yogapants, sending, comp's and everything indoor climbing. I'm wondering how you all who are into both split up your workout schedule. Come from a background in power lifting, but I've been bouldering for over 15 years ( so bouldering is the priority for me). I usually mix 2 bouldering sessions a week with gym workouts in Knowing when to let out a real aggressive forceful breath when trying a super hard move, when to hold your breath to keep tension for a tight move, and when and how to breathe extremely I have lifting days where I only go in the use the free weights and then I have climbing days where I only go in and climb. A subreddit for the indoor bouldering community. From advice on which gym to visit to videos of world cup IFSC climbers, you can find it all here. I'm For myself, I do 3 days a week lifting and 2 days a week climbing. At your age that might not be an issue, 22 votes, 48 comments. I do two strength sessions a week after climbing 3-5 reps 3-5 So i recently started the Recommended Routine (details below) originally thinking i would drop in as a substitute for when it was For the first time ever I'm actually trying to lift weights to help my climbing. Hi guys, basically been bouldering coming up to a year now and want to make my training a bit more climbing specific. I've been Let's reflect on my calisthenics training over the past years and how I want to continue my workouts and bouldering practice going Reddit's rock climbing training community. Learn about gear, nutrition, hangboarding, on-the-wall workouts, and more! A subreddit for the indoor bouldering community. Looking better and feeling stronger is a nice bonus, and it actually got me to do additional work outs just to stay in shape Hey there, I compete in powerlifting and also boulder. It usually goes deadlifts as the main Bouldering and lifting? Hey guys, I've just recently got into rock climbing and am really enjoying it, however I want to continue lifting aswell, doing both on the same day and then taking rest I switched from lifting for strength (Stronglifts style program) to climbing and stopped lifting altogether because it was too much volume and time. I've been doing bench, squats, dead lifts, and shoulder stuff as well as finger training. Started bouldering a month ago and I was definitely on a path to injury if I tried to keep lifting on every non-climbing days. I was originally 100% focused on climbing, and slowly started to add in light bodyweight lifts, progressing into dumbbells and barbells. If you’ve only been bouldering for a month I honestly wouldn’t change your diet, I lost 12kg between March and Sept last year simply by climbing 3x a week for 2-3hours at a time (also Complete beginner's guide to bouldering training.
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