In climbing, there is an old adage stating that "climbing is the
best training for climbing," an adage used by many to make
excuses for not training outside of climbing. I personally
disagree with this philosophy as I will explain.
When we are speaking of the exact skills needed in climbing, how
and when to step, climbing techniques and mental skills, there
is no substitute for the activity of climbing itself.
However, in order to develop strength levels specific to the
sport of climbing such as improving grip strength and upper body
strength and endurance climbing will produce very limited or
even no results or improvements.
One of the main reasons climbing isn't good for strength
training is because in climbing failure is not an option. If you
have muscular failure while climbing, it may very well prove
fatal. So the goal while climbing id to avoid this completely.
Alternatively, when one is strength training for climbing, one
wants to reach and even pass the point of muscular failure as it
is this very act that causes the body to respond with an
increase in strength to adapt to the stress being place on it.
So the two methods are mutually exclusive and you will never
achieve maximum strength by climbing alone.
Another example that reinforces the disparity between climbing
and strength training for climbing is the way in which you grip
the rock. In climbing, the rock demands the climber to use a
random variety of many different grip positions and, at times,
you may even deliberately vary the way you grip the rock. As a
result, it's unlikely that any single grip position will ever
get worked maximally and, therefore, the individual grip
positions (e.g. crimp, open hand, pinch, etc.) are slow to
increase strength.
This should help you understand why a full season of climbing
may indeed improve your anaerobic endurance (i.e. endurance of
strength), but do little to increase you absolute maximum grip
strength.
Therefore, varying grip positions is a great strategy for
maximizing endurance when climbing for performance, but it will
never work for training maximum grip strength. Effective finger
strength training demands you target a specific grip position
and work it until failure, which can only be done safely in a
non climbing environment.
Finally, it could be better for some climbers to participate in
cross training with other activities that are not particularly
sport-specific. As an example someone who needs to lose weight
should spend the majority of their non-climbing time performing
aerobic activity to burn off the excess body fat as it is
essential that a climber be as lean as possible for optimum
performance.
If someone is totally devoid of at least some modicum of
fitness, they would be better off doing some circuit training
that will give them both strength and aerobic benefits.
In closing I will say that regardless of your experience level
in climbing, you will see a huge improvement by including
specialized strength training in your regimen.
About the author:
Gregg Hall is a business consultant and has been involved in the
fitness industry for over 25 years. Get your
climbing gear at
http://www.ruggedsportsgear.com