Finger strength and endurance, body
mass and technique, are, according to Dave MacLeod the big four key
components to climbing well. Seems like, of late, I've lost three of
the four. Too much “cheating” on the paleo program, and too
little training and climbing has left me with weak fingers and a
heavier than ideal body. Even my technique has gone somewhat adrift
as it's difficult to have good technique on steep climbs when you are
weak and heavy. The mind may know what to do but the body doesn't
necessarily obey.
At our old home in Nelson we had a
small climbing wall that I used about every second day. Sometimes, I
wondered if all that tedious bouldering – staying on a small wall
for even half an hour at a time is crushingly boring – was doing
anything at all. Now I know. We also had a fairly well set up gym
with a good stack of heavy, but simple, weights, a pull-up bar, and a
jump box. The most important thing I had back in Nelson, however,
was a routine. Three days of Stronglifts a week, five to six days of
Crossfit WOD's per week, and three days on the bouldering wall per
week. Written down, that seems like a lot, particularly as all that
was in addition to whatever mountain activities I was doing that
week, and Doug used to frequently tell me I was overtraining.
Sometimes even I wondered if I was overtraining. In hindsight, I
don't believe I was.
It always seemed to me that I lost
whatever fitness I had frightening quickly, and regaining that
fitness was always frightfully hard. That concept kept me nose to
the grindstone – or hands to the weight bar – on a very
consistent basis. Two months away from my regular routine
and training equipment has left me too heavy and too
weak, and, any elation I might feel over being right is profoundly overshadowed
by dismay.
Of course, one can train without any
equipment - although for building pure strength, nothing beats a
simple 5 x 5 weight routine (which is impossible without heavy
weights) - so much of my failure is due to lack of will not lack of
equipment. Undeniably it's easier to stay in a familiar and well
set up environment than it is to scrounge around in multiple
different locations to find a good area with at least a tree branch
or playground set for pull-ups, a boulder or step to jump on, and a
steep, long hill to run. Certainly, scrounging around for a work-out
location, scheduling in that workout when your life lacks routine and
coming up with creative ways to lift heavy things, work on explosive
speed and power, develop core and finger endurance and strength has,
at least for me, been overwhelmingly difficult.
I had thought that the regular climbing
and hiking we were doing would be enough to maintain a good level of
climbing fitness - wrong, wrong, wrong. It is clear to me now
that I need a structured, targeted and regular training program in
addition to recreational climbing and hiking to stay fit. The
difficulty is going to be constructing and implementing such a
routine when I'm forever moving around and lack easily accessible
training facilities. Joni Mitchell was right, you don't know what
you've got 'til it's gone.
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