Practice falls on gear
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I really like the perspective Will Gadd gives in this video: |
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Thanks for sharing! I really like his approach to gear, esp. his point about the cam blowing up high. It's miscalculating situations like that that leads to so many dangerous ground falls IMO. |
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Helen, |
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FrankPS wrote:Helen, Do you own any cams? Frank Lol! I said up thread this was hypothetical for myself, just pondering while belaying my trad rope gun! He did enjoy the climb we were on, lots and lots of options, so he could mess around and try out everything, dinky nuts to a giant cam. |
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I agree: falling on gear with a bolt underneath it was good for experience and helped peace of mind. I already have the experience to know what good pro looks like, but subjecting it to test falls in a variety of situation still taught me more than I expected and will help me evaluate marginal pro even better in the future. |
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Well, i’ve told this story here a few times, but i think another iteration is in order. |
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Leading 10s in less than 3 months?! Baller. |
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Yeah, i really don't understand people reticence to lead at their level. Don't get me wrong, i get gripped, and i get in trouble, and i don't always push. And i love to work hard routes on toprope! But i am older than Old Lady H. (!) and have been climbing 5 years, don't have much time to get it all in! |
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Old lady H wrote:Just hypothetical question here. Thought of this while belaying my trad leader today. So, I was thinking about how gear placements don't get tested much, beyond bouncing on them, or, hoping you aren't about to die. On a single pitch vertical route with clean falls, I was thinking the placements could all be tried with a fall, as an exercise, just before cleaning them, if the climber is being lowered and is on top rope belay, the belayer is patient, and no one is in a hurry. The climber could unclip the rope from the piece, clip back into it with a loop tied from dynamic cord, attached to the belay loop with a locker. They could then climb up a bit, leaving the slack in the climbing rope, and take their fall. If the gear holds, great, if not, the top rope fall would be pretty minimal. I realize the aim in trad is to not fall, but I know from my own experience that trust in the systems is partly from having falls, and knowing the stuff works. What you know is less worrying than the pure trust in the unknown. I'm assuming it could be the same for those new to gear, also. Like I said, just pondering out at the cliff today. Not a trad climber, just a belayer! And I managed to climb today! Yay! Best, Helen climbing friend old lady H. |
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Aleks Zebastian wrote: climbing friend old lady H. this appears as the unnecessary mental masturbation about falling and overly complicated. study placements, bounce test, aid climb toprope solo, lead some 5.6 choss gulleys for trad vision quest, and then gain the experience falling on nest of 3 or more pieces on high up on vertical clean climbing rocks if you so are desiring. But doing this a few times does little, as you would have to do it constantly hundreds or thousands of times. Or just be pushing yourself on steep well protected climb on rocks in which you can place many pieces gear. the climbing it is so scary. Most people will never fall or trust their gear and will remain mediocre forever. do not fall the trad route unless you are having the experience and climbing for probable at least 5.10s and/or it is clean for the falling./ Climbing friend Aleks, |
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Old lady H wrote: Climbing friend Aleks, As always, your fishy breath speaks truth. Happily, I will be experiencing the falling many, many, times, as I climb at/above my top rope limit many, many times. I do anticipate the glorious trad climb in my future, as a second. I am one who has no desire to do the splatting, especially with my friends there to clean up, yet, I do not have the fear. If I could have remembered how to spell your most excellent name, I would have written you in on my ballot. Very fortunate I did not, as on reflection, why would I wish that hell on your most excellent meatiness? I would not. I do have one question I trust you to answer: is it a micro aggression for unmeaty, feeble, old ladies to wear a sports bra and/or Lycra on the rocks for climbing? I confess my shallow self would like one photo that has the appearance of being a real climber. Photoshop can only do so much. Best, Helen climbing friend, |
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Aleks Zebastian wrote: I think age excuse is most likely totally false or blown way out of proportion. Wait until you are >55 to say that!! |
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Muscrat wrote: Wait until you are >55 to say that!! climbing friend, |
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Aleks Zebastian wrote: climbing friend, how you say, "bullshit?" It is true you may be taking longer to recover your own self, or more care may be taken to avoid injury, but mostly it's just an excuse like so many others. look no further than man begins climbing at 33 and sends first 5.14 at age 59, climbing 5.13 still at age 68: climbing.com/news/lee-sheft…! rockandice.com/lates-news/l… The real question is as you age how long may you be able to maintain half-erection or the wanting for sex? Oh just wait! |
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On the note of pushing grade or gear and only doing one at a time, it's best to make sure that you're ACTUALLY relaxed and comfortable with lead falls on sport first as well. Doing that on lead in the gym is great, but it's still not the same as real life. Get on steeper sport routes outside and fall a few bolts up a lot, until you can push your grade and take unexpected lead falls. After that's dialed in start falling on gear. |
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Yeah, falling is very different in trad. There are definitely "no fall" situations where a fall would likely result in serious injury or death...very different from your padded foam sport climbs ;). |
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Ted Pinson wrote:Yeah, falling is very different in trad. There are definitely "no fall" situations where a fall would likely result in serious injury or death...very different from your padded foam sport climbs ;). Hmmm... how serious is "serious"? Or is it you who's not "serious"? :-) |
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Muscrat wrote:Yeah, i really don't understand people reticence to lead at their level. Don't get me wrong, i get gripped, and i get in trouble, and i don't always push. And i love to work hard routes on toprope! But i am older than Old Lady H. (!) and have been climbing 5 years, don't have much time to get it all in! Goal for this season is put up a 5.13 and send it. !! My passion these days is developing hard sport. Well, hard for this old bod. Just finished developing a 5.11 11 pitch trad line on an unclimbed wall. And no, not on MP, yet. And Old Lady H., go to it! My wife and i have an organic farm, are both working artists, many things in common. Get on the sharp end, it will thrill ya! And stay healthy. Best advice is to be careful and be able to climb another day. At our age, booboo-owies take their toll! Thanks! |
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Ted Pinson wrote:Yeah, falling is very different in trad. There are definitely "no fall" situations where a fall would likely result in serious injury or death...very different from your padded foam sport climbs ;). I do live in NC but we have no fall situations on lots of sport routes here, 20ft+ first climbs on hard routes, 60ft+ runouts, etc. I find climbing sport in almost any other state extremely safe compared to here. |
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ViperScale wrote: I do live in NC but we have no fall situations on lots of sport routes here, 20ft+ first climbs on hard routes, 60ft+ runouts, etc. I find climbing sport in almost any other state extremely safe compared to here. But there are no fall areas for pretty much any type of climbing, my friend took a 25ft fall on a high ball boulder problem and is lucky he didn't break anything. I do know some high balls that have V5 starts but 35ft topouts on V1 easy climbing that are pretty much no fall situations cause the ground is covered with lots of rocks. But that's NC sport climbing; very different from the sport climbing known to the rest of the world. Sport climbing, in theory, isn't supposed to have no fall zones, provided the climbing is steep enough and you don't blow a clip. |




