Giving slack to a falling leader
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When I was taught belaying the technique was to immediately lock and arrest the fall. Fast forward to modern times. I’m taking the lead climbing test in a gym and the worker says it’s safer to give rope out before locking for a “soft catch”. My response is that with a stretchy dynamic rope every catch is soft. Who’s righ? |
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You are not correct when saying "with a stretchy dynamic rope every catch is soft." There exist climbers with broken/sprained ankles that would agree with me. Being able to give a "soft catch" is a good skill to have (among many) in order to be a desirable belay partner. |
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And just as important, learn when it is appropriate to give a soft catch and when it is not. And also learn the difference between keeping slack in the system, vs letting some rope through the device, vs letting yourself get pulled up. |
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Soft catch WHAT nonsense. The longer your climber falls the more chance to get hurt. |
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You were both pretty wrong. |
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Mark Frumkin wrote: Soft catch WHAT nonsense. The longer your climber falls the more chance to get hurt. It’s absolutely not nonsense. Spend more time sport climbing, especially on vertical or past vertical terrain and you will learn otherwise. Better yet make sure to take falls on steep terrain with a belayer much heavier than yourself who just locks off. |
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I would not pay out slack during a fall to give a soft catch. However I often jump to get my body weight moving up to give a soft catch. |
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The difference between a soft and hard catch is usually most influenced by the belayer remaining stationary vs allowing themselves to be pulled from their stance (hopefully not directly into the wall or anchor). The amount of rope in the system, belay device, friction from protection biners influence this too but not as much. Like someone already posted... learn when it’s ok and not ok to give a soft catch. And despite your instructor’s well intentioned advice, don’t be the guy that constantly keeps a giant U shaped loop of slack that touches the ground in effort to provide a soft catch. It’s kinda dumb and won’t help that much. |
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Can you explain the diff end result between jumping and hopping and leaping which gives a bunch of slack, to yarding out a bunch of slack to the falling leader ? |
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I was really surprised this was not discussed before /s |
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other wrote: Can you explain the diff end result between jumping and hopping and leaping which gives a bunch of slack, to yarding out a bunch of slack to the falling leader ? The little hop must be timed right, you want to be moving upward when the catch begins... then the fall gets stopped over time as instead of an immobile mass its pulling something up that is already moving up, so deceleration happens much slower. |
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other wrote: Can you explain the diff end result between jumping and hopping and leaping which gives a bunch of slack, to yarding out a bunch of slack to the falling leader ? The difference is not ending up with rope burn and dropping your climber because you're trying to feed out slack in the middle of a fall. |
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Feeding out slack while the climber is falling sounds like a good way to drop the climber. |
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amarius wrote: I was really surprised this was not discussed before /s Those are all old threads and don’t include the latest cutting edge research and scientific journal articles. On the little hop. |
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other wrote: Can you explain the diff end result between jumping and hopping and leaping which gives a bunch of slack, to yarding out a bunch of slack to the falling leader ? Leader to belayer: “The moment I begin to fall, start yarding out a ton of slack.” -said no one ever |
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Paying out slack while you fall sounds asinine. There’s a place for “soft catches” but that’s not how I go about it. |
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The reality is that leaping, jumping and hopping to pay out rope to a falling leader is the same as paying out rope with your hands. |
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no, it's not. |
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other wrote: The reality is that leaping, jumping and hopping to pay out rope to a falling leader is the same as paying out rope with your hands. Lol I needed a dose of stupidity today. I hope for your sake your are trolling |
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Soft catches are important. |
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S2k 4life wrote: I truly feel like the soft catch phenomenom is a gym thing. Blah.
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