What Makes a Great Climbing Gym?
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highaltitudeflatulentexpulsionwrote: Seriously, foot stank is contagious and hard to get rid of. I've known some dirtbags to have feet and shoes that smell worse than a sewage treatment plant. |
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M Mwrote: My gym has a no barefoot policy....I got you on the shoe stank but It's the bros who don't use deodorant that can knock a buzzard of a gut truck "fasterer" than a sweaty shoe |
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If you're at a gym, wash your feet before you put your climbing shoes on and after you take them off. Cuts down on the bacteria that goes into your climbing shoes (and street shoes & socks) to breed in the dark dank. Simple concept, but so few people do it. |
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No people, free climbing. |
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The Depot Sheffield but maybe make it 24/7 card access. |
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holds that spin and rip off the wall to emulate choss. |
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Trevr Taylrwrote: Yes and Each wall should require a 45 minute incline treadmill session, while the staff beats you with slide alder and pine branches to simulate Washington approaches. Periodically throughout the day the overhead sprinklers will come on to force people to bail. |
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Making the prepubescent gym rats keep their shirts on |
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Clint Helanderwrote: No shaved or waxed chest bros either. |
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Shirt-on policy please. |
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grug gwrote: Or blanket no shirt policy |
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Magnus can take his shirt off if he wants to. |
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grug gwrote: Would you be more comfortable if i wore nipple covers? |
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John Clarkwrote: Pasties required for sure |
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John Clarkwrote: keep the "dirty brown flesh" covered |
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Logan Petersonwrote: The last couple “gym-to-crag” courses I saw were taught by some grom employee who only started climbing (indoors) a year ago and has only actually climbed outdoors a handful of times at the local choss crag. |
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Teton Tomwrote: In my experience, this a common theme with gym climbing. There is a huge difference from being certified and qualified. The instructor may have taken a class about teaching, but never put in years of training on real rock. Gym employees, often pretty new to the sport, think they have a huge understanding of climbing. To be fair, they may have a good understanding of how their local gym works. Even the most skilled competition climbers have to learn to transfer their skills to real rock, and some become the best rock climbers in the world. But gym climbing it is not the exact same skill set as outdoor climbing. We have all seen people that are strong in the gym but are horrible at slabs, cracks and reading routes / boulder problems. They often have what I call "5.12 hands with 5.8 feet." It is hard to know where to put your hands and feet when they are not bright pink and protruding from the wall, if that is what you are used to. |
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Shaun Johnsonwrote:
The issue is using the gym as a step towards getting outdoors. Using employees who are more interested in spreading psych and pumping up the sport than they are about the nuance of litter, impacts, and safety. At the end of the gym to crag class, do these people have an experienced partner to continue to show them the way? Sometimes the gym is enough. Let it be. |
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highaltitudeflatulentexpulsionwrote: While I have very mixed feelings about 'gym to crag' , advocating being an ostrich regarding the issue, is not a solution either. Like it or not, a percentage of folks who start climbing in gyms are, sooner or later, going to want to start climbing outdoors. Over the years, partly as a result of the availability and ease of gyms as the 'entrance drug' for climbing, many of the former ways folks were introduced to outdoor climbing ( especially trad) --such as climbing clubs or opportunities for developing mentor relationships, have withered or disappeared entirely. I know that this has been happening fairly extensively in the Northeast for several years---there are still some such opportunities, but much more limited both in number and location. The main options now available are guides or commercial climbing courses which are costly, not available in many locations, and rarely offer the ( non-commercial) infrastructure for continuing mentoring. Those factors are resulting in increasing numbers of gym-'trained' climbers venturing outdoors on their own. While that isn't always necessarily a bad thing ( long tradition of learning to climb with 'mother's clothesline'--those surviving such beginnings often developing into very accomplished climbers), the potential negatives are multiple and obvious. Given these circumstances, a well-thought out and well-run ( emphasis on both) gym-to-crag program can be worthwhile. |
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A good gym has only spray walls. No commercial setting at all is key. There should just be plywood walls with old holds with tape on them. It should be a cheap place to replicate outdoor climbing |




