Avoiding (tendon / pulley) injury as beginning climber?
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Hey all, |
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Warm up, warm up, warm up... Even spending 5-15 minutes on an exercise bike gets the blood pumping to your fingers. |
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There's no magic formula for maximum hours per week of climbing. It depends on intensity of your workouts, genetics, the types of holds you favor, etc |
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I take about 15 mins and slow climb the V-easy and V0s on the vert or near vert walls. I emphasize stretching on the route and breathing fully. Then about 5 mins of stretching, then I start ramping up my workout (even if it is a weights day and not a climbing day, I do this warm up). So much yes for open hand crimps v close hand. A lot of people save close hand for outside projects since they cause so much strain on your pulleys. If your a boulderer: for a warm up, don't jump down if they end in a double hand match, down climb; your body might not be loose enough so early in the workout to take the jolt, getting old sucks. |
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They sell a tincture at my gym called iron monkey finger formula, ironmonkeyclimbing.com. |
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+1 develope a workout routine that works antagonistic muscle groups (muscle climbing doesn't use). Many tendon injuries are from muscle imbalance. Especially the infamous "climbers elbow". |
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Just don't train on finger boards, and no full crimps, the only 2 things you need to know. |
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that guy named seb wrote:Just don't train on finger boardsNot sure I would recommend it to the op who has been climbing for a few weeks, but I feel like hang boards have done a lot to reduce the stress on my tendons. Hang boards allow you to slowly increase load in a very controlled manner (unlike bouldering) and now I can usually hang onto small holds openhanded when others are using full crimps. |
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will ar wrote: Not sure I would recommend it to the op who has been climbing for a few weeks, but I feel like hang boards have done a lot to reduce the stress on my tendons. Hang boards allow you to slowly increase load in a very controlled manner (unlike bouldering) and now I can usually hang onto small holds openhanded when others are using full crimps.Most people don't start out strong so they probably wont be able to do the moves to get to the hold. |
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Rando Calrissian wrote:I take about 15 mins and slow climb the V-easy and V0s on the vert or near vert walls. I emphasize stretching on the route and breathing fully. Then about 5 mins of stretching, then I start ramping up my workout (even if it is a weights day and not a climbing day, I do this warm up). So much yes for open hand crimps v close hand. A lot of people save close hand for outside projects since they cause so much strain on your pulleys. If your a boulderer: for a warm up, don't jump down if they end in a double hand match, down climb; your body might not be loose enough so early in the workout to take the jolt, getting old sucks. Its awesome that you're so jazzed on climbing! Take a few days off here and there to replenish your body's stores! Never go so hard you can't hang on a jug, never go so hard your form starts to deteriorate. Once this happens, stop immediately, take the next day or two off then you can come back. Rest is just as important as climbing, let your body repair what you did to it and then hammer away at it again. I am also a believer in antagonistic muscle work outs too, so doing like pushups and forearm rolls and twists with a light dumbbell (like 5-8 lbs) helps out tons.---------------------------------------- I'd say you are at some risk and once you get a finger injury it is gonna suck! Second what Rando said....On the psychological side your mind needs time to assimilate and organize the new things you are learning. Always pre-stretch and warm down. Take deliberate days off. |
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Do any move with strong control, if something feels out of control and like you have to 'jump for it' don't, instead take a moment to plan and climb statically. If your muscles are engaged while you make a move to a controlled hold you'll be much more likely to get strong without shock loading something and getting hurt. |
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that guy named seb wrote:Just don't train on finger boards, and no full crimps, the only 2 things you need to know.+1 for not on hangboards yet. Wait until you are stronger and have impeccable form and body awareness (a year ish?????). If you hangboard wrong, yer gonna get hurt. If you get hurt you have to take off a good chunk of time from climbing. You like climbing, so don't get hurt; simple gangsta. |
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Early in my climbing I was plagued by finger injuries. However, I've found a solution that has worked amazingly. Here it is: lay on the ground and smash your forearms with a barbell or other heavy object. In my experience, the pully injuries come from too much tension in the forearms. Smash, smash, smash and you will be free of injury. |
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Listen to your body, make sure you rest. If you're climbing at a beginning level you probably won't put your fingers at much risk climbing every day. Warm up before you try anything hard. |
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Jon H wrote:One thing you can do is learn to climb open handed instead of closed crimping.^^ This. |
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Just go climb friction slabs all day. You'll never strain a finger! |
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I personally think hangboards suck. I do like some training devices though, like the finger friendly 'G-Strings'. Practice, warm up, and DO tape up your fingers for more support across the tendons you feel are at risk the most. It sure helps me as I get older from blowing out another one and being laid off to heal for my typical 8 months from a bad one. |
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Woodchuck ATC wrote:Practice, warm up, and DO tape up your fingers for more support across the tendons you feel are at risk the most. It sure helps me as I get older from blowing out another one and being laid off to heal for my typical 8 months from a bad one.Woodchuck, do you happen to know how to properly tape up fingers to support the tendons? Lately whenever I make a crimp position the joints in my middle finger seems to pop. I'm sitting out of climbing for a month or so to let it heal. I'm a beginner and terribly fell into this injury without any knowledge of it. :( |
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stlee268 wrote: Woodchuck, do you happen to know how to properly tape up fingers to support the tendons? :(http://www.climbing.com/skills/avoid-finger-blowouts/ |
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Thanks for the reference page link. I do recall seeing that printed in some version in the back 'yellow pages' of mags once, or long ago in the old 'Tech tips' pages that I saved and have in a thick 4 inch binder from back to at least the 90's. Divided up into sections of Sport, Alpine and Ice, Trad, Aid, Safety and medicine, and even some gym hints. Always go in a 'figure 8' around the knuckle with tape crossing underneath and a few wraps at each start-end. Holds me together just fine. I just cover with another full layer if it's for crack climbing protection too, or do the back of hand tape glove if needed. |
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Think of training like farming. You cant force your vegetables to sprout earlier by pouring more water on, in fact you might kill them by doing so. Bring that mentality to the gym. You are training for the long haul, for routes 3 or 4 years from now. Be patient, end your session while you still feel good, get good rest, eat right. |