In part one of this article, I talked about why many climbers should consider supplementing their climbing-specific training with resistance training. In this article, I’ll talk about how. First, let me say that I think resistance training is terribly misunderstood and misused by climbers. When we talk about strength training with weights we are not talking about bodybuilding and we are not talking about conditioning. When we train for strength we want to:
- address sport-specific motor patterns
- address sport-specific metabolic pathways
- progressively overload the system to cause an improvement in force generation
- avoid doing anything that will negatively affect our climbing
There are myriad popular group training programs available today that utilize many of the strength training exercises you’ll end up using as a climber. While the exercises might be the same, the framework in which they are used differs. Understand that developing a high level of non-specific work capacity will not help most climbers. This kind of workout may be appropriate for novices who are unfit and in need of general conditioning and for expert-level climbers that have maximally developed their climbing technique. For most of us, the damage done by random, high-intensity “workout of the day” efforts is huge; you might not get injured, but you are likely diminishing your climbing ability.
If you elect to do training directed by someone else, check their qualifications. A weekend seminar does not make a good strength coach. Ask some questions. Make sure the training they are asking you to do is tailored to your goals. Ask them to explain how their program is going to help you develop strength specific to rock climbing. Anyone who talks “elite fitness” or scalability within a general plan as a method of improving your climbing should be fired immediately.
OK. End of rant.
Getting back to specificity, we like to use movement patterns similar to what a climber might experience on the rock. This is called motor specificity. We also want to use exercise durations, muscle actions, and loads that lead toward our end goal of strength. This is called metabolic specificity. Exercises can be either motor specific, metabolic specific, or both. The more of both you have, the better.
To develop appropriate strength for climbing we want to use complex, multi-joint movements at loads high enough that the body will adapt by getting stronger rather than getting bigger. Remember that there is a huge misconception that heavy training leads to bulk. Not so. It is high-volume, medium-load training that is most effective for building size (i.e. 8 sets of 12 reps).
There is a clear and incontrovertible relationship between increases in body mass and a reduction in relative strength. Since climbing is all about relative strength, we need to be obsessive about staying as light as possible. Once we get you good and strong, I will put together an article series on fat loss and ideal body composition, so we can work on the other side of the equation.
I mentioned progressive overload. Don’t skimp on this. Strength training does not happen one session at a time, but rather over a prolonged period of weeks and months. The more advanced you are in your athleticism, the longer it will take you to see an improvement in strength.
As a general outline, our athletes train strength on this kind of schedule:
Off-Season (several weeks out from performance climbing): 3 sessions per week, 3-5 exercises, 4 sets each, 1-4 reps (working at 85%+ of 1RM)
Pre-Season: (in the 4-6 weeks before a “peaking” time): 2 sessions per week, 2-4 exercises, 3 sets each, 1-4 reps (85%+ of 1RM)
In-Season: (during a peak climbing time): 1-2 sessions per week, 2-4 exercises, 2-3 sets each, 1-6 reps (75%+ of 1RM)
Often, these sessions take less than 30 minutes, which seems like a very short time to spend in the gym. We usually combine this training with a climbing gym session, as we have both a weight room and a climbing gym in our facility. I understand that this is not always the case.
We pick the specific exercises based on movement patterns rather than “muscle groups.” In general, we opt for ground-based exercises using free weights. When setting up the workouts, we always look for the bare minimum of weight-training time that will still yield results; unless you love weightlifting, gym time runs counter to what most climbers really enjoy.
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The movements we pick are pretty simple. We look for 4 basic patterns in each of our sessions:
1. Upper Body Pull – This is usually a rowing motion. Pull-up type exercises also qualify for this group, but I think they are inferior to the row for rock climbers.
2. Upper Body Press – This can be a bench press, push-up variation, dip, or an overhead press.
3. Lower Body Multi-Joint – For climbers we like lunges, step-ups, and single-leg squats. Bilateral exercises such as squats and front squats are fine, but harder to do correctly and are somewhat less specific; you very rarely press with both legs on the same plane at the same time.
4. Hip Hinge or Posterior Chain – These exercises help balance the strength of the quadriceps, as well as developing the strength of the low back and hamstrings. We like deadlifts, Romanian deadlifts, and even some kettlebell movements for this part of the workout.
To make things efficient, we set up a typical 4-exercise session, doing bi-sets (supersets). An example:
Do 3 sets each of the following pairs:
A1: 4-6 1-arm inverted rows
A2: 4-6 1-leg squat
A2: 4-6 1-leg squat
B1: 4-6 dumbbell bench press
B2: 2-4 deadlift
Rest 30-60 seconds between exercises and 2-3 minutes between groups.
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When we set up strength programs, we are looking at what gives us the greatest return per unit of training time. Many people look at a plan like the one I’ve listed above and comment that it looks easy, that the sets are too short to be very hard. Any climber that’s tried a V-double-digit boulder problem knows that the “short=easy” mentality is flawed.
The training ideas listed above are designed to help climbers create greater full-body strength, which can then lead to better technical execution of specific climbing movements. This style of session is not a replacement for climbing movements.
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Great article Steve! I’ve been incorporating those principles into the weight training our adult competitive team does and the difference in their strength over the last 4 weeks has been huge. I like the concept of the 1 arm inverted row – I’ve been doing 2 arms, but that would definitely step it up and mimic a long pull and lockoff.
EXCELLENT ARTICLE. I did my first Strength Training Session tonight and it only took about 20 min.
Weighted Pull Ups:
80lbs x 5
65lbs x 8
45lbs x 10
1 Leg Squat – 5 x each leg (assisted)
Push Ups – 5×5 with legs on bench
One questions, should these Strength exercises be done after climbing specific training (hangboard, campus, etc) or before??
Thanks for the great info.
Carlos
Hey Carlos,
I’d say do the strength work after climbing if you can. The reason I say this is because we have a harder time learning good movement patterns under fatigue, so we want to do the most technically complex work first in a session. If you’re splitting into separate workouts, the order probably doesn’t matter as much.
Hi, Steve! Excellent article. Since I started using a targeted resistance training program similar to the program outlined above in the past several years, my climbing ability has improved dramatically. I only wish someone had pointed me in this direction much, much sooner. Thanks for sharing your knowledge here.
Hi Steve, Interesting article. One question. You said “It is high-volume, medium-load training that is most effective for building size (i.e. 8 sets of 12 reps).” What do you think of things like cross fit type workouts that utilize high volume weight training? One workout might be something like, 4 rounds of 30 Kettlebell swings (35 lb kettlebell), 30 box jumps (24 inch box), 30 pullups. Is something like this going to build unwanted muscle mass in a climber?
Alan
Hi Alan,
I don’t think a CrossFit sytle session should cause too much mass gain. The movements are generally complex, explosive, and done under time constraints that don’t allow for much rest. This keeps strength gain and mass gain to a minimum, and generally aims at higher conditioning. The founder of CrossFit says otherwise, however, “”The bodybuilding model is designed around, requires, steroids for significant hypertrophy. The neuroendocrine response of bodybuilding protocols is so blunted that without ‘exogenous hormonal therapy’ little happens. The CrossFit protocol is designed to elicit a substantial neuroendocrine wallop and hence packs an anabolic punch that puts on impressive amounts of muscle, though that is not our concern. Strength is. Natural bodybuilders (the natural ones that are not on steroids) never approach the mass that our athletes do. They don’t come close.”
I think it’s very important to keep in mind that CrossFit is not a well-planned out training program. It, in Dewey Neilsen’s words, “is not a thought-out progressive exercise system, it is an extreme sport done with strength training tools.” Sure you can gain fitness doing it, but it’s likely not the best training plan for climbing. We did the CFHQ WODs a bunch in 2005 and 2006 with little to show for it.
One thing’s for sure…it will make you tough. Bottom line, do some measurements. Take girth numbers on your quads, hips, shoulders, and upper arms. Establish some base fitness numbers, including your climbing fitness. Do a month or so of whatever training you’re doing, then measure again. If you don’t like the numbers, change your training plan.
SB
Hey Steve, stumbled across this website just recently and I am impressed, alot of really good knowledge that relates to climbing on here! It just so happens I started climbing just over a year ago but gave up lifting due to not being able to recover from climbing sessions. I recently began to implement a lifting program again with the new years focusing on relative strength only keeping reps and sets in the 1-5 range and I was curious if you would recommend breaking up lifting days with climbing days or doing it all in the same day so the next day is a true rest day. I live right next door to a gym so I could easily climb in the afternoon and lift at night on the same day or just climb and lift in the afternoon on alternating days. Thanks for your time and the website!
Don
Hey Don,
Good question. Here is the clear answer: it depends. There are pros and cons to each method. First, if you’re really training strength (like your 1-5 rep plan) you are going to be sorely compromised for climbing anytime within the next 24-48 hours. Likewise, if you are training hard in climbing, you probably won’t be able to lift as heavy.
Since you have your head on straight and thus prioritize climbing over weight training, I’d think about setting it up either as a M-W-F plan where you climb in the morning and lift in the evening, or do a climb Monday, lift Tuesday, rest, etc. cycle.
That all being said, if you’re not getting better, the plan sucks. Maess around until something feels right.
SB