Training the Young Climber

There have been two great articles published online recently, and I don’t want to go over old ground by repeating them, instead I shall throw you over to the sites. The first is by Dave Macleod, who talks about how young people often learn the hard way about injuries. The second is from Rebecca Williams who runs Smart Climbing, who added a recent blog post on more rounded training based on her experiences of gymnastics.

Last week I met up with Rebecca as she had a whiteboard she didn’t need anymore. I stopped for a quick brew and somehow we both got talking about Long-Term Athlete Development (LTAD) in climbing. We discuss that far too much time seems to be on climbing rather than the conditioning of a well round general fitness.

Rebecca’s recalls her gymnastic past, whilst during my MSc I went and visited an old school friend who is an elite gymnastic coach, to chat about what she does with the gymnasts that she trains, and having observed a session, I can say that what Rebecca describes appears a common thing in gymnastics. Yet during our discussion I tried to remember times when I had seen a 30 minute warm up or 30 minute stretching session at the climbing wall, and sadly I have yet to come across it, but that doesn’t mean it does not happen.

Similarly I have also done two of the BMC LTAD, and as it has been hard to get involved as a deliverer of these courses, so I decided to do a bit of digging and research and set up a similar course on LTAD.

When looking at the Fundamentals stage of LTAD and how other sports cover this, I found most other sports don’t use their sport as a vehicle when developing the ABC of movement (Agility, Balance and coordination). Instead they use a set of exercises that are aimed at developing these skills, skills which if not learnt by a certain age become harder to master. If they have mastered these ABC then the child can, if they choose to, take them to another sport, but essentially the Agility, Balance and coordination are already hardwired. Try searching Agility, Balance and coordination in Google and you’ll find a lot of resources, some from tennis and other sports are particularly good, and include short videos of what you can do.

Interestingly the BMC and UIAA recently endorsed the notion that ‘campus board’ training was inappropriate for young climbers, as a research paper had linked it damaged of the growth plates in the fingers and subsequent permanent finger deformity. However, I suspect any overtraining of fingers of steep boulders may well have a similar effect.

Another issue for young people, I wrote about a long time ago was weight issues, after reading an article on weight and gymnasts. It attributed weight being made an issue by a coach as making gymnasts be significantly more likely to develop some form of disordered eating. However it also looked at coaches’ thoughts, asking them ‘Do you make weight an issue in training’, to which nearly all coaches denied making it an issue. However when they asked current and ex-gymnasts they found that a much higher percentage felt the coach made weight an issue. I am sure that there would be similar results if that same work was carried out on climbing coaches and the question was of weight, and on ‘protecting children against finger injuries’.

By the look of the two articles I linked to above, neither of them are not alone in thinking that training young climbers is still a delicate and relatively misunderstood thing, with little decent research being available. However conditioning training seems vastly underused, and the issues around the development of young climbers bone structure is still often misinterpreted, and could lead to as Dave puts its young climber learning the hard way about injury.

I draw a parallel to a powerlifting training regime that was tested many years ago as part of some research. The protocol showed that yes it was extremely effective at increasing strength, however the research was cut short, as whilst the strength increase was undeniable, the down side was that it lead to some pretty horrific injuries (Ruptured/detached muscles and tendons if I recall). We are only starting to come into the light from darkness when it comes to training young climbers, and like this protocol we may be making some mistakes.

So whilst the start of the BMC young climbers competition circuit is starting up this weekend. Where competition is growing as more and more people compete (around 2000+ young climbers are involved across the UK), how we train them to do this is still a dark art, and perhaps we should use a precautionary principle when training young people.

Anyway I really just wanted to support the two articles I mentioned and managed instead to go off on yet another tangent

 

Snowdonia Mountain Guides PDF Brochure

Hi, I have been bust putting together a little brochure with all the courses we are offering over at Snowdonia Mountain Guides. I will put a link on the website soon, but for now you can download the PDF here.

The Brochure covers all the courses we have coming up over the next few months, right through to the Autumn of 2013. If you use social media and have friends who climb or mountaineer who’d be interested in seeing our Brochure please help us market this brochure by re-tweeting this tweet, or sharing the link to the PDF with your friends on Facebook.

 

Welsh Winter Skills Courses

Well, it has snow the last couple of days leaving the tops covered in some snow, and with the freezing levels looking good well into next week. There might well be the oppotunity for some Welsh Winter Skills Courses. So if you want to learn to use ice axes and crampons, as well as learn how to survive and enjoy winter in the mountains of Wales, then it looks like we have finally got a winter.

If you are interested in either a Welsh Winter Skills course or few days being guided up some of the classic mountaineering routes, then please get in contact with here. If you’d like to know more about the courses then please look at my SMG website.

Logbook Function add to iCoach

Well, I have been busy designing and building a logbook function to my iCoach project over on my Coaching/Instruction website. At the moment if you register you can complete a performance profile which will give you 5 climbing attributes to focus your training on over the next month.

To compliment this, I have added a way to log you training be it climbing indoors or out, running or mental skills training. As well as logging each route by grade, I am encouraging people to get used to using the PRE scale (Perceived Rate of Exertion), this if you like adds another performance measure.

Over time you should notice that your PRE for a given grade will decrease, before you Grade increases. Whilst at the moment there is not an outputting page, my idea is to follow this up in about a month with a page that allows you to look at monthly averages against session.

Eventually I might even add a facility that will add overload to your session, printing you out a programme for your next wall session.

Free Performance Profiling

Sorry I haven’t been on here much, the main reason is that I have been learning php to programming a bespoke web service for climbers. If you have brought my book ‘How to Climb Harder’ it features a performance profiling technique. I have managed to automate this for individual climbers.

Whilst at the moment the site only assesses your performance and gives you suggestions for training over the coming month the plan is to slowly develop the site. The next step is to add some ability to log your training sessions in detail, and after that I will look at developing various graphs to highlight performance changes.

If you’d like to try the site out, the link is here. If you do use the site, I’d really like to here any feedback on how you found it, plus any ideas on how you’d like to see the site develop. You do have to register and login to the site, this is neccessary for two reasons the first is that it allows you to revisit the site and review your profile, as well as re-evaluate it after a month.

The second reason is that may use some of the data at a later date to examine training behaviours of climbers.

Anyway I hope that the site will be of use to many climbers, and possibly even coaches. If you are a coach feel free to get your climbers to use the site. If it proves popular I can create a coaches login so you can examine your climbers profiles.

Last Minute Winter Skills Courses

Well with the first signs of winter over Snowdonia, I thought I’d make a post about the Winter Skills courses that I run. In them I use many of the generic coaching skills of teaching skill aquisition, but apply them to crampon and ice axe work.

These courses are great, and a real essential if you are a summer hillwalker or mountaineer who wants to head out into the mountains in Winter Conditions. We’ll show you how to use all the equipment you need to keep yourself safe, as well as do some classic hillwalks and mountaineering routes in either Snowdonia or if you give me enough warning Scotland as well.

I have a couple of pages on my website Welsh Winter Skills, and Scottish Winter Skills. I have some dates in the calender for these courses, but I am flexible if the dates don’t suit you, then matbe I can arrange something y=to suit you.

CPD Instructor Courses 22nd and 23rd Oct

Just thought I’d remind people that I am running some CPD courses for instructors or trainees this weekend. Saturday 22nd is a Long Term Athlete Development Workshop, and 23rd is a Coaching Climbing Movement. These courses would be ideal for anyway either qualified as an SPA or MIA or going through training who wants to develop skills for coaching climbing and working with the long term development of young climbers at a Kids Climbing Club.

If you are interested then contact me through the comments or contacts here or at Snowdonia Mountain Guides.

More details on the course can be found here.

Another New Site: Snowdonia Mountain Guides

I finally got round to making a new website for my domain, Snowdonia Mountain Guides. The site is still a work in rpogress, although all the major features are there. It is a retro site, in that it is based on hand coded PHP and HTML, rather than using wordpress as a content management system. I am oping that it will be easier to managed, as I have managed to do some background work that controls the pricing across all the site.

Anyway, I hope you like it and find time to explore and visit, and maybe be inspired to come and join me on a course at some point. I am really looking forward to the winter if anyone is keen for some last minute winter courses in Wales, based on when the conditions are in.

http://snowdoniamountainguides.com/