Quarantraining
and the double-edged sword it is:
The whole world is in lock down, countries are shutting down
literally, toilet papers are running out from supermarkets and climbers are
freaking out from having to stay too much indoors. Word on the street is that
Covid-19 rules the world these days.
Even though corona virus’ scientific name sounds like a
robot sent from the future to destroy human interaction, impose social distancing and isolation; life is
Arnold Schwarzenegger saying, “I’ll be back”.
When it comes to
climbers, most of them are either rediscovering their houses on a weekday
afternoon, on a weekend or reconnecting with their family members they had
ditched, things they missed ever since they got seriously hooked on climbing.
Most of all the
climbers are dusting off their long-forgotten home set-ups they barely used
before. These home set-ups include woodies, fingerboards, a wide array of
climbing training gimmicks and in certain cases treadmills turned cloth
hangers.
If you are on social
media, namely Facebook or Instagram you have surely noticed these three trends:
1.
Climbers who are heading outdoors to get their dose of quarantine in
nature. There are different opinions whether we as climbers should stay home or
be in nature but judging from the rates of infections and weak healthcare
coverage of remote areas we should also be isolating at home. Many countries
like Spain, Italy and France have suspended all kind of outdoor activities
including climbing.
2.
Climbers who have reached a level of home boredom so high, their
trajectory ended in climbing anything including staircases, stone walls, dinner
tables and kitchen closets.
3.
Climbers who have one or more training tool and looking to maximise their time using it to get their mind off from turning berserk due to
isolation.
This article will not
result in a recipe for how to use your home wall, or how to turn your weak
fingers into Wolfgang Gullich on “Action Directe”, but it just wants to send a
key message: train smart and do not get injured.Stemming from my own
experience, I try to live by this motto: “try not to get injured while
training to perform on rock”.
While you can easily access so much information
on training tips and videos, it is essential to stay grounded on this fact
below.
“The lock down spectrum
for climbers who train at their houses these upcoming week is the following: You
either get strong and have higher chances to perform as you dream of, or you
get overstocked stupidly enough to burn distances and end up over training and
injuring yourself. Your call, train smart!”
Concluding with three
essential tips for surviving the lock down and having a successful quarantraining:
·
Warm up gradually before each session, warm down at the end of it.
·
Ensure you stretch enough to avoid unexpected injuries.
·
Take rest days because not every day is a day to crank hard moves, every
2 to 3 days make sure you rest, recover, sleep well and be in shape for your
next session.
Home wall 1, with different training tools. |
Home wall 2, with a small campus board, a peg board and gymnastic rings. Photo: Jad Issa. |
Home wall 3, using a symmetrical setting. Photo: Sam Eid. |