Varför man ska öva Speedclimbing
| Many climbers scoff at the mention of speed climbing as an esoteric pursuit practiced by a small minority of competitors. Speed, however, can be a key to climbing success on difficult routes as well, and a conscious attempt to speed climb may help you succeed on routes you've failed on before. How can you speed climb a route that you can't even climb at a relaxed pace? Speed can actually help you climb more efficiently by reducing technique hindering inhibition and pessimism and letting your body do what it should be doing automatically and unconsciously. This principle was illustrated brilliantly to me by a friend, Andreas, with whom I had a friendly rivalry. |
Nine years ago I had climbed only one 5.12. With my head held high, I went climbing at Stony Point in Southern California. After warming up, I put a top rope on a 5.12 route. On this testpiece, I ended up hanging on the route twice for my first burn. After quite a struggle, I got to the top. This took me about 10 to 15 minutes.
My friendly rivalry with Andreas did not end that day at Stoney Point. Andreas called me a week later and said he'd climbed the route in 38 seconds! I packed my climbing pack and got in the car.