How To Prep For Ice And Mixed Climbing Season Author: Gordon McArthur September 29, 2014

The leaves are changing, the temps are dropping, and summer projects are being ticked. After months of hot weather, time at the beach, and beers on the back deck, winter lines have begun to encroach our daily thoughts. Dipping our hands into chalk bags will soon become sharpening our picks and readying ourselves to climb in sub-zero conditions. No more shirts-off climbing—time to layer up with our warmest jackets and sip from a thermos filled with hot coffee.

With a new season approaching, it’s always a good idea to go into it with a certain sense of readiness. To which level you take said readiness to depends on what your goals are. Maybe you’re psyched on learning how to mixed climb, or maybe you’re going to try your hand at competition. Any way you look at it, getting your body prepared to suffer through the winter temps is worth paying attention to.

There really is no “right way” to prepare or train, only that of which works best for you and your body. We often try to mimic what others do, and to an extent that may work. But to get ultimate performance out of ourselves, we need to discover how our own bodies work, and what’s best for them. There are, of course, the standard exercises that lay the groundwork. The chin-ups, pushups, dips and cardio—the movements that fire your muscles in lieu of what’s to come. You don’t want to grab your tools after a six-month hiatus and go and try to be a rock star. That’s a nasty road that leads straight to injury. The foundation you build your training on is the key to having a fun season—whether you’re trying to climb along a horizontal mixed roof or up a WI3 ice climb.

Since everyone’s bodies and goals are different, here is an overview of what I do, and how I prepare with certain goals in mind. From that you could perhaps formulate a plan based on some of what I do, tailoring it to your goals and what works for your body.

Throughout the course of the summer, I love to rock climb, so I’ll spend most of my “outside days” doing so. A lot of the times the movement in rock climbing crosses over into the mixed and ice-climbing world beautifully. So if you rock climb, you’re already on your way for the winter prep. I also try to go to the gym three or four times per week. Head to toe, I’ll train various muscles so my body is well balanced. In climbing there’s so much pulling and not as much pushing. IT’S EXTREMELY IMPORTANT TO TRAIN THE OPPOSITION MUSCLES. Like pushups, bench press and shoulders, to name a few. Push, push, push. Being unbalanced—like able to do a lat pull-down equivalent to your body weight, but you can only bench press half your body weight—will lead to injury. Do you get sore elbows? Be honest, because most climbers do. It probably means you’re unbalanced.

After about a month of general conditioning, I alter my gym workouts to more climbing-specific exercises. Two times a week I’ll work on training the muscles that specifically pertain to climbing: dead lifts (lower back), lat pull downs, chin-ups, seated rows, hammer curls (like a bicep curl but holding the dumbbell up and down, not side to side), wrist flexors, etc.

I’ll also do one or two days a week of opposition training. This workout is generally a little faster; usually I’ll snap off rounds of shoulder presses, bench presses, some specific rotator cuff exercises (to keep my shoulders healthy), followed with some stretching and light cardio.

My general goal with weight training is to build up a lot of power, so that when I’m putting out energy I’m not redlining the entire climb. The idea is to have enough power so instead of being at my max and burning out before the end of the climb, I always have enough reserve in the tank. The general rule is to bring yourself to a place where you’re not hitting your max halfway through the climb. If you train at 70 percent effort, and try to perform at 100 percent effort, your body will crash before the chains. Train at 90 to 100 percent effort, and when it comes time to perform, you’ll find yourself cruising to the top only using 60 to 80 percent of your effort.

Now for the fun stuff: the training that involves actual ice axes and other sport-specific equipment. I spend six months in preparation for my winter season. Your goals may be different, perhaps requiring less commitment. But alongside the gym training, I also train three to four days per week doing sport-specific training with my ice axes. Where I live, my resources are somewhat limited for climbing-specific training and actual climbing movement. So I’ve tried to build everything possible in my backyard.

Superman has his fortress of solitude. Batman has his bat cave. I … have my backyard. In my backyard I’ve built everything I could think of that would lead to the most specific training possible. It seems like every week I’m building something new, formulated from a new idea of how to be better and stronger. It’s over the top, but, it’s what’s needed. We don’t have a climbing gym where I live, so I essentially built my own. There’s a 30-foot arch, a huge bouldering cave, things strung from every tree, chin-up bars, campus boards, and the list goes on.

You might not need to go to such lengths. I’ve seen so many simple ideas that have led to peoples’ great success. One of the staples invented by the man, Will Gadd, was the “splice.” Defined as the “Steep plywood ice,” essentially Gadd built a three-foot-wide by 20-foot high wall (framed by 2x4 and plywood), drilled holes all over it (two side by side about every two feet), put rungs between the holes for feet, leaned it on an angle and then climb up and down it until fatigued. The brilliant thing about this concoction was that it could be leaned to any angle, as there was rope tied to it, strung up to a tree. If you wanted to train for vertical ice, lean it straight up and down. If you wanted to train for steep mixed climbing, lean the sucker over to a 35 degree angle and climb up and down until you drop. For about 80 bucks, you have an excellent training device.

Simply slinging your tools over a chin-up bar and doing pull-ups is about the easiest way to get your arms ready for the season. Don’t have a chin-up bar? Anything from tree branches, to your doorframe, to the school playground, there’s always a place to hang your tools from for a set of pull-ups. Can’t do a pull-up? No problem. Put a chair in front of you, put your legs up, or one leg up and then do a pull-up. Work toward doing them with both feet hanging. Then, start trying to do sets. I like doing 100 pull-ups in ten minutes—that’s 10 every minute. I also try to add variety by doing wide grip, narrow grip, and shoulder width apart grip. This allows me to build all angles of pull power.

I spend a lot of time training in my backyard. In fact, whether training or building or re-setting, I’m pretty much in my backyard every night. It’s built and set so that I can push to my absolute limit. I climb laps on set routes. Like 4x4’s, which is climbing four routes with about a minute of rest between each route, times four. That’s 16 routes. I practice specific movements, train them in climbing scenarios, and then try to refine, refine, refine. I’ve built rectangular boxes and strung them up in the air so I can train figure 4’s and figure 9’s. A figure 4 is throwing your opposite leg over your opposite arm (left leg over right arm), and a figure 9 is same leg over same arm. These types of movements or for when there’s nowhere to put your feet, generally when you’re upside down. There are various bars hung for doing pull-ups, lever training—lifting your body up into a plank position, and one-arm lunging. Campusing walls are in place for specific one-arm power training, and quick draws are hung to refine my clipping skills. My backyard is crazy. But it’s amazing crazy. Well, I think so at least.

Trying to define what you should do to prepare for the winter season is kind of hard, shy of suggesting the aforementioned standard workouts of weight training, getting comfortable with pull-ups, and spending some time on your tools. Beyond that, my suggestions are to define your goals, and from there define your weaknesses. Knowing your weaknesses and admitting them is a humbling sense, but it’s where great things begin. Then you can start to move. Any sort of sport-specific preparation is going to lead to better results and a healthier body. Sleep well, eat well, and keep your body in shape. This is the formula for attaining goals. And beyond all of this, if you need more insight and/or more direction, drop me a line, as I’d love to talk more.

Gordon McArthur Gordon McArthur has been climbing for 16 years, but only in the last five have things really gone a lot deeper. “He says that even though we sleep, our desire does not,” says Gordon. “’It is who we are.’ We are desire. It is the essence of the human soul, the secret of our existence. Absolutely nothing of human greatness is ever accomplished without it. Desire fuels our search for the life we prize. The same old thing is not enough. It never will be.” Gordon lives, breathes and eats climbing, whether sport, mixed or ice. “When I am climbing, things feel right, smooth, like it was meant to be.” He lives in Cranbrook, BC and travel a lot, living out of his van and relishing the opportunity to see the world whilst living his dream. “Life is crazy, wrangling my kids, running my design business, and sharing life with my wife,” he says. “There’s never a dull moment and always a new adventure. It’s perfect, really.”