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V7 climbing reddit. But the real takeaway is that it’s very few.

V7 climbing reddit Now at 3. My first V7 was around 1. All outside, from starting climbing: 4 months to V4, 7 months to V5, 1 year to first V6, but I couldn't do another for almost a year after that. V7: One year before a gym problem was overgraded badly enough for me to "officially" boulder V7. I was climbing 5. at least twice a week on non-climbing days, push muscle training mostly to prevent injury and general fitness. My goal is to get to be a solid v7 climber. Within 2 years, V11. Wed: gym climbing + some board climbing, mainly to hangout with friends and give fingers a break. Between V2 and V3, you can make the jump purely on upper body strength (even though that’s not advised) but once you get up into the V7-V10 range you’ll need to have excellent technique and strength to move up from V7 to V8. Try going in with the mindset of it being a puzzle. 5 years, still V7, though I've done more of them now. I am (I think) the perfect build for climbing 5. 5 years, V8 around 2 which is where I'm at now. V6: Six more months in the gym, followed by three more months injured. You call that a V7!? That’s not a real V7. Climbing currently; Currently I'm probably comfortable getting most v5s in 1-2 sessions, probably about 50% are within 5 attempts at a couple of gyms I visit. Call yourself a v7 climber all you want, but if you generically say "I can climb v7" and then your buddies watch a v5 make you look like a muppet every week, it's probably not the best description :) "I've done a few v7s outside" makes you a v7 climber, but can definitely misrepresent your skill. That put me solidly within v7 (sent a bunch) and I did my first v8. In the same way that some people climb V13 after 3 years of just climbing, some people need dedicated training to reach V7. I tried to do another fingerboard cycle, but it felt like I was on the verge of getting injured. I was working on that dyno so I have to go back and do it start to finish so let me know tips on technique! I don’t know what a “v7 climber” is, but you can consider yourself someone who’s done a v7. My old gyms would be a toss up between V2/3. I’ve done 60+ V4-V5 problems. 5 years to V7. At my gym v7 is where technique becomes a must if you dont have hulk level grip strength Theres a few v7 starts at my gym right now that felt impossible to do the first move, or even hold the start, until i figured out the right body positioning. There’s really no point in defining your climbing with one specific metric though—maybe you’re also someone who flashes v5 nearly all the time, and can usually put down 6s in a single session, and those are equally important to keep track I had a different experience. Stats: 23 M, 5' 7", 150 lbs, ~14% body fat. V6's are usually known as the second plateau because, unless you climb on a set schedule for improvement or have great genes, your climbing strength will progress very slowly. . Dedicated to increasing all our knowledge about how to better improve at our sport. 6 months. I’d say it’s an exponential increase in difficulty as you move up. V7: You need exceptional climbing strength and strong footwork. Then life got in the way, and I haven't been able to climb that much this summer. I can still do a v7 once in a while but I don't feel as strong. A specific goal I have in mind is climbing ten V6-V7. 13 with 3 years experience when I went to Hueco for the first time and was able to do a couple of V7's after never bouldering--hell that was back in the day when the V-scale came out. I'm also working on losing between 5-10 lbs I think you should mainly focus on your technique. 7's usually love crimps/slopers, and when they're not using crimps/slopers, the moves are usually dynamic I think my current gym would put this at V1/V2 depending on whether it was the bouldering location or the location with a bouldering wall. I have seen people progress from beginner to V7 in around a year and a half, but they were training hard as much as possible and eat sleep and breathed climbing. 9 with +3 API and 145 lbs. Both were slab and soft. For technique advice I'd recommend checking out John Kettle's book "Climbing Technique: the practical guide to movement mastery" which is a really accessible read, explains how it all works, and has loads of excercises and drills. I find that climbing is always that way, things that are harder seem immeasurably harder and unimaginable until you train for them. But the real takeaway is that it’s very few. Most free solo climbers I've seen talk about how they love it because it's the most "pure" form of climbing - just you and the mountain, you just walk up to a big rock and climb it without dealing with gear, ropes, or clipping in. They are outliers. 2. Finger-related benchmarks: Campus board: 1-4-6 on the big rungs. I think outdoor bouldering will help you progress faster, as it will help with finger strength and will tech you technique. I can easily tell that your problem is soft because of the way it is. Don’t go telling me you climbed a V7 until it’s the arbitrary benchmark problem that I chose! Ultimate goal is to get out and do some outdoor sport climbing and boulders this summer (Planning on going to a sport climbing gym march-may to learn belay and practice indoor sport climbing) Reply reply More replies V4: Actually joined a climbing gym. You should also invest in some better climbing shoes. Reddit's rock climbing training community. I live in a major climbing hub now and find the gym to be a little more stiff than the “non-climbing” cities I’ve lived in, which is probably usual This is based on my climbing experience over the last 10 years. V5: Joined bouldering-only gym, climbed V5 in 3 months, turned 40, injured shoulder. I've done two in my lifetime. Quit climbing gym in celebration. First V7 Climb! My gyms grades are fairly higher for easier climbs but it still felt like a great milestone. Monday + Friday, weighted hangs 4 sets at +40lbs then some gym climbing. I'd like to be able to redpoint V6-V7 (indoors) with some consistency. That problem would only be a V6+ at my gym, which is obviously the gold standard for climbing grading because I climb there. Everyone's trajectory cannot be the same but if you dedicate the time you can have good results. rgauxn nsboiwh ceqht bsciv cpjvf qlpai hdwe enbti qxyuzx waqmnpj