Andy Chapman

The Hone Zone: Confessions of a Training Junkie

By: Andy Chapman | January 19th, 2012
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With the debauchery of the holidays over, you might feel that it’s time to repent and start training. A month of over-consumption and inactivity has left you feeling lost. Having strayed from the path, you look to the web for guidance. The Google leads to many websites, books, magazines, and blogs offering recipes for success. Dissatisfied with the current state of things, you begin to find inspiration in the testimonials and meaning in the words of those with the answers.

Thin-air squats: Crossfit at almost 19,000 feet.

Brimming with enthusiasm and the promise of salvation, you feel motivation building in the New Year as you vow to improve. “If I just do X, Y, and Z, I’ll be set. This time I’ll get it right!” you think, as the sugarplums dancing in your head (actually they probably already made it to your belly …) are now replaced with visions of killer programming and previously unimaginable physical prowess. Read More …

Shoulder Season Sending: Tips for climbing in the cold

By: Andy Chapman | November 18th, 2011
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Winter is imminent, but you still haven’t done your proj. Don’t despair. Cooler temps are actually quite conducive to “sending.” With a few tricks, you could turn that draw-recovery mission into a productive day of climbing.

What to wear

"Warming-up" on a chilly day at the Motherlode.

The first rule is to bring a lot of clothing for your single-pitch climbing or bouldering session. I typically crag- or pebble-wrestle in cotton as it’s more comfy and less geeky. I rest easy knowing that, since I’m close to the car, weight and moisture management aren’t a concern. If you have a long approach or prefer something up top that wicks, choose a synthetic or merino wool tee. Pack for comfort (and style?), knowing that there’s no harm if extra layers stay in your pack all day. Read More …

Destiny Manifested Part II: Gear for Peak Bagging

By: Andy Chapman | September 19th, 2011
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Andy Wellman and Diane Chapman going up Wilson Peak

The conditions encountered on your average summer or autumn peak-bagging outing can vary considerably: one minute you are blasted by the sun, the next minute it’s hailing or even snowing. Relatively long walks or exposed scrambles mean that you want to bring just enough to deal with precipitation and temperature swings but not so much that you are busting a gut carrying it all. This post is focused on what you need and (implicitly) what you want to leave behind. Read More …

Destiny Manifested: Peak-Bagging Colorado’s 14ers

By: Andy Chapman | September 7th, 2011
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Longs Peak and the Diamond

Sometimes the universe seems to conspire against you. My best efforts to have meaningful (or any) progress climbing this spring and summer have been consistently shat upon by the cosmos. After six months of setbacks, I was hardly surprised when my wife/climbing partner hurt her wrist a week before our planned road trip. Accepting that my climbing agenda had been set adrift on the cosmic tides, I simply threw my hands up and decided that I was along for the ride. No Sierra granite for us. Time to find a Plan B.

Having taken a fatalistic approach to this chunk of time off, I looked for signs.  Diane was keen to get into the backcountry, but I am loathe to carry a pack without the carrot of climbing something.  Humping loads from point A to point B to point C is personally unappealing. Could we find common ground? I asked the universe. Read More …

Nice Rack II: Put Together Your Climbing Rack

By: Andy Chapman | August 2nd, 2011
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Part 2: Putting it all together

The Desert is a cam intensive place to climb

The Desert is a cam intensive place to climb

Building a rack is an investment that is best viewed on a lifelong time frame. You’ll have to throw down on the front end, but aside from occasionally cleaning, re-lubing and re-slinging, cams will last many years. If you climb in The Desert or other cam intensive nitch crags like Vedauwoo, then your rack is never really complete.  Don’t despair.  If you frequent these venues, you will probably make friends with other like-minded individuals and have an open door policy of gear borrowing and lending. Read More …

Nice Rack: A Practical Guide to Cams

By: Andy Chapman | August 1st, 2011
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Josh taking his pick of the litter

Josh taking his pick of the litter

Knee-deep in the gear room last June, I was confronted with a major dilemma: what rack to take for the summer? Heading mainly to Squamish and the Bugaboos in the Northwest, I realized that taking the entire arsenal would be overkill. A phone call to my friend Nate in Portland, Ore., quickly sorted things out. “Dude, it’s granite. You probably only need doubles, maybe triples in a few sizes.” And with that, more than half my rack stayed at home. Lest you get the wrong impression of me as a gear-hoarding, over-protecting, grubby consumer, be forewarned that the parallel world of desert cracks leads to a skewed outlook when it comes to the cam department.

Spring-loaded camming devices (SLCDs or simply cams) can become a hotly contested issue among gearheads and dirtbags alike. Safety is a concern, to be sure, but other subtleties such as ease of use, holding power, size range, and cost come into play. Racking preference is largely personal, and as such is laden with bias. People new to trad climbing are often forced to rely on beta from their more “experienced” partners or simply go for the price point. This article will hopefully shed some light on the matter by briefly highlighting major design differences and providing some recommendations for putting together the right rack for you. Read More …

Go Big: How to Dress for Success on Long Rock Routes

By: Andy Chapman | May 2nd, 2011
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What to wear?

What to wear?

Spring is in the air, and many a young man’s (and woman’s) thoughts are turning to rock climbing. Longer days and warmer temps mean it’s time to start venturing off the ground to get some air under your heels. But before venturing onto a big route, you need to ask the age-old question: “What to wear?”

My pragmatic take on climbing clothing generally holds that expensive technical fabrics should be reserved for situations when you actually need them. (The bar, climbing gym, or even single-pitch crags don’t usually count in my book.) For a number of years, I also applied this philosophy to multipitch rock routes, wearing Carhartts up many a desert tower. Eventually, it bit me in the ass. A stuck rope on a cold November night left me wishing I weren’t dressed in a cotton hoody, canvas pants, and a cowboy shirt. Fashion is a bitch. Read More …

Training Wheels: Coming to Grips with Leashless Ice Climbing

By: Andy Chapman | February 17th, 2011
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Andy on the West Face Direct, Tocllaraju. Cordillera Blanca, Peru. Photo: Adam Riser

Andy using leashes in Peru

Packing for the first ice trip of the season, I called a friend to get the conditions report: Things had been rained on in the San Juans, but were coming back in quickly. The new ice offered enough to warrant a trip.  After hashing things out, he added, almost as an afterthought: “So I took my first whip on ice today.”  “Nice. How’d that go?” I eventually got the synopsis: 15 feet above a screw his feet blew. Pumped from cleaning lots of junk ice on steep terrain, he was unable hang on to the tool. After the fall he used his partner’s tools to retrieve his, which had remained in the ice.

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Art of Hangboarding: Fingerboard Workouts

By: Andy Chapman | January 20th, 2011
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Hangboard workouts

Hangboard workouts

Following up on yesterday’s intro to hangboarding, I’ll now delve into some workouts. When you are hanging from a fingerboard, keep in mind you are training the small tendons and ligaments in your fingers and hands. It’s really easy to over-train and get injured. Err on the side of caution. The workouts posted below are based on what I’ve read and set/rep structures my friends and I have developed on our own. As with all things in life, personal accountability is huge. To quote Pavel Tsatsouline: “If you get hurt, it’s your fault!” So with that in mind, a few caveats … Read More …

Hone at Home: Art of Hangboarding

By: Andy Chapman | January 19th, 2011
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Hangboarding at home

Hangboarding at home

With winter in full swing, climbers in most locales have to settle for gym training to stay fit. While there is no substitute for actually climbing—even on plastic—a hangboard (or fingerboard) is an indispensable tool that every climber could benefit from. My first exposure to concerted hangboarding came after a major traumatic accident involving more injuries than I care to recall.

Two months after the accident, climbing was still a LONG way off: I couldn’t move, but I could hang. Following the guidance of Josh, my climbing partner and spiritual advisor regarding all things geeky, I paired some time on the fingerboard with my physical therapy. Despite being largely incapacitated, and initially skeptical, I greatly improved my contact strength. Once I could finally start climbing, I was well ahead of the curve and was eventually able to come back to pre-accident levels of performance on rock. Read More …

You’ll Shoot Your Eye Out – A History of Ice Climbing

By: Andy Chapman | December 14th, 2010
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History of Ice Climbing

Photo by: Tommy Chandler

More than a decade after receiving my Black Prophets, I continued the trend of gifting dangerous items for Christmas. My girlfriend received her first pair of ice tools—the finest the modern world has to offer: Black Diamond Cobras. The shiny new tools brimmed with optimism and when placed next to my battle-weary pair, looked more like a work of art and less like a piece of gear. Read More …