Types of climbing

Rock climbing style refers to the method and equipment used to establish and repeat rock climbing routes. Style also incorporates values from sportsmanship and environmentalism to uphold and further develop rockclimbing. Each climbing style can be considered a sort of game with rules or standard commonly referred to as climbing ethic. These ethics are some of climbing's social mores.[1] Lito Tajeda-Flores elaborated on 'Games Climbers Play' [2] defining a Game as an arena (boulder, crag, wall, etc.) and an accompanying Style. Royal Robins said : 'in rockclimbing [Style] refers to methods and equipment used, and the degree of 'adventure' involved'.[3] In his 'The Murder of the Impossible' [4] Reinhold Messner underscores the importance of 'adventure' and Style adjusted to task at hand.

Categories

The term "style" is used by climbers to describe more than one set of distinctions. Ethics, class, techniques, and goals all can be talked about in terms of "style", and both the usage of the term "style" and the usage of stylistic terms themselves can vary quite greatly by geography.

What "style" is not

Certain categories of climbing associated with techniques, classes, grades and locations are not generally regarded as matters of "style".

While Indoor climbing is not a style of climbing it is distinct from climbing outside. Indoor climbing involves bouldering, top roping, and sport climbing in an indoor environment on wood or plastic holds. In recent years, indoor climbing walls, basically artificial cliffs, have become quite popular. Climbing walls can be used to train climbers for the outdoors, but many climbers enjoy climbing indoors for its own sake. The controlled environment and possibility to easily set original routes has allowed indoor climbing to evolve into a competitive sport.

Similarly speed climbing is not a true style since it is mostly a compilation of other styles. Speed climbing does however contain some techniques unique to speed climbing, and the ethics or sportsmanship of speed climbing can be talked about in terms of "style".

Climber leading the sport route Spud Boy, Clark Canyon, California, United States

Free climbing

Free climbing requires the climber use only his/her own body's connections to the rock for upward progress. Commonly confused with "free soloing" which is a specific form of free climbing done without a rope. The essence of free climbing is that, although gear may be used to protect a climber in the event of a fall, the actual "climbing" is being done without the help of any artificial device's adhesion to the rock.

General description

Free climbing can be subdivided into traditional climbing and sport climbing.

Free climbing
Category Description
Traditional climbing climbers carry and place majority of safety anchors during ascent
Sport climbing pre-placed safety anchors

Types of free climbing

Short (one-pitch) climbs on the Calico Hills, west of Las Vegas, Nevada

Aid Climbing

Aid climbing involves using artificial devices placed in the rock to support all or part of the climber's body weight, and is normally practiced on rock formations that lack the necessary natural features suitable for free climbing.

References

  1. Mountaineering: The Freedom of the Hills, Swan Hill Press; 6th Revised edition (14 Oct 1997) ISBN 1-84037-001-7 ISBN 978-1840370010
  2. Ascent 1967
  3. Basic Rockcraft, 1971, ISBN 0-910856-34-6
  4. Mountain magazine #15, 1971
  5. "Tricksters and Traditionalists," Tom Higgins, Ascent, Sierra Club, 1984
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