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Featured Climbing Articles

A Bicycle Trip Down The River
My river-rafting adventure started on a bicycle. The small daypack I wore carried a hatchet, a saw, some scraps of rope, food, water, a garbage bag bivy sack, a hat, and odds and ends. It weighed less than fifteen pounds total. It was late May, so Id ...

Get Started Exercising Now, But Take It Easy!
So you're overweight, "fat"--to be honest--and you want to start exercising. Before you take off like an overlarge airplane and start preparing for the Olympics trials, stop right there. You may have it all figured out by now, after checking with your ...

Lightweight Backpacking: An Example
I was in the Weminuche Wilderness Area when the snow came. It was my second day out of Silverton, where the locals told me it rains or snows every day in August. I made a note to myself to do some research next time. Then I made a note to myself to find ...





Indoor Rock Climbing - How Rock Climbing Can Help You Chisel Your Physique
 
It was a humbling moment, indeed.

At the time, I felt like I was higher than a mountain. I was running five miles every morning, laboring through a hard day of strenuous work every day, then hitting the gym every night. I could rip out pushups in three-digit sets, grind through a set of 60 dips without cracking a single sweat gland.

Meanwhile, my strength remained in tact. I was benching, curling, pressing, pulling, and squatting more than ever before. The higher my gains had soared, the lower my body fat percentage would drop. Yes, I was in the best shape of my life.

I bounced off my 15-minute warm-up session on the stepper and was ready to take over this new gym by storm. I had never worked out at this particular facility before but it didn't matter. At the time, I felt invincible.

On my way over to the Smith machine, I noticed a small gathering in the far corner of the gym. All eyes were focused on the wall where something new, something intriguing had to be whirling up this fuss.

I strutted over to check this out for myself just as a middle-aged man came crashing to the floor, his face purple with exhaustion, his breath caught deep in his gut. He looked like a soldier returning from battle, as he was instantly consoled by his awaiting love.

I peered up at the enemy. Hovering above was the most bizarre piece of fitness equipment I'd ever seen. It was big, it was strange, it was awkward, it was ugly.

It was awesome.

One look at it and I knew exactly what it was. It was a rock-climbing machine. It rested on the floor and nearly extended to the height of the ceiling, a large conveyor belt that rotated on a metal frame. Along the belt was a series of synthetic rocks and grooves, designed to simulate an actual cliff. Along the side was a lever that regulated the speed in which the belt would rotate.

It was aptly named "The Rock."

Nobody else made a move to tackle this endeavor. Nobody dared. Nobody except me.

The movie


"Cliffhanger", the Sylvester Stallone flick that brought the action genre to new heights, was buzzing across everyone's lips at the time and no doubt had inspired the gym to purchase such a workout device.

I was feeling a little bit like "Rocky" myself so I emerged from the crowd like the heavyweight champ and bolstered myself atop this machine.

What happened next, I'd rather not divulge.

Let's just say that three minutes later, the ego, the self esteem, the soaring confidence, it all came crashing down off the wall with me. I sat on the gym in a heap of defeat, my arms and legs completely shot, my heart racing like a Nissan. "The Rock" had knocked me out.

The morale of the story (besides keeping your ego in check) is that rock climbing is one of the most physically challenging exercises you could possible take on. After all, there has to be a reason why professional rock climbers are so lean and healthy.

Rock climbing is an exercise that not only strengthens your legs and upper torso, but it may also be the best method for improving range of motion.

As imposing as my three-minute bout with "The Rock" may sound, the apparatus is actually the ideal way to begin this activity. The resistance of the machine can be set at a very low level for beginners to accustom themselves to the form and motion needed in rock climbing.

You can eventually work your way up to a faster pace, which provides for a sensational workout. I remember feeling a resounding pump throughout my entire body after just a few fast-paced minutes on the machine.

Your battles don't necessarily end after you've conquered the "Rock." Hundreds of rock climbing gyms have been cropping up across the country and offer the most challenging of programs.

About the author:

Visit our extensive article library at http://www.hsfvitamins.com and find interesting health products at our sister site, http://www.hsfenergy.com


Climbing News



CBS News

Everest climbers find new body, raising death toll
CBS News
(AP) KATMANDU, Nepal - Climbers have reported seeing another body on Mount Everest, raising the death toll to four for one of the worst days ever on the world's highest mountain. Nepali mountaineering official Gyanendra Shrestha said Tuesday that the ...
Maybe Everest Needs A Traffic Cop - At Least Four Climbers DeadNPR (blog)
Everest will be crowded again days after 4 killedThe Associated Press
Mount Everest Death Toll at Four with One MissingABC News

all 1,044 news articles »

Romney's ever-climbing jobs claim
Washington Post (blog)
By Jonathan Bernstein And just like that, the Mitt Romney campaign is back to claiming he created not thousands of jobs, not tens of thousands of jobs, but “well in excess of 100000” jobs at Bain. So says the Romney campaign's Eric Fehrnstrom.

and more »

NBCSports.com

Four people dead on Mt. Everest, one still missing
Boing Boing
By Maggie Koerth-Baker at 4:31 am Tuesday, May 22 1996 was the deadliest year in the history of modern climbing on Mt. Everest. In one May weekend, eight people died when they were caught on the mountain in a storm. Over the course of the year, ...
I'm beginning to think that it might be dangerous to climb Mount EverestNBCSports.com
73 year old Japanese woman becomes oldest to climb Mt. EverestThe Japan Daily Press
Japanese Woman Becomes Oldest To Summit EverestGadling
DigitalJournal.com -The Epoch Times -The Japan Times
all 475 news articles »

Telegraph.co.uk

Youngest woman to climb Mount Everest reaches summit
Telegraph.co.uk
By Hannah Furness Mollie Hughes, 21, made the gruelling ascent to nearly 30000ft with a team of intrepid climbers in “near perfect” conditions. She is now understood to be recovering at the base camp of the mountain, after spending a night at Camp 4; ...

and more »

CrazyEngineers VoiCE

Clothbot, the Fabric-Gripping, Pants-Climbing Robot
PC Magazine
Amazingly, this is not the first fabric-climbing robot—or even the creepiest. That would be CLASH, a climbing robot whose size, speed, and propensity for poking through fabric as it climbs makes it resemble nothing more than a metal insect that could ...
Future of mobile phones? Robot can climb out of your pocket and whisper in ...Mother Nature Network
Wrinkle-traveling Clothbot makes its IEEE debut (w/ Video)Phys.Org
Researchers unveil eerie clothes-scaling robotDigitaltrends.com
CrazyEngineers VoiCE
all 13 news articles »