LIMERICK, IRELAND (Irish Climbing Coaching) – Universities – Don’t miss the boat for the Intervarsities!
We’ve just finished a 3 week coaching stint with the University of Limerick Outdoor Pursuits Club in order to help prepare them for the Intervarsities, this is some of what they had to say….
- “Cheers, great course lads”
- “Brilliant course to learn about technique as I had just been [using a] trail & error method which is only good to a point. Thanks!”
- “Explained and demonstrated well, patience was shown by the instructors”
The course was led by our two Coaches, Neal McQuaid and Nigel Callender and was a mixture of 1 to 1 and small group coaching, coupled with video analysis and feedback. Each session was tailored to the requirements of the group and improvements were instantly apparent and were retained by the participants.
Thanks for the feedback guys…..
Nigel & Neal

LIMERICK, IRELAND (Irish Climbing Coaching) – We all know one…. Little Jimmy who does endless laps of the bouldering wall, hogging it for the evening and not stepping off once. He just cruises around on big holds fighting the ‘pump’ for ages at a time, all the while muttering something about ‘trying to get strong’. Though he does have this strange ability to be able to stay in the same spot (usually stuck just below the crux moves on a route) for a short eternity, Little Jimmy never does get any stronger. Why is this? For all the ‘training’ he puts in to ‘get strong’ why isn’t he some well muscled mutant cranking out one-armers every time there’s a female in the room?
Following on in our series on the basic principles of training (see No. 1: Periodisation) we’ll deal with another major factor in making your training successful, Specificity.
Specificity means that a certain type of training is specific to a certain system/muscle group/type of muscle fibre. If you wanted to improve your cycling, you wouldn’t go out and do a load of pull-ups as training would you? This is a very stark example, but the same principle applies to every aspect of training. If you want to develop your finger pocket strength, you don’t train on big slopers, or if you want to develop your power, you don’t try and do a high volume of moves in a really static manner.
So why is Little Jimmy’s training program ineffective? Maybe he wants to ‘get strong’ on big holds… True, he may only want to improve his strength on bigger holds, but the intensity at which he’s climbing (i.e. easy moves and loads of them) is wrong. It’s not specific to what he wants to achieve. His muscles are operating far below their maximum and so are not in the ideal ‘zone’ for developing strength, if he was in this ‘zone’ he’d probably only be able to string 4/5 moves together, never mind the few hundred he does during his usual sessions. Basically, Little Jimmy is working far below his maximum and at too low an intensity. So, what he’s actually training is his longer term endurance, hence his ability to hang below the crux on a route for an eternity – now if only he had the strength to do the harder moves….
This is a very general overview/taster on specificity, it can be as simple as this or considerably more complicated, depending on your goals in mind. Take a step back and have a think about what you’re currently trying to achieve and what way you’re actually going about it. If you find that you’re doing circuits on a bouldering wall, but actually want to improve your one-move lock-off strength, you need a rethink. This will become a bit clearer over the next few weeks as a few more principles are introduced. Don’t think we’re going to give everything away though – and it’s far easier to just get someone else to plan all this for you 
Photo: John Harrison gets specific on steep, 2 finger pockets on a Sardinian 7c.
Welcome to IrishClimbingCoaching.
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Also check out performanceclimbingandcoaching.blogspot.com, the 1st Irish Performance Climbing and Coaching Seminar, an event we are running in conjunction with Tollmore Mountain Centre and
The Mountaineering Council of Ireland.
Call back soon!!
Neal & Nigel – IrishClimbingCoaching