The Injury Prevention Mindset
As intermediate climbers pushing into V5-V8 territory, we're constantly walking the line between progression and injury. The experts at Lattice Training and physiotherapist Andy (Process Physio) share critical insights that could save your climbing season.
Working at a high load isn't inherently problematic—it's how you get there that matters. This distinction forms the foundation of effective injury prevention for climbers at our level.
Strategic Load Management
Gradual Progression is Non-Negotiable
The first weeks of any new training cycle should feel similar to what you've already been doing. As Andy explains:
- Start conservatively: Those initial 1-2 weeks shouldn't feel dramatically different from your previous training
- Find your minimal effective dose: What's the least amount of training you can do to get significant gains?
- Avoid the peaks and troughs pattern: Sudden spikes in training followed by complete rest create injury risk
Be Wary of Breakthrough Periods
One of the most dangerous moments for V5-V8 climbers is what Lattice calls the "breakthrough week"—when everything suddenly clicks and climbing feels effortless. Here's what typically happens:
- You feel stronger than ever and everything feels easy
- You immediately increase difficulty, volume, or intensity
- 1-2 weeks later, you're nursing a finger or shoulder injury
When you notice this breakthrough feeling, deliberately pump the brakes. Your external training load may have spiked, but your body hasn't yet adapted to handle this new level consistently.
Active Listening to Your Body
Auto-Regulation is Essential
At the V5-V8 level, you need to develop the discipline to modify training based on how you feel:
- If you're scheduled for a high-intensity power session but feeling depleted, adjust accordingly
- It's better to slightly under-train than slightly over-train
- Consistency trumps occasional heroic sessions
Warning Signs Aren't Optional Feedback
As Andy notes, warning signs tend to be "whispers rather than shouts":
- That niggle at the base of your finger
- Minor pain at the front of your shoulder
- General inflammation that seems manageable
Don't push through these signals. They're your body's early warning system, not challenges to overcome. At our climbing level, the ability to recognize and respond to these warnings separates the consistently progressing climber from the perpetually injured one.
Recovery as a Training Component
Active Recovery vs. Passive Rest
Intermediate climbers often neglect the recovery component of training. Andy emphasizes the difference between:
- Passive rest: Simply sitting on the couch between sessions
- Active recovery: Taking specific steps to accelerate the recovery process
Effective recovery strategies include:
- Low-intensity systemic exercise (walking, easy cycling)
- Targeted stretching sessions
- Proper hydration and nutrition
The Total Stress Equation
One often-overlooked aspect of injury prevention is managing overall life stress:
- Job changes, moving house, relationship issues
- Emotional stress manifests physically in your body
- "Stress is stress" - your body doesn't differentiate between physical and emotional demands
During high-stress periods, consider:
- Reducing training volume
- Focusing on enjoyable climbing rather than structured training
- Being compassionate with yourself and your performance expectations
Strength Training for Durability
Beyond Performance-Driven Strength
Intermediate climbers typically focus on strength training with immediate performance payoffs (pull-ups, fingerboarding). For injury prevention:
- Adopt a more generalized approach to strength
- Train antagonist muscles and underutilized movement patterns
- Focus on hips, knees, and other areas not directly stressed in climbing
Building Capacity for Future Gains
The primary benefit of strength training isn't immediate grade improvement but building capacity:
- Increased robustness to handle more training volume
- Ability to sustain difficult positions longer
- Greater resistance to the specific stresses of hard climbing
Training Flexibility: The Plan B Approach
Avoiding the "Bulldozing" Mentality
When your scheduled power session isn't clicking, you have options:
- Cut the session in half: Maintain intensity but reduce volume
- Change the training intention: Switch to endurance if power isn't viable
- Make it a social session: Recover and return stronger later
Flexibility isn't weakness—it's strategic training that preserves quality.
Putting It All Together
As you push through the V5-V8 grade range, injury prevention isn't separate from performance—it's a cornerstone of it. The climber who remains healthy makes consistent progress, while the perpetually injured one cycles through frustrating setbacks.
Remember Andy's wisdom: "You can't fight it; you've got to roll with it sometimes." Being adaptable, attentive to your body's signals, and strategic with your training approach will keep you climbing strong when others are nursing injuries.
These principles aren't groundbreaking revelations but rather the fundamentals that even elite climbers return to consistently. They form the foundation that allows you to train hard, push your limits, and continue progressing through the grades.