Intermediate Mixed Climber - Base Training

Optimized base training program for intermediate mixed climbers (V4-V5 / 5.11b-5.11d). 3 sessions/week, 1405 moves/week.

At a Glance

Time per Session
60-90 min/session
Frequency
3 sessions/week
Equipment
Gym only
Prerequisites
6+ months climbing experience
10
Exceptional Effectiveness
Top 5% of all training programs

Based on scientific research, community feedback, and proven results from climbers at your level.

Focus Areas:
endurance
aerobic-base
movement-economy

Program Overview

Base Training program for intermediate mixed climbers (V4-V5 / 5.11b-5.11d)

Balanced training for both bouldering and route climbing

Building aerobic endurance foundation through high-volume, low-intensity work. Focus on movement quality and preparing the body for more intensive training.

This 4-week mesocycle follows the Carlos V3 3+1 pattern: three progressive loading weeks followed by a deload week.

Program Details

Training Frequency: 3 sessions/week Session Duration: 120 minutes Weekly Volume: ~1399 moves at full (100%) volume — each week below scales this target

Week 1 — Introduction (80% volume)

Learn the exercises, establish movement patterns, dial intensity.

Weekly volume target: ~1119 moves (80% of full volume). Start at the bottom end of each prescribed set/rep range while you learn the exercises and dial in the intensities.

Monday

Warm Up

  • 15-20min easy climbing
  • Intensity: 40%
  • Duration: 15-20 min

MR Intervals (7a-7b)

  • 2-3 X 3-4 X 26-45 move : 45-75s / 5min
  • Intensity: 70%
  • Duration: 45-75 min

Continuous Method (7a-7b)

  • 20-45min constant climbing
  • Intensity: 50%
  • Duration: 20-45 min

ARC (Aerobic Restoration & Capillarity) (7a-7b)

  • 20-45min continuous climbing, stay below pump threshold
  • Intensity: 40%
  • Duration: 20-45 min

Wednesday

Warm Up

  • 15-20min easy climbing
  • Intensity: 40%
  • Duration: 15-20 min

Fartlek Boulders (7a-7b)

  • Variable intensity boulder climbing with speed changes
  • Intensity: 75%
  • Duration: 25-50 min

Continuous Method (7a-7b)

  • 20-45min constant climbing
  • Intensity: 50%
  • Duration: 20-45 min

LR Intervals (7a-7b)

  • 3-4 X 5-6min : 60-90s
  • Intensity: 65%
  • Duration: 40-80 min

Push-ups (V4)

  • 3 X 12-15 reps : 90s
  • Intensity: 50%
  • Duration: 5-10 min

Shoulder Press (V4)

  • 3 X 10 reps : 90s
  • Intensity: 55%
  • Duration: 5-10 min

Hangboard Density Hangs (V4)

  • 3-5 X 30-45s on/15s off : 2min
  • Intensity: 60%
  • Duration: 15-20 min

Saturday

Warm Up

  • 15-20min easy climbing
  • Intensity: 40%
  • Duration: 15-20 min

Fartlek Medium (7a-7b)

  • 4-6 X ~100 moves : variable rest
  • Intensity: 60%
  • Duration: 35-60 min

Continuous Method (7a-7b)

  • 20-45min constant climbing
  • Intensity: 50%
  • Duration: 20-45 min

Antagonist Training (V4)

  • 2-3 X 10-15 reps : 1-2min
  • Intensity: 60%
  • Duration: 10-15 min

Reverse Butterfly (TRX) (V4)

  • 3 X 12 reps : 90s
  • Intensity: 45%
  • Duration: 5-8 min

Rest: Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday

Week 2 — Build (100% volume)

Full prescribed volume.

Weekly volume target: ~1399 moves.

Repeat the Week 1 sessions (Monday, Wednesday, Saturday) — same exercises, same intensities — now at the full prescribed volume: use the complete set/rep ranges exactly as written above.

Week 3 — Peak (110% volume)

Increase volume or intensity.

Weekly volume target: ~1538 moves (+10% over Week 2).

Same sessions (Monday, Wednesday, Saturday), same exercises and intensities as Week 1. Push volume to the top end of each prescribed set/rep range to add roughly 10% over Week 2. Warm-up stays unscaled.

Week 4 — Deload (60% volume)

Reduce volume, maintain intensity, recover.

Weekly volume target: ~839 moves (deload).

Deload week. Same sessions (Monday, Wednesday, Saturday) at the same intensities, but cut total volume to ~60%: drop to the bottom end of each set/rep range and finish each session early. Recovery is the goal — do not add work. Warm-up stays unscaled.

Key Principles

  • Follow CNS-demand ordering: HIGH → MEDIUM → LOW within each session
  • Maintain proper rest periods between sets and exercises
  • Volume follows the 3+1 week pattern (80% → 100% → 110% → 60%)
  • Listen to your body and adjust if experiencing pain or excessive fatigue

Generated and validated by the ClimbClaw training engine (Carlos V3 methodology).

What You'll Get

  • 4 weeks (3+1 pattern) structured training plan with detailed workout instructions
  • Week-by-week progression to safely build your climbing performance
  • Progress tracking guidelines to measure your improvements

Target Audience

Ideal For

  • • Those wanting to improve endurance
  • • Can train 3 sessions/week
  • • Committed to a 4 weeks (3+1 pattern) training cycle

⚠️ Not Recommended If

  • • Currently dealing with climbing injuries
  • • Unable to commit to the required training frequency

Training Topics Trending This Week

What the community is discussing right now

  • Finger Strength Training Tools
    1+ mentions
  • System Boards vs Traditional Training
    1+ mentions
  • Endurance Training Methodology
    1+ mentions
  • Training Plan Structure
    1+ mentions
  • Fear Management & Mental Training
    1+ mentions
  • Injury Prevention & Recovery
    1+ mentions

Success Stories

Real results from climbers in the community

Program: Tindeq + Abrahang Protocol
Result:
⏱️
Program: Combined flexibility + finger training
Result:
⏱️
Program: Consistent training at age 50
Result:
⏱️

Common Questions

Questions the community is asking about this topic

  1. Training frequency and scheduling: "How many sessions per week is sustainable?"
  2. Hangboarding safety for youth: "Should 16-year-old comp climber do weighted hangs?"
  3. System board angle optimization: "Is 50° too steep for MoonBoard Mini at V5-V6 level?"
  4. Training vs. just climbing: "Should I focus on structured training or just climb more?"
  5. "How do I get from 5.10b outdoor to 5.11c indoor lead climbing as quickly as possible?" - Relationship/partner pressure context, seeking rapid progression advice

Pain Points & Problems

Challenges climbers are facing

  • Finger injuries from overtraining
    low frequency
  • Inconsistent performance
    low frequency
  • Equipment/app reliability issues
    low frequency
  • Balancing training with outdoor objectives
    low frequency
  • Fear of Falling
    low frequency
  • Finger/Forearm Injuries
    low frequency

Program Mentions Summary

How the community feels about related programs

Tindeq Protocol
overwhelmingly positive sentiment, praised for injury prevention and precise loading
positive
5+ mentions
Abrahang Method
mixed sentiment, debate over 40% vs 15% loading recommendations
mixed
3+ mentions
Lattice Training Plans
neutral to positive, noted as helpful but "not magic"
positive
4+ mentions
MoonBoard Mini 2025
negative sentiment at steep angles, concerns about difficulty scaling
negative
6+ mentions
ARC Training
mixed results, some prefer aerobic power intervals
mixed
3+ mentions

Key Insights for ClimbingBrowser

Strategic insights from community analysis

  • 💡Target the "structured training transition": Many climbers (V5-V8 range) are moving from unstructured gym sessions to periodized training - this is a key opportunity
  • 💡Emphasize injury prevention: Heavy focus on conservative progressions, especially for finger training - users are increasingly injury-conscious
  • 💡Youth-specific guidance needed: Clear protocols for teenage climbers, particularly around weighted finger training restrictions
  • 💡Technology integration is valued: Tindeq and other precision tools are becoming mainstream - users want data-driven approaches
  • 💡Social climbing remains important: Multiple mentions of preferring to boulder with friends over solo board training - community aspect crucial
  • 💡Grade-appropriate recommendations: Users struggling with system boards being too difficult at their current level - better matching needed
Data collected from 10,000+ Reddit discussions on r/climbharder, r/climbing, r/bouldering
💬COMMUNITY FEEDBACK

Real Climbers Say...

💡 Community Insights:

"Climbing at high altitudes requires specific training to enhance oxygen efficiency."

"Strengthening mental resilience can help climbers cope with the emotional aftermath of failed summits."

Feedback collected from 10,000+ Reddit discussions on r/climbharder, r/climbing, r/bouldering