Can we still go to climbing walls?
I don't know what the new restrictions mean. Help?
Yes, but not for long I’d wager.
I dont think anyone knows. Keeping an eye out for BMC to announce something.
Pretty clear to me: no new measures for gyms announced.
Aren't indoor teams sports supposed to be no more than 6 people.
How does bouldering inside work with that?
No idea?
> Aren't indoor teams sports supposed to be no more than 6 people.
> How does bouldering inside work with that?
The idea is that we're social distancing in the wall, but obviously you can't do that in most sports.
> Aren't indoor teams sports supposed to be no more than 6 people.
> How does bouldering inside work with that?
> No idea?
Bouldering is not a team sport.
> Aren't indoor teams sports supposed to be no more than 6 people.
> How does bouldering inside work with that?
> No idea?
How the f*ck do you make bouldering into a team sport! Have you ever EVER climbed?
That's a bit strong. Are you OK.
Fine thanks. But I'm not the one trying to team boulder!
It is quite funny. I must be in a team.
I believe the correct term is "combined tactics" and it's a noble discipline I will not hear questioned.
Well observed. You are absolutely correct.
Bouldering is frequently a team thing, all those spotters, beta sprayers, mat carriers and groupies. AND thats without the local youth group etc casually walking under your drop zone (unless its Brad pit sit start style problem).
If you prefer solitude, other disciplines are available.
I'd suggest in order:
Bouldering
Sport
Trad
Mountaineering
Soloing
Armchair web climbing
However I realise "indoors" may be a tough criteria to fill.
xx.
Yer FFS JimHolmes ya clueless ball bag! Don't you know it's crew (or possibly crue) not team nowadays.... "I had a most excellent bouldering session with mi crew and Im gonna post it all ower Insta!!!"
PS get some climbing done )
Quite right Jim. Team Holmes Hansome has been out on a number of occasions. Some climbing has been completed in some very problematic conditions. Some of your language is a little nouveau to me to understand.
Ps the climbing is crap around Haworth. What a dump.
Me too.
No, no, no, it's a climbing support group now making the limit 15
I was waiting for this thread to pop up...
Generally, the two bouldering walls I go to in Birmingham have been less busy than usual. A bit busier now that the students are back but still quieter than usual in the evenings. Partly that may be due to more people going earlier in the day due to having more flexibility with WFH. Partly it’s because some people are avoiding the walls.
I suspect numbers will fall a bit further now but it seems that a lot of the people going now are regular climbers who aren’t going to stop until the walls are forced to close again.
Is it appropriate to keep going?That’s a personal question. It depends on where you are in the country for a start. It also depends on how Covid risk averse you are, whether you believe you can effectively mitigate the risks of being at the wall and your overall Covid risk profile. This is why any BMC guidance or UKC chat is going to be of limited use - it’s sensible to read it and reflect on it but we must all come to our own conclusions based on our own circumstances. This assessment could also change over time as the second wave gather pace.
My own take on it is this.
1. Birmingham has a high incidence of Covid cases. I have no idea whether the climbing population has a higher or lower incidence rate. This is a concern.
2. I’m fairly risk averse as regards Covid. I’ve avoided social gatherings, have been to the pub only three times since March (two of those visits were very brief), have limited my climbing contacts to half a dozen people (most of whom work from home), have worked from home and declined to go back to the office when it opened last week (now closed again, ha!) and have been scrupulous with hand hygiene and face masks where required. My main exposure is through climbing outdoors at weekends and by going to the wall.
3. This means my own Covid risk profile is relatively low, apart from going climbing.
4. Can I mitigate the climbing related Covid risk? For outdoors climbing, in theory yes but in practice I’ve not seen anyone socially distance with their climbing partner (on the other hand, it’s easy to socially distance from other parties). To mitigate the risk, I mostly rely on climbing with a small number of people and with only one or two people at a time each weekend. For indoor climbing, I think it’s fairly easy to mitigate the risks. Don’t go if the wall is busy. Wash your hands before and after. Upon getting home from the wall I also clean my phone and house keys with surgical spirit. Don’t touch your face while at the wall.
Conclusion - I will keep going for the time being.
There was a team bouldering comp held in Keswick around 1995.
Nothing to do with the BMC they have no control over the climbing walls, keep a look out for a government announcement.
Didn’t you see that photo of the bouldering team on Deliverance the other day?
> For indoor climbing, I think it’s fairly easy to mitigate the risks. Don’t go if the wall is busy. Wash your hands before and after. Upon getting home from the wall I also clean my phone and house keys with surgical spirit. Don’t touch your face while at the wall.
Unfortunately, it looks increasingly as if transmission via surfaces is a lower risk than originally thought, and transmission via air (including aerosols) is a much higher risk. And in enclosed indoor spaces, 2-metre social distancing isn't always enough to prevent transmission. See:
https://elemental.medium.com/the-most-likely-way-youll-get-infected-with-co...
https://www.bmj.com/content/370/bmj.m3223
Obviously, you might feel that the risk of airborne transmission at the climbing wall is low enough that it still falls within your personal "risk budget", but it's something to be aware of.
I like that the first article essentially points out that infection is a matter of degree of challenge; in other words the number of viral particles. Essentially everybody is likely to be able to deal with one viral particle, and as the numbers in the challenge go up, even young people eventually will not be able to fight off viral infection.
Then in the second article it points to the idea that people when exercising are probably pushing out their breath more like a cough, and therefore more likely to be more of a risk, plus presumably if more air is moving from alveoli which have normally less flux of air into and out of them at rest, then there may be more viral particles in the exhalation, which is of a greater volume than the normal tidal volume anyway.
So at the climbing wall, perhaps we should all be wearing our masks all the time. This certainly does not happen at the Northampton wall, which I have visited 8 times since lockdown easing. I tried on the first visit, and it gets troublesome and hot. BUT, perhaps I should bloody well persevere next time??
Thank you for the links
> Thank you for the links
Glad they're useful! I've also found these very helpful for thinking about relative risks:
https://www.erinbromage.com/post/the-risks-know-them-avoid-them
http://www.ezekielemanuel.com/writing/all-articles/2020/06/30/covid-19-acti...
Indeed and that’s why it’s key to avoid times when the wall is busy. At the small bouldering wall I go to there are often only a handful of other people there across two rooms. The Depot was relatively busy last time but even so easy to find whole sections which were deserted, as was the circuit board area. So not been an issue so far. This might not be the case everywhere. So again comes down to where you live etc.
My mate went to one wall (TCA Prop Store) yesterday after work, which is about 1 mile from the current student outbreak in Glasgow (Murano Student Village)
His words 'I'm no going back there, the behaviour is shocking. No one hand sanitises. No social distancing' and he's not near as old as I am, he's a relatively young 31 and very fit / no underlying medical conditions.
So you can go, but be aware of the risks.
My own experience is that, as the walls have been open for a few weeks, visitors have become complacent. On my last visit to the GCC, I noted that no-one bar my wife & I were hand sanitising between climbs (despite the plentiful supply of sanitiser, and its nice stuff too!) people were not wearing masks when not climbing / belaying, people were sitting on the bench spaces that were covered in tape to indicate 'out of use' and we had to untie & move a few times as others tied into top ropes right next to us.
Best advice: go early / when not busy. Do not count on others keeping to the 'rules'
Not sure why walls haven't just set half their routes/problems, which would mean distancing would be passively enforced, rather than relying on people to do the right thing who may well not do.
> Not sure why walls haven't just set half their routes/problems, which would mean distancing would be passively enforced, rather than relying on people to do the right thing who may well not do.
Could end up with everyone grouped under the remaining routes?
Agreed. I also think lead walls are trickier than bouldering as you can’t move away quickly if an area gets busy.
Jim you are a legend in shit stiring terms but this takes the biscuit just stay safe and go easy on the mascara.