All climbers need a certain amount of power endurance.  Without good power endurance, you will find yourself in the situation of being able to do all the moves on your projects, but failing because you are unable to link them in a single continuous effort.  It is because of failing on climbs in this way that we worked with Kris Peters to design our 6-Week Power Endurance Training Program.

While most of us probably associate power endurance more with route climbing, it is just as important for boulderers.  So no matter what kind of climbing you’re into, give the workout below a shot and if you like it give the rest of the program a shot.  We guarantee you’ll come out of the 6 weeks feeling WAY fitter than when you started!

Sample Workout for 6-Week Power Endurance Workout:

 

Obviously, since the complete program is 6 weeks long as this workout is taken from the end of the forth week, it is going to be pretty difficult and meant to be built up to through the preceding workouts.  However, we thought it would give you a perfect taste of how Kris Peters designed this training program to work the different facets of power endurance all while increasing your overall work capacity.

TrainingBeta Training Programs:

If you like what you see, click through below to purchase the complete 6-Week Power Endurance Training Program for yourself.  Here’s who we think this program is perfect for:

“If you climb between 5.10+ and 5.13+ or boulder between V3 and V11, you’ll benefit the most from this program. But all workouts are scalable (Kris tells you how to make it easier or harder), and we’ll warn you if you should absolutely not be doing a particular workout (campusing, etc.), and give you a substitute workout to do.” – TrainingBeta

If this program does sound like the right fit for you, we offer a variety of programs that train everything from endurance to finger strength.  Check them all out here: Climbing Training Programs.

Full Program: 6-Week Power Endurance Training Program

climbing training programs

(photo courtesy of Edwin Teran)

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4 Comments

  1. AlexM April 4, 2017 at 8:37 pm - Reply

    I wonder if you guys differentiate different styles of routes in your workouts: balancy slabs give me completely different kind of pump than overhangs, and those are totally different from vertical crimps.

    Also, do you have substitutes for route climbing? I don’t think I’d always be able to find a partner, especially one willing to belay me 8 routes in a row.

    • Neely Quinn April 7, 2017 at 3:57 pm - Reply

      Hi AlexM – We don’t differentiate styles of route in the program, and as for substitutes for route climbing, we always say that you can consider a route to be around 40 feet of climbing, or around 20-25 moves, so if you want to do the equivalent of that for each route on a bouldering wall, that’d be totally fine.

  2. Repka April 3, 2017 at 1:11 pm - Reply

    The instructions are pretty precise about grades, but what if I consistently onsight vertical 11a, but can only say the same about 10a on the overhang?

    • Neely Quinn April 7, 2017 at 3:59 pm - Reply

      Repka – I’d say use your best judgement and convert grades to suit the drill. If it’s asking you to to do many routes in a row and you can’t finish half of htem on overhung 5.11a’s, bump the grades down so that you can finisht the exercise. Don’t make it too easy, but make it hard enough that you’re getting pumped and falling off at the appropriate point in the workout (the there will be instructions in the workouts about that). Hope that helps!

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