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So I was actually having 2 problems.
The first being âthe outside footâ
The other being the âpulling/pushing and holding body partsâ
The outside foot:
Since that first offwidth failure around the age of 16 I have learnt just how important the outside foot is in offwidth climbing. Back then I didnât even have it placed in the crack, (let alone use it effectively).
Since then I have learnt that this foot creates
Most of the upward movement
A platform to rest on
And to get this to work all you simply need is the correct body position (side-on), and the correct insertion of the foot into the crack (heel first, then toe).
When I learnt to do these two things correctly I entered into the world where every aspiring offwidther wants to beâŚthatâs moving up the crack rather than back down itâŚđ
Pulling/pushing and holding body parts:
Now then, although Iâd mastered the outside foot, I still had a few more hoops to jump through to actually make my offwidth efficient.
When I learnt
- Where and when to push
- Where and when to pull
- Where and when to hold
The offwidthing game significantly changed for me. I went from the world of every aspiring offwidther (moving up the crack rather than down), to every offwidtherâs dream landâŚthat's actually enjoying offwidths đ
So to make this effective, hold yourself into the crack with the âinside body partsâ and âpull and pushâ yourself up the crack with the outside body parts.
There are a few more nuances to it, to get everything working in harmony, but thatâs the bottom lineâŚhold with the inside, push/pull with the outside.
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