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Climbing

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A climber scaling a steep mountain face in Torres del Paine National Park during an adventurous ascent.

Climbing is an activity where people use their hands, feet, or other parts of their bodies to go up steep things. These can be very big, like the world's tallest mountains such as the eight thousanders, or small rocks called boulders. People climb for many reasons: to move from place to place, for fun, in competitions, and even for jobs like construction or military work.

Paul Pritchard on the FFA of the 600-metre (2,000 ft) big wall route, El Caballo de Diablo 5.12a (7a+), on the North Tower of Torres del Paine, in Patagonia

Climbing can happen both inside buildings and outside. When it is done outside, people might climb natural things like rocks for rock climbing or ice for ice climbing. Inside, there are special places made for climbing, such as climbing walls and climbing gyms. These places let people practice and enjoy climbing safely without having to go to a real mountain or ice field.

Evolution as a sport

Climbing became a popular sport as climbers reached new heights, tried new methods, and used better tools. Guides and guidebooks helped many people learn to enjoy climbing outdoors. Famous early climbers include Walter Bonatti, Riccardo Cassin, Hermann Buhl, and Gaston Rébuffat. Later, Reinhold Messner and Doug Scott became well-known, followed by others like Mick Fowler, Marko Prezelj, and Ueli Steck.

Since the 1980s, safer ways to climb, such as using bolts and indoor climbing walls, made the sport more popular. Competition climbing also grew, with climbers like Wolfgang Güllich, Alexander Huber, Chris Sharma, Adam Ondra, Lynn Hill, Catherine Destivelle, and Janja Garnbret becoming professionals. Climbing became an Olympic sport for the first time in the 2021 games in Tokyo, with lead climbing, bouldering, and speed climbing as events. Ice climbing is not yet an Olympic sport.

Rock-based

The sport of rock climbing started in the late 19th century and has many types. These include single-pitch climbing, which uses routes up to 50 metres, and multi-pitch climbing, which can go up to 1,000 metres.

There are different ways to climb, such as aid climbing, which uses tools to help, and sport climbing, which uses fixed anchors for safety. Traditional climbing relies on climbers placing their own safety gear as they go. Top rope climbing uses a rope at the top for safety and is a common way for beginners to try climbing. Bouldering involves climbing short rock formations without safety gear, and very tall bouldering routes are called highball bouldering.

Mountain-based

Mountaineering as a fun activity started a long time ago, even before rock climbing did. By the middle of the 1700s, people were already enjoying climbing in the mountains. Over time, mountaineering has grown into different types of climbing.

These include:

  • Mountaineering: Climbing mountains, which might need some rock or ice climbing. This type often uses support and fixed ropes.
  • Alpine climbing: Climbing big routes that need skills in rock, ice, and mixed climbing, but with very little equipment and no outside help.
  • Scrambling: Climbing rocky faces and ridges, which can include basic rock climbing and is often part of hillwalking.
  • Via ferrata: Climbing mountain paths using fixed steel cables, metal steps, and ladders for safety.
  • Ice climbing: Climbing frozen water or hard snow using tools like ice axes and crampons, usually in mountains.
  • Mixed climbing: Climbing paths that use ice climbing tools where there is both rock and ice. If there is no ice, this is called dry-tooling.
  • Solo climbing: Climbing paths alone. This can be done with ropes or without any protection, known as free soloing.

Competition-based

Competition climbing is a type of sport where people climb on special walls inside buildings. It began in the 1980s and is overseen by World Climbing. This group is part of larger sports organizations like the IOC and GAISF. There are three main kinds of competition climbing:

Competition ice climbing is another type of climbing sport that started in the early 2000s. It involves climbing on walls that look like ice, both outside and inside buildings. The UIAA oversees this sport worldwide, but it is not yet part of the Olympic Games.

Other recreational-based

There are many fun ways people enjoy climbing for fun. Some people climb the outside of buildings just for the challenge. Others enjoy climbing along canyons or up tall mechanical cranes.

You can also find climbing in traditional sports like Mallakhamba, where people climb poles or ropes while doing yoga and gymnastics. Climbing can also include moving smoothly through city areas, called parkour, or quickly climbing thick ropes. Some people like to climb trees using ropes and safety gear for extra fun and adventure.

Commercial-based

Climbing can be used in jobs. Some workers climb to reach high places instead of using scaffolding. This is called rope access and often uses abseiling.

Some workers are tower climbers. They climb very tall towers, like those for broadcasting or telecommunications, to fix or maintain them.

Climbing and health

Therapeutic climbing helps improve both mental and physical health. It involves setting goals, managing emotions, and building confidence by doing climbing activities.

International organizations and governing bodies

World Climbing is the main group for climbing competitions around the world. It is approved by the International Olympic Committee and works with other sports groups. It helps organize contests for different kinds of climbing, such as climbing fast, solving puzzles on walls, and moving over big rocks.

The International Mountaineering and Climbing Federation has been around for a long time and looks after climbing and ice climbing. It makes rules for ice climbing contests and helps the sport grow.

In film

Main article: Mountain film

Climbing has been shown in many movies, both stories and real-life documentaries. Some well-known climbing movies are Touching the Void, Everest, Meru, The Dawn Wall, Free Solo, 14 Peaks: Nothing Is Impossible, and The Alpinist. There is also a traveling film festival called the Reel Rock Film Tour, which shows climbing and adventure movies.

Images

A climber tackling the famous 'Midnight Lightning' bouldering route in Yosemite National Park.
Climbers scaling a rock face during a crack climbing session in the scenic Indian Creek area of Canyonlands National Park, Utah.
A climber competing in the Lead Final at the 2018 IFSC Climbing World Championships in Innsbruck, Austria.
A climber summiting Mount Manaslu, showcasing the mountain's peak and rugged terrain.
A climber navigating a route on the famous Eiger mountain in Switzerland.
A climber scaling an icy cliff using specialized equipment during an ice climbing expedition in Switzerland.
A climber scaling a rock face during a sport climbing activity.
Climbers scaling El Capitan, showcasing an impressive feat in adaptive sports.
A climber scaling an icy rock face at Pirates Cove, showcasing the challenge and excitement of mixed climbing.
People climbing a bridge as part of an outdoor adventure activity.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Climbing, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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