Shoulder dislocates for overhead mobility — daily habit worth building
Calisthenics for Climbers: The Training Crossover
Climbing and calisthenics have significant movement overlap and training each improves the other more than most people realize. Here's the transfer I've experienced.
From calisthenics to climbing: pull-up strength, especially at the top of the range, transfers directly to powerful lock-offs on the wall. Front lever work builds the anti-shoulder-extension strength that climbers need for underclings and mantles. Finger strength from hanging work transfers to crimp and pinch strength.
From climbing to calisthenics: route reading and movement problem-solving carry over to skill acquisition. Finger and forearm conditioning from climbing reduces grip fatigue in hanging calisthenics work. The body tension climbing requires — especially on overhangs — builds the core control that calisthenics demands.
Programming both: I keep calisthenics and climbing on separate days. Climbing fatigues the fingers and forearms in ways that affect pulling performance, so I avoid climbing the day before a front lever or muscle-up session.
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