From the Ground Up Week 8 – Learning to Sport Lead Climb: Rope length & management, Clipping, Quickdraws

Once you have decided you want to learn to sport climb, as well as the kit you already have; harness, helmet, shoes, chalk bag and belay device you will need a rope, quickdraws, two long slings and two screwgate karabiners.

30m Gym Ropes

 

60m Ropes: 10.5, 9.4 & 9.1

 

 

 

 

Ropes for sport climbing come in a variety of lengths, but as a general rule you would use a 30m rope for indoor and a 60m rope for outdoor sport lead climbing. Be aware that some indoor climbing centres are higher than 15m and so a 30m rope will not be long enough. It is always wise to ring the centre and check the length of their routes before you visit. Also there are some outdoor sport climbs that are longer than 30m, and you will therefore need a 70m rope. Read the relevant guide books before you venture on these routes or seek local knowledge. However, there are two ways you can ensure you won’t drop the lead climber when lowering and that is either to tie in as second, or tie a knot in the end of the rope.

Ropes can also vary in thickness between 9.1 and 11mm. The thinner sport ropes are usually used for travelling to save weight but a rope of 10mm is easier to handle and more suitable for general use. If you do go for a skinnier rope ensure you have the correct belay device.

Budget Quickdraws

You will often find if you lead indoors that the quickdraws are already in place. Some centres leave a selection of their lead walls without quickdraws and just have the bolt hangars in place.On sport crags outdoors there are no quickdraws in place and you have to provide your own. But what type do you choose and how many? Keeping 16 quickdraws in your rucksack and then choosing to carry as many as needed on the route with a couple to spare is recommended.

Ali uses clean-nosed, wire gate, snap link karabiners because they are light and easier to remove from the harness, and to unclip from the rope and bolt hangars as there is no hook to snag on. However, these are quite expensive and you can buy budget quickdraws that are adequate for as little as £8 per quickdraw.

Clean and Hook Nose Krabs

It is worth having a selection of different lengths of tape connecting the two karabiners on your quickdraws in case you need a longer length to negotiate an obstacle, e.g. an overhang.

You may also use shorter tapes when clipping close to the ground to avoid hitting the floor should you fall off.

The two karabiners should be different colours to differentiate between the karabiner that clips the bolt and the karabiner that the rope clips into. The reason for this is that the karabiner that clips the metal bolt will become worn with sharp notches that may abrade the rope if you get them the wrong way round.

Varied lengths

How to orient them is an interesting question, but generally speaking 99% of the time it is best to have the karabiners facing the same way so that the gates can be clipped facing away from the direction of travel.

There is a slight advantage in having them in opposition, but only if the bolt is a long way off to the side, then the gates are in the optimum position to get the most out of your reach.

Correct clipping occurs when the lead climber, in a balanced position is able to clip the karabiner one handed so that the rope to the climber is coming out of the front of the lower karabiner and the rope to the belayer is against the wall/rock face. It is worth practising with both hands whilst still on the floor as you use a slightly different method with each hand, and clipping from the left and the right.

Correct Clipping

Climbers often clip above their head, which means they pull out more rope to make the clip, which uses up more energy and if they fall off at this point, they will fall further and could even hit the floor, even from as high as 4 bolts up. The optimum position to clip is when the quickdraw is around waist height.

There will be many occasions, however, when you will clip above your head; just make sure you are in a good solid position.

Back Clipping

 

Z Clipping

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
If you clip from the front to the back of the karabiner – commonly known as back clipping – there is a small risk of the quickdraw unclipping itself in a fall. Z clipping is to be avoided at all costs and it occurs when bolts are close together and the rope is taken from beneath the last quickdraw rather than from above it, and as you try to climb on the rope creates a Z which halts your progress. The simplest way to get out of this is to unclip the quickdraw below.

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