Oops! Used the wrong version in the title, education these days amiright?? Try, "you're soft US..." Sometimes the muscle climbers need to work on the most is the one in their skull LOLLL
@@ansonhu5551 Oh yeah? Whatever... You must think your pretty cool, or maybe that big attitude is you compensating for something. There's no other explanation as to why you'd say something so hurtful... Your stinky ;P
@@ansonhu5551 Oh yeah? Whatever... Everyone look, we've got a armchair grammarian in the room with us, or maybe just a big attitude that's compensating for something. Your just jealous because you didn't notice it first. Umm, fricking LOL (laughing out loud> at you)
Just ignore the rest of the comment if you dont want advice, but you should really focus on placing your feet a lot more. You consistently look away before your foot is on the hold which might be the easiest technique improvement ever. This would prevent a large amount of the foot slips and will likely he the gateway to getting a lot more out of your feet.
I rewatched a bit of my video and yeah you’re definitely right on that. I’ll add it to the list of things to work on. I’ve been focusing on trying to get more power from my lower body and core and that would probably help a bit with that. Thanks!
Back home I barely do V3's. V4's feel like a massive step up and I can rarely do 3 moves max. I went to the states, and did 90% of V4s I came across in 2 different gyms. No idea if I'm actually stronger (newbie gains) or US gyms are soft. I did a moonboard v4 last week which was really hard for me.
US gyms are typically soft to get people interested in climbing faster. If you’re ever curious what grade you could climb outside I would say that the moonboard is likely the most accurate in the Midwest and the Tensionboard is more accurate elsewhere in the states.
Your issue is footwork and applying pressure to bad feet. It's the reason you slip off the kicker and it shows through most of the moves. The moonboard highlights this as moves are typically shorter than on something like the kilter, but holds are less juggy and also make worse feet.
@@bbeebsbouldering Maybe a spraywall. Or just any overhung bouldering that doesn't involve a lot of hooking. You need to make an effort to not cut lose with your feet. It's something you need to actively try for and learn.
@@bbeebsboulderingI’m still learning a lot when it comes to weighting your feet properly. But I’d say to climb sets you know you can absolutely do and really actively think about weighting your feet and activating your leg muscles as you move to the next hold. Progressively using worse feet as you improve. Core is very important but it’s not everything.
I believe that with more careful and silent footwork you will instantly climb harder without needing to get stronger core or fingers! But this 2024 moon feels by far the hardest grade wise
Oops! Used the wrong version in the title, education these days amiright?? Try, "you're soft US..." Sometimes the muscle climbers need to work on the most is the one in their skull LOLLL
Pin of shame
so loud and so wrong LOL
@@ansonhu5551 Oh yeah? Whatever... You must think your pretty cool, or maybe that big attitude is you compensating for something. There's no other explanation as to why you'd say something so hurtful... Your stinky ;P
@@ansonhu5551 Oh yeah? Whatever... Everyone look, we've got a armchair grammarian in the room with us, or maybe just a big attitude that's compensating for something. Your just jealous because you didn't notice it first. Umm, fricking LOL (laughing out loud> at you)
@@sorenstults please tell me ur a freshman in hs
She crimping on my rock until I boulder problem.
Waiting for the taste testing event
@@bbeebsbouldering lmfao, sounds absolutely unhinged when you say it under this comment.
Just ignore the rest of the comment if you dont want advice, but you should really focus on placing your feet a lot more. You consistently look away before your foot is on the hold which might be the easiest technique improvement ever. This would prevent a large amount of the foot slips and will likely he the gateway to getting a lot more out of your feet.
I rewatched a bit of my video and yeah you’re definitely right on that. I’ll add it to the list of things to work on. I’ve been focusing on trying to get more power from my lower body and core and that would probably help a bit with that. Thanks!
Back home I barely do V3's. V4's feel like a massive step up and I can rarely do 3 moves max. I went to the states, and did 90% of V4s I came across in 2 different gyms. No idea if I'm actually stronger (newbie gains) or US gyms are soft. I did a moonboard v4 last week which was really hard for me.
US gyms are typically soft to get people interested in climbing faster. If you’re ever curious what grade you could climb outside I would say that the moonboard is likely the most accurate in the Midwest and the Tensionboard is more accurate elsewhere in the states.
Where from?
@@TheGUNZaBLAZIN I'm from the UAE. The gyms I went to were around the Albany area, New York.
edge hugging left foot 6:23 I wouldn't count that personaly
Yeah that’s super fair, I saw that when rewatching. I’ll have to redo it at some point
@bbeebsbouldering it's not a big deal you surely can do the climb but for some people it's stressful because of the ranking sistem and points
that last move is actually brutal without the edge hugging
Your issue is footwork and applying pressure to bad feet. It's the reason you slip off the kicker and it shows through most of the moves. The moonboard highlights this as moves are typically shorter than on something like the kilter, but holds are less juggy and also make worse feet.
You got any ways to improve on this, I don’t have close access to a moonboard or Tensionboard.
@@bbeebsbouldering Maybe a spraywall. Or just any overhung bouldering that doesn't involve a lot of hooking.
You need to make an effort to not cut lose with your feet. It's something you need to actively try for and learn.
@@bbeebsboulderingI’m still learning a lot when it comes to weighting your feet properly. But I’d say to climb sets you know you can absolutely do and really actively think about weighting your feet and activating your leg muscles as you move to the next hold. Progressively using worse feet as you improve. Core is very important but it’s not everything.
Moonboards are brutal.
For real
I believe that with more careful and silent footwork you will instantly climb harder without needing to get stronger core or fingers! But this 2024 moon feels by far the hardest grade wise
What’s your experience like on other moonboard sets then and which is your favorite?
Get a Mike dude
And use it.
I had one at the beginning of the video and then it broke part way through, I got a new one now though