So this bouldering problem (named Lil Ninja) has been around for about a year now. It was rated a v6 I'm not that great of a boulder and my best was a v4. My friends and I went out to check this out and has I started looking at it I noticed if you skipped 2 moves and made a long reach instead it would be a lot easier. My friends did the route and they kept saying it was the hardest v6 they climbed. I came up skipped to holds and made it to the top with no problem. Turns out the route setter was there and saw what I did. Lil Ninja is now a v3 bouldering problem.
I measure everything by the the French grade... I learnt rock climbing in France after all, so it's what makes the most sense to me (even more so than the UIAA system used in Germany).
That indoor vs. outdoor bouldering comment is sooo true. I just sent my first V8 indoor, went outside and was struggling on V2/V3 lol, couldn't even finish a V4. Super humbling.
yeah a lot of gyms will grade stuff super light to give new climbers a sense of rapid progression to get them hooked, so most commercial gyms are super soft.
Kevin Farnand yeah I agree with you, most climbing gyms do that, but the climbing gyms near where I live ( I live in El Paso Texas) 95% of the time they have the grade right since we have hueco tanks just 20-35 min away
When I first went outside with climbing/bouldering, I went down quite a few grades because it takes a lot of time just to learn to see the holds. You're so used to these colorful holds on the wall that jut out making the route obvious, but outside it's a whole different thing. Once I figured out how to recognize holds on the rock, my climbing grade outdoors became much closer to my indoor.
I definitely agree. Bouldering is very different outdoors. Non-existent footholds, sharp painful crimp edges, awkward fall zones. A V4 at one of our local gyms is nothing like a real V4 at the crag. I think I'm about V3 level but I'm yet to send one as I've only just sent some V2s and started trying some V3s and V4s. But that being said, I'm loving outdoor bouldering so far regardless of how hard it is to me.
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Route to my school. Graded 1, it is the hardest thing in my life.
The most misrated climb is the one i have to beat every single morning ... my alarm says 5:00 and i have to leave my warm and comfy bed and go to work ... its 5 minutes by foot but it feels like i'm in the hardest 9b+ in the world!!
Not anymore it seems. I never really payed attention to it but i realised that they are not found on any of the walls in my local Climbing gym anymore. A 6B- is simply just called a 6a+ now.
I realize that it’s hard to grade on the USA bouldering scale because you can’t get technical, but as someone who hasn’t climbed for very long I really like how broad the categories are. They make me try things I normally wouldn’t try if they were graded with a letter or a +/- after
my gym just does: green - 'i just started' yellow - 'I've been working at it' orange - 'i can sign up for the outdoor excursions finally' red - 'hard' ... they just use the colors; i added the meaning; it works though
At my Gym it is: Green: Ladder Red: u have to pull Blue: u have to pull harder Grey: u have to pull like your life depends on it Black: don't even look at it
My contention is that outdoor grades aren’t harder, but different. Because most new climbers start in the gym, where every climb is nothing like climbing outdoors from a technical perspective, then translating your skills outdoors is more difficult. That makes the same grade outside much harder. Usually a grade or two for most people.
"people that climbed for a couple of months should aim for the sixes" ... is really like that or is my gym incredibly biased with grades? Our 6a are pretty damn hard.
Indoor Vs Outdoor: I find indoor climbs that use more volumes as opposed to bolt ons, tend to mirror the outdoor movements more closely. Its great to see more indoor gyms adapting to this model also. It means you can get rock fit not plastic fit.
The V system on boulders seems crazy to me. I can do V5s in one gym and struggle with V2s in another. It is very easy to get in your own head with climbing. I am trying to get better about looking at a route or boulder and saying, that looks fun, I'm gonna try it and ignoring the grade.
indoor versus outdoor is hilarious! I make sure I knock 3 number grades off my indoor grade and I'm super happy if I can send anything outside. I feel amazing after sending V1 in Yosemite...
Wish my the two gyms near me would use grades. It's all colors from blue, white, green, orange, red, black. It's just nice to see how you can progressive when you're using grading.
Either way it's how someone feels. There's no science behind any of it. This one feels hard I'll give it a 6 this one's harder it's a 7 this one's harder but not as much harder only like .546 rocks harder so 6.546
I m french so i mostly use the french system xD Fontainebleau boulders are actually harder than they look, its just super slopery holds, impossible to hold for an indoor climber like me (indoor I climb 7a and at fontainebleau 5c) Sry for my bad english :) Useful vid anyway 👍
A common grading addition in the US: G - Good protection PG - Pretty good protection R - Run out X - all but free solo. Modern Times in the Gunks. Rated 5.8+ some folks call it 5.10b/c
I made a new grading system. The 8 different difficulties are: Literally walking Easy Possible Interesting Unreasonable Masochistic Impossible Adam Ondra
I must say, the boulders in Joshua Tree all feel very sandbagged. I can do about V4/V5 indoors and V2/V3 outdoors and the very best that I could do at JT, even with a lot of effort, was a V0. It's a different style of climbing (a lot more friction), so one grade difference is fine, but 2-3 grades seems ridiculous to me.
Silence was climbed after Matt made this; Ondra gave it 9c (or 5.15d) making it the current hardest sport route in the world. Next will be a 9c+ then a 10a! (But I can already climb 10a, so yeah...)
I feel like in certain area's (outdoors) of France the grades can be more or less mitigated by the exposure. My biggest, yet very modest, success so far is in Gorges du Tarn. It is called "Couilles au cul". It is rated 7a. It did not feel that difficult, however the exposure is somewhat high. Falling while clipping the relay could bring you just a couple of meters from the ground and the route itself is 30-35 meters ... Beautiful line though :)
As for misgraded route, I'd have to say that Left Martini (V10) in Hueco is it for me. When compared to something like Theater of the Absurd (also V10), the moves and holds are much easier. I think Left Martini gets grade points for the incredibly difficult beta to figure out (which shouldn't really be part of the grade) rather than the actual individual moves.
At my gym in Atlanta (USA) uses the V point and YSD. We use grade ranges for bouldering(V0-1, V2-3, V4-5, V6-7 etc), but myself and other coaches often use the V point system to identify the difficulty of a crux on a sport climb, or how sustained it is. For example, we might say an easy 5.12 felt like mostly V2 climbing, with a V4-5 crux.
At our local gym bouldering grades are WAAAY easier in gym. Outdoor they're much harder. But you've also got to remember that holds are often broken off outside AND you're much more concerned for your leg bones out at the crag!
Jaws V0 at Rogers Park in Belton, Texas. 15' Dihedral, sit starts with a Limestone finger crack up to two finger pockets and finishes with a huge dyno and a scary top out! Not to mention a notoriously bad landing with a tree root sticking a foot out of the ground. Most people who are visiting Rogers Park climb this problem first due to the grade being so low. But sure enough after a few burner goes someone ends up with a tweaked ankle or two. If not a broken ankle or shin. Multiple pads are a must.
there's this problem called the claw at a little place in new york state called ice pond, i believe it's a V9, but that thing is so sketchy in so many ways. it's not high, but you basically NEED to cut your ankles open on the starting moves shoved deep into a roof crack, and i think it's off by probably a good 2 grades AT LEAST
At my local crag there's a route called "dynamo" VIII-(6c+) back from the early eightys, back when dynamic climbing wasn't a thing. The route revolves around basically one move that is a bit further between two good jugs. Something a lot of people do when they visit the bouldering for the first or second time.
In Saxony, Germany, we use a grading system of ine through twelve using roman numerals. From seven onwards we also have a, b, c. Many routes also feature unofficial markings such as a ring that indicates above-average safety or one to three stars that indicate the experience one will have climbing. A 7b with a ring and two stars might be perceived to be as easy as a 6 in some cases.
Indoor routes of identical grades are definitely easier if only because the callouses you build up indoors aren't sufficient for what you'll need outdoors with sharp rock. I think the moves themselves are roughly similar in difficulty, however.
Haig Boulter I am not sure it is necessary to mention this, as even mr. Pearson himself has agreed for a long time now that he had graded these routes to high...
Corkscrew, 5.8 at Delaware Water Gap, NJ. Old school grade, route is definitely at LEAST 10a-10b. Really bad gear on the second pitch, with micro nuts and a really scary friction traverse.
Grades just differ very widely. There is a company running multiple gyms in my vicinity. In one of them I'm very close to several 6c+s while in the other 6b (+) is usually quite the fight or something to project. Funnily the two alleged 7as I did so far felt way easier than that. Some is personal style, but I think reaching the 7s is quite an accomplishment and not something everyone can do. At least in my experience it is.
Good Onion, Damai Wall, 68100 Batu Caves, Selangor, Malaysia. Sport climb, 78m, 3 slings, rated 6b (French rating system) First clip is onto a sling (first of three) with sharpish rocks at the bottom. Lots of shape to the rock on the lower half giving you lots of options with large jugs and underclings. The upper half smoothens out a bit but stays easy as you transition to the lighter grey rock above.. All in all, it was quite a relaxing cruise to the top, and it is a little bit overrated. I would rate it a 5c+or a 6a.
Most people get into the sevens? Aw damn.. and i'm still stuck around 6c. Been climbing on that level for almost 2 years. I'm not making any progress anymore -.- And when i go outdoors.. i'm struggling with a 6a even.
once my friends and i were out climbing at this climbing gym in San Antonio and towards the end of our session, we decided to try this V4 that included a strong push that was borderline a dyno off to the side. our problem with this is that we were still fairly new but this route was so difficult that the guy working agreed it should have been set as a V6, well out of our climbing skill.
I've been working on a orobkem at my local gym that begins with a pretty big dyno, then goes across the ceiling. The holds are pretty simple but overall it seems pretty tough, and yet it is rated v3. All the other v3s in the gym seem a lot easier!
I think that the brush off (E4-5C) is just stupid, it has no gear however it is not very high and if you have a few mats it is fine, it is a slab and is easy to just walk up if you have good technique! I think it should be less hard.
T-D Gap on the Cuillins - this is a scramble / climb cross. Recently given VS but it's often climbed in scrambling shoes. Some Scrambling info would also be good here.
Most bouldering gyms in my city (Berlin) use colors to mark grades. Usually have 6 colors which carry a range of difficulties. The 5th and 6th color usually being pretty hard (6th only for a very select group, so they are sparse). Some also have a "Joker" color where the boulder grade can literally be anything (which invites more people to try out something they wouldn't necessarily try if they had normal gradings). There is one gym that sets with font grades, but they've recently really started sandbagging them eg: 3 months ago I would flash all 6a's as a warm up and now I'm having difficulties even flashing/sending some 5C's. I have to say, I like the color system more, at least indoors. It makes me try out stuff I wouldn't have tried if it really had a grade. As for the comp, can't say since I've only climbed indoors. Hoping that will change this spring/summer
My vote for most under-graded route goes to Flying Buttress HVD 4a at Stanage. I could have chosen from many UK HVS routes, but I chose this HVD because it's many people's first introduction to outdoor climbing. Maybe it used to be HVD 4a, but with all the traffic it gets, even gritstone gets polished eventually, and the crux is now too slippery and scary for first-timers.
I reckon the one that stands out right away would be La Marie Rose in Fontainbleau. Stated as a 6A but that was back when the feet weren't glas. I would even consider putting it up as 6C but 6B+ would be more accurate.
In the McDowell mountains in Arizona Peaches and cream last time I checked was a 5.7, even though the first part of the climb is a terrible lie back while the entire crack system is insanely greasy.
Since I live in the northern part of germany I don't get to climb outdoors as much as I like so I'm mostly stuck at climbing on plastic - which is also fun and challanging in its own way I suppose. Since I'm not that much into bouldering, the sport-grades are more important to me. My gym uses the french system as well as the german system (that someone mentioned down below) - Bouldering is graded by a set of 7 colors which gives the setters more room in terms of difficulty. On another note - several months back our setters have started to not fill in the grades of new climbs for a week or so, which I believe is great because it invites everyone to try it. You look at a route and think "damn some moves look really nice - gonna try that" instead of looking at the line, checking the grade and think "that's almost an entire grade above what I can climb on good days and leave it at that. I'm not going to mention any overrated/unterrated routes because I simply have not yet done enough routes to have a solid understanding. I'm just going to say that almost everything becomes easier if you do it the "intended" way.
Just learned about the French grading, seems like a better system rating the entire climb. When gym climbing I have given up looking at ratings. They are incredibly inconsistent and subjective at best. Just happy we have some great local climbing opportunities with creative route setters!
Norway used the decimal system for a long time, with 6 defined as the hardest possible. We had a bunch of "6+" climbs that had been put up around 1970 by the likes of Ulf Geir Hansen which everyone knew were "very hard indeed". 10-15 years later they all got regraded to 7 or even 7+.
thanks, ive always wondered about the other grading systems. im from southern Texas so its the V scale over here though you do see the Yosemite scale every once in a while.
Just trying out V6s in the bouldering gym indoors at the moment. Have yet to climb outdoors, but when we eventually go out to Fontainebleau, I'm anticipating starting all over again on V1s, 2s, and 3s just because it will be so different. Will also be lots of fun :D
in my gym they dont put up grades so we just have the the color leves from 1-5, and now someone has setted a level one boulder which requires absolutely too much energy and brain work :D it feels like level 3 so quite challenging
Grades vary hugely depending on venue and culture. Also remember that nearly all grades were placed by your average male climber. This means that morphology often becomes a big issue for shorter males or females. In general, for climbers who are not your average male climbers height, grades begin to make less sense. For sure very adept shorter climbers may prevail but this is not a qualification of the grade but more an exception. Bouldering Grades started prior to Sherman and and there were just 3 grades at that point. The most sandbagged boulder problem I have ever tried is a problem in Font graded 5 at Bois Rond which more realistically would be around Font 7a+. I hear what your saying regarding Strawberries at Curbar. I found this harder than Trackside 7a and Early Doors 7a. It certainly warrants 6b+ and not the 5+ it got when I did it many moons ago.
I have to say the most misgraded climb i've ever tried, was when Rustam Gelmanov did some guest comp setting at my local bouldering centre late last year. It was supposedly v4/v5 and only the 12th route out of 20 (ascending difficulty), yet I only saw Rustam top it. After doing it so easily he even attempted, and then suceeded, to climb the whole thing with only back 2 finger open crimps....seriously.
I understand that a high E-rating can reflect a safe but strenuous climb...just to confuse things that much more! Also, Yosemite grades now reflect the pitch as a whole for the most part, i.e. like the French system. The "hardest move" rating was for slabbier face climbs which most people don't do anymore.
In my gym 6a 6a+ is very easy but the difference between 6a 6a+ and 6b 6b+ is huge all routes are 1/3 of a finger pad and when i look at 7a 7b they are the same just the distance between them is increased. I can not even start the climb on anything higher than 6a+. Recently they removed grades from the boldering area and i love it as all the grades gets in to your head.
there was a 5.10c at a gym in MN I can climb 5.11bs and I got about half way up and just could not get any farther because of a weird dead point onto a small pinch
there is a problem at nine corner lake in the Adirondacks (northern New York state) that is a V3. I have done V8 there and that problem punts me every time
I definitely agree with the difference between indoors and outdoors bouldering when you go outdoors you drop about a grade n a half like climbing 6a-c indoor you will climb 4b-5b outdoors, but then crack climbing is totally graded on the person because that comes down to how big your arms actually are.
There is a V4 at the gym that i go to. It was set as a V1 (i still think that it is), but they changed it. They either just put the wrong note card on it, or just mixed it up with another problem.
In my climbing gym they use the UIAA scale, and my bouldering gym has made up their own scale which kind of correlates to the french scale but is its own thing...
In Germany I only saw the UIAA system, which is sometimes given in Roman numerals, but sometimes not. You have to start using your hands at a 3. Most people can do a 5. I used to do 7- and a friend sometimes did 7+/8- I've been told the hardest possible routes would be around a 12, though in my gym they stopped at 9+
Although I always payed attention to grades, early on in my climbing career a wise friend told me that you can either climb it or you can't. Although perhaps an over or under statement, I have found that to remain the truest measure of difficulty.
The most sandbagged route grade I've climbed is a sport route in East Railay Thailand called Short & Savage. As the name suggests it is a short climb that is considerably difficult but only rated 6a. With a pull up on small holds to start and only two bolts to clip on a slightly overhanging rock face this climb should definitely be rated 6b or 6c!
yeah, always very confused with V grades VS font grades. climbing in Fontainebleau, i experienced the difficulty of 2 to 4 grades. and i can tell you that when i see a scale comparing V0 to a 4font, I don't understand at all how the scale is so wrong. (sport climbing 6a and some 6b+) i guess i'll have to go climb in a Vgraded country to make my own experience.
there’s a new setter at my gym and he read a grade wrong. it was graded v7 and he read it as v1 and thought he was weak so he made a “v3” that was actually supposed to be a v6/7
Best grade systems: For boulder Vsystem For trad British system For sport Australian system I'm european and I use the French system but I think that this and the Yosemite system are the worst
I live in South Africa and we also use the Ewbank- its brilliant because it is numerical, allowing one to add other challenges- eg climb your age, score 100 points in a day etc. Interestingly there is a growing community here that uses the French system, simply because it is becoming a standard, and using it seems evolutionary- they even find it more motivating, but I disagree on the latter.
It was very interesting to hear about the Grades system! In Japan we are using unique grade system for bouldering, called "Dan/Kyu" which I think is super problematic. Cz, 1Dan covers two grades in French system. In addison, I felt much harder in Japan compare with Spanish boulder, although those boulders should be around the same grades. I would like to hear other opinions about the Japanese grade system!
i would say the most underrated climbs are the ones that are set for children! they seem very straight forward but always have holds that are small and makes it hard to get of the ground!
I think the WhiteRastafarian climb at Joshua Tree National Park is well under graded at v1+ considering some of the moves and the possibility of breaking your back on the rocks below :(
I go off the Australian system because I'm from New Zealand but I feel it is the most simplistic because it just goes from 1 to 36, 1 being something you could only just do no hands and 36 being the World record. It does become a bit too vague at higher levels but it's probably the easiest to get your head around.
It also seems to be the most logical since all these ever are is relative grades of difficulty. There's no scientific basis that i can see that dictates something is an 8b other than it being harder than 8a. Why not just call it a 9? Why go 8c then 9a why not 8d? It's nonsense tbh.
Outdoor bouldering is harder? I have the feeling it is not about difficulty, but style. Generally speaking, overhanging stuff is graded soft outdoors, and slabby/technical stuff is graded hard. Font should be a perfect example for this... As a indoor climber I can do 7a overhang within an hour trying, but a 6a slab might take me the same amount of time... Same for old sport crags like Céüse or Freyr I think.
I guess grading scales are really variable from one place to another and from one individual to another. I have never seen anyone climbing for a couple of months and being able to climb a 6a (french system). In my area people become able to climb a good number of 6as usually after 6-10 months of climbing. 6b level is reached after a year/year and a half and that's were most people stop improving unless they start doing intense training. I know a only handful of persons that can get past a 7b. Those who climb higher grades (>6c) get inesorably back to a 6a-6b level if they stop training regularly.
I think like you said the outdoor bouldering compared to indoor bouldering grading has a large disconnect. my experiences are only in America but i find that either the peers who grade indoor are trying to boost your moral while outdoor take it more seriously or that there just needs to be a better way to differentiate in the USA. love your channel keep up the great work and climb on :)
We (in Slovakia) use UIAA grades therefore I-XI for route climbing. For the boulders instead, most of the gyms just generalise grades into colours, which is super inaccurate, which sucks. And outside boulders haven't tried any yet, so I wouldn't know :D
I use my own grading system It goes like this from easiest to hardest
Yep
Give it a go
Nope
What do you guys think? Comment below...
^^This
patrick baranowski This works...
How does it work? I kind of confuses me.
I would add one more category "I can do everything apart from the start"
So this bouldering problem (named Lil Ninja) has been around for about a year now. It was rated a v6 I'm not that great of a boulder and my best was a v4. My friends and I went out to check this out and has I started looking at it I noticed if you skipped 2 moves and made a long reach instead it would be a lot easier. My friends did the route and they kept saying it was the hardest v6 they climbed. I came up skipped to holds and made it to the top with no problem. Turns out the route setter was there and saw what I did. Lil Ninja is now a v3 bouldering problem.
This is a great story
pretty sick
😂
Lol they were like, "well if this guy can do it"
@@vitamin9165 sad story! true story...
If there is one thing the French do well, it is to create decent units of measure. Kudos.
Ciro Santilli I would argue the Ewbanks system is best but I am biased
Their pretty good at running away
I measure everything by the the French grade... I learnt rock climbing in France after all, so it's what makes the most sense to me (even more so than the UIAA system used in Germany).
Say that to their numbers :')
That indoor vs. outdoor bouldering comment is sooo true. I just sent my first V8 indoor, went outside and was struggling on V2/V3 lol, couldn't even finish a V4. Super humbling.
yeah a lot of gyms will grade stuff super light to give new climbers a sense of rapid progression to get them hooked, so most commercial gyms are super soft.
Kevin Farnand yeah I agree with you, most climbing gyms do that, but the climbing gyms near where I live ( I live in El Paso Texas) 95% of the time they have the grade right since we have hueco tanks just 20-35 min away
Wow you had a big down step, for me it was going from V5 indoor to V3-V4, but the routers close to me felt pretty good for me.
When I first went outside with climbing/bouldering, I went down quite a few grades because it takes a lot of time just to learn to see the holds. You're so used to these colorful holds on the wall that jut out making the route obvious, but outside it's a whole different thing. Once I figured out how to recognize holds on the rock, my climbing grade outdoors became much closer to my indoor.
I definitely agree. Bouldering is very different outdoors. Non-existent footholds, sharp painful crimp edges, awkward fall zones.
A V4 at one of our local gyms is nothing like a real V4 at the crag. I think I'm about V3 level but I'm yet to send one as I've only just sent some V2s and started trying some V3s and V4s.
But that being said, I'm loving outdoor bouldering so far regardless of how hard it is to me.
Route to my school. Graded 1, it is the hardest thing in my life.
so you couldn't find any lighter color marker for that board of yours? XD
The most misrated climb is the one i have to beat every single morning ... my alarm says 5:00 and i have to leave my warm and comfy bed and go to work ... its 5 minutes by foot but it feels like i'm in the hardest 9b+ in the world!!
Do the Adam Ondra screams while you go to work. I hear that helps with 9b+ :)
A small mistake. There are no minuses in the french sport grading system.
Not anymore it seems. I never really payed attention to it but i realised that they are not found on any of the walls in my local Climbing gym anymore. A 6B- is simply just called a 6a+ now.
@@welkijken 6b- is 6a+... there je only + and no-
Exactly. They used to around here but they figured it's kinda redundent.
I realize that it’s hard to grade on the USA bouldering scale because you can’t get technical, but as someone who hasn’t climbed for very long I really like how broad the categories are. They make me try things I normally wouldn’t try if they were graded with a letter or a +/- after
my gym just does:
green - 'i just started'
yellow - 'I've been working at it'
orange - 'i can sign up for the outdoor excursions finally'
red - 'hard'
... they just use the colors; i added the meaning; it works though
At my Gym it is:
Green: Ladder
Red: u have to pull
Blue: u have to pull harder
Grey: u have to pull like your life depends on it
Black: don't even look at it
My contention is that outdoor grades aren’t harder, but different. Because most new climbers start in the gym, where every climb is nothing like climbing outdoors from a technical perspective, then translating your skills outdoors is more difficult. That makes the same grade outside much harder. Usually a grade or two for most people.
"people that climbed for a couple of months should aim for the sixes"
... is really like that or is my gym incredibly biased with grades? Our 6a are pretty damn hard.
Use darker marker plz
Alex Honnold is responsible for videos like this ending up in my recommended.
Indoor Vs Outdoor:
I find indoor climbs that use more volumes as opposed to bolt ons, tend to mirror the outdoor movements more closely. Its great to see more indoor gyms adapting to this model also. It means you can get rock fit not plastic fit.
As someone who's now climbed outdoors a fair bit, I find them spot on.
The V system on boulders seems crazy to me. I can do V5s in one gym and struggle with V2s in another. It is very easy to get in your own head with climbing. I am trying to get better about looking at a route or boulder and saying, that looks fun, I'm gonna try it and ignoring the grade.
manasculpting most commercial gyms are softer than tissue. You probably climb like hard 3
The americans want to climb a lot of grades early. The french system is much more divided in the early grades.
indoor versus outdoor is hilarious! I make sure I knock 3 number grades off my indoor grade and I'm super happy if I can send anything outside. I feel amazing after sending V1 in Yosemite...
Man really went like "okay let's pick the LEAST contrasty colour to write on a whiteboard"
Wish my the two gyms near me would use grades. It's all colors from blue, white, green, orange, red, black. It's just nice to see how you can progressive when you're using grading.
Either way it's how someone feels. There's no science behind any of it. This one feels hard I'll give it a 6 this one's harder it's a 7 this one's harder but not as much harder only like .546 rocks harder so 6.546
i usually boulder a V7 indoor and boulder V4-5 outdoor. usually u drop 2 to 3 grades.
I m french so i mostly use the french system xD
Fontainebleau boulders are actually harder than they look, its just super slopery holds, impossible to hold for an indoor climber like me (indoor I climb 7a and at fontainebleau 5c)
Sry for my bad english :)
Useful vid anyway 👍
That bloody 6b at my gym. I SWEAR THAT THING IS A 8c+!!!!!!
A common grading addition in the US:
G - Good protection
PG - Pretty good protection
R - Run out
X - all but free solo.
Modern Times in the Gunks. Rated 5.8+ some folks call it 5.10b/c
I made a new grading system. The 8 different difficulties are:
Literally walking
Easy
Possible
Interesting
Unreasonable
Masochistic
Impossible
Adam Ondra
Adam Ondra isn't that good I think
Mine is
V0
V1
V2
V3
BEYOND HARD
ULTRA DIFFICULT
V6
ONDRA
V8
Rube Tornabene you must be new to climbing.
@@rubetornabene8543 You haven't been paying attention man.
Im a wrestler, I haven't climbed a day in my life so I probably shouldn't talk, who are the best around?
The gyms in my area, Florida USA, use a combo of Hueco and US. Usually Hueco for bouldering and US for lead climbing.
I must say, the boulders in Joshua Tree all feel very sandbagged. I can do about V4/V5 indoors and V2/V3 outdoors and the very best that I could do at JT, even with a lot of effort, was a V0. It's a different style of climbing (a lot more friction), so one grade difference is fine, but 2-3 grades seems ridiculous to me.
Silence was climbed after Matt made this; Ondra gave it 9c (or 5.15d) making it the current hardest sport route in the world. Next will be a 9c+ then a 10a! (But I can already climb 10a, so yeah...)
I feel like in certain area's (outdoors) of France the grades can be more or less mitigated by the exposure. My biggest, yet very modest, success so far is in Gorges du Tarn. It is called "Couilles au cul". It is rated 7a. It did not feel that difficult, however the exposure is somewhat high. Falling while clipping the relay could bring you just a couple of meters from the ground and the route itself is 30-35 meters ... Beautiful line though :)
That name is worth a high grade by itself!
La dura dura has been filmed up-side-down and is just a V1-V2 ladder
As for misgraded route, I'd have to say that Left Martini (V10) in Hueco is it for me. When compared to something like Theater of the Absurd (also V10), the moves and holds are much easier. I think Left Martini gets grade points for the incredibly difficult beta to figure out (which shouldn't really be part of the grade) rather than the actual individual moves.
Burden of Dreams V5 soft
Callum Jones ikr
At my gym in Atlanta (USA) uses the V point and YSD. We use grade ranges for bouldering(V0-1, V2-3, V4-5, V6-7 etc), but myself and other coaches often use the V point system to identify the difficulty of a crux on a sport climb, or how sustained it is. For example, we might say an easy 5.12 felt like mostly V2 climbing, with a V4-5 crux.
At our local gym bouldering grades are WAAAY easier in gym. Outdoor they're much harder. But you've also got to remember that holds are often broken off outside AND you're much more concerned for your leg bones out at the crag!
finally, been searching for a video like this for ages
Jaws V0 at Rogers Park in Belton, Texas. 15' Dihedral, sit starts with a Limestone finger crack up to two finger pockets and finishes with a huge dyno and a scary top out! Not to mention a notoriously bad landing with a tree root sticking a foot out of the ground. Most people who are visiting Rogers Park climb this problem first due to the grade being so low. But sure enough after a few burner goes someone ends up with a tweaked ankle or two. If not a broken ankle or shin. Multiple pads are a must.
there's this problem called the claw at a little place in new york state called ice pond, i believe it's a V9, but that thing is so sketchy in so many ways. it's not high, but you basically NEED to cut your ankles open on the starting moves shoved deep into a roof crack, and i think it's off by probably a good 2 grades AT LEAST
At my local crag there's a route called "dynamo" VIII-(6c+) back from the early eightys, back when dynamic climbing wasn't a thing. The route revolves around basically one move that is a bit further between two good jugs. Something a lot of people do when they visit the bouldering for the first or second time.
I've found that an indoor grade is about 2 or 3 grades higher than it would be outdoors. So V5 indoors is similar to V2 outside
So I'm like a negative 1 outdoors then
In Saxony, Germany, we use a grading system of ine through twelve using roman numerals. From seven onwards we also have a, b, c. Many routes also feature unofficial markings such as a ring that indicates above-average safety or one to three stars that indicate the experience one will have climbing. A 7b with a ring and two stars might be perceived to be as easy as a 6 in some cases.
Indoor routes of identical grades are definitely easier if only because the callouses you build up indoors aren't sufficient for what you'll need outdoors with sharp rock. I think the moves themselves are roughly similar in difficulty, however.
I think it has to be james pearsons the walk of life, when it was put up in 2008 they graded it at E12 but I think has since been dropped to about E9
Haig Boulter I am not sure it is necessary to mention this, as even mr. Pearson himself has agreed for a long time now that he had graded these routes to high...
Pearson was talking bollocks. Walk of life was never E12.
Corkscrew, 5.8 at Delaware Water Gap, NJ. Old school grade, route is definitely at LEAST 10a-10b. Really bad gear on the second pitch, with micro nuts and a really scary friction traverse.
Grades just differ very widely. There is a company running multiple gyms in my vicinity. In one of them I'm very close to several 6c+s while in the other 6b (+) is usually quite the fight or something to project. Funnily the two alleged 7as I did so far felt way easier than that. Some is personal style, but I think reaching the 7s is quite an accomplishment and not something everyone can do. At least in my experience it is.
Yeah try using a darker maybe even black marker on the white board...
Good Onion, Damai Wall, 68100 Batu Caves, Selangor, Malaysia.
Sport climb, 78m, 3 slings, rated 6b (French rating system)
First clip is onto a sling (first of three) with sharpish rocks at the bottom. Lots of shape to the rock on the lower half giving you lots of options with large jugs and underclings. The upper half smoothens out a bit but stays easy as you transition to the lighter grey rock above..
All in all, it was quite a relaxing cruise to the top, and it is a little bit overrated. I would rate it a 5c+or a 6a.
Boulder - creeping tiger - Kochel - Bavaria - Germany - 7b+ - very low moves for about 5/6 of the boulder - hard to keep your legs up
Most people get into the sevens? Aw damn.. and i'm still stuck around 6c. Been climbing on that level for almost 2 years. I'm not making any progress anymore -.- And when i go outdoors.. i'm struggling with a 6a even.
Don't be discouraged. Nobody is forcing you to progress. As long as you're still having fun, just keep at it.
1:51 could have used some lighter shade...marker was very contrasting
The hardest 6A ever, being also the very first 6A ever ^^ La Marie Rose in Fontainebleau !
My first 6A outside beautiful boulder
once my friends and i were out climbing at this climbing gym in San Antonio and towards the end of our session, we decided to try this V4 that included a strong push that was borderline a dyno off to the side. our problem with this is that we were still fairly new but this route was so difficult that the guy working agreed it should have been set as a V6, well out of our climbing skill.
I am a consistent V7-8 climber and there is a V1+ in Leavenworth Washington called Funhouse Stairway that took me 10 sessions....
I've been working on a orobkem at my local gym that begins with a pretty big dyno, then goes across the ceiling. The holds are pretty simple but overall it seems pretty tough, and yet it is rated v3. All the other v3s in the gym seem a lot easier!
I think that the brush off (E4-5C) is just stupid, it has no gear however it is not very high and if you have a few mats it is fine, it is a slab and is easy to just walk up if you have good technique! I think it should be less hard.
The gym i go to (uruguay) uses the V scale.. currently at V2-3 as i've been bouldering only for about 2 months
T-D Gap on the Cuillins - this is a scramble / climb cross. Recently given VS but it's often climbed in scrambling shoes.
Some Scrambling info would also be good here.
Most bouldering gyms in my city (Berlin) use colors to mark grades. Usually have 6 colors which carry a range of difficulties. The 5th and 6th color usually being pretty hard (6th only for a very select group, so they are sparse). Some also have a "Joker" color where the boulder grade can literally be anything (which invites more people to try out something they wouldn't necessarily try if they had normal gradings). There is one gym that sets with font grades, but they've recently really started sandbagging them eg: 3 months ago I would flash all 6a's as a warm up and now I'm having difficulties even flashing/sending some 5C's.
I have to say, I like the color system more, at least indoors. It makes me try out stuff I wouldn't have tried if it really had a grade.
As for the comp, can't say since I've only climbed indoors. Hoping that will change this spring/summer
My vote for most under-graded route goes to Flying Buttress HVD 4a at Stanage. I could have chosen from many UK HVS routes, but I chose this HVD because it's many people's first introduction to outdoor climbing. Maybe it used to be HVD 4a, but with all the traffic it gets, even gritstone gets polished eventually, and the crux is now too slippery and scary for first-timers.
Grading according to proximity to coffee? C1 boulders by a hipster cafe - C10 Cerro Torre
Funny stuff. You get climbing humor, I can tell. Come by the Peet's Coffee sometime
I reckon the one that stands out right away would be La Marie Rose in Fontainbleau. Stated as a 6A but that was back when the feet weren't glas. I would even consider putting it up as 6C but 6B+ would be more accurate.
Climbed the birthing canal in Niagara Glen, Ontario. Supposedly a V3, but it felt like a V0 / VB
In the McDowell mountains in Arizona Peaches and cream last time I checked was a 5.7, even though the first part of the climb is a terrible lie back while the entire crack system is insanely greasy.
There is a rout at Horse Pens 40 called "Sand Box" it is rated as a V2, but as someone who can project most V6 I have yet to top it...
Since I live in the northern part of germany I don't get to climb outdoors as much as I like so I'm mostly stuck at climbing on plastic - which is also fun and challanging in its own way I suppose.
Since I'm not that much into bouldering, the sport-grades are more important to me. My gym uses the french system as well as the german system (that someone mentioned down below) - Bouldering is graded by a set of 7 colors which gives the setters more room in terms of difficulty.
On another note - several months back our setters have started to not fill in the grades of new climbs for a week or so, which I believe is great because it invites everyone to try it. You look at a route and think "damn some moves look really nice - gonna try that" instead of looking at the line, checking the grade and think "that's almost an entire grade above what I can climb on good days and leave it at that.
I'm not going to mention any overrated/unterrated routes because I simply have not yet done enough routes to have a solid understanding. I'm just going to say that almost everything becomes easier if you do it the "intended" way.
Just learned about the French grading, seems like a better system rating the entire climb. When gym climbing I have given up looking at ratings. They are incredibly inconsistent and subjective at best. Just happy we have some great local climbing opportunities with creative route setters!
Norway used the decimal system for a long time, with 6 defined as the hardest possible.
We had a bunch of "6+" climbs that had been put up around 1970 by the likes of Ulf Geir Hansen which everyone knew were "very hard indeed". 10-15 years later they all got regraded to 7 or even 7+.
thanks, ive always wondered about the other grading systems. im from southern Texas so its the V scale over here though you do see the Yosemite scale every once in a while.
Just trying out V6s in the bouldering gym indoors at the moment. Have yet to climb outdoors, but when we eventually go out to Fontainebleau, I'm anticipating starting all over again on V1s, 2s, and 3s just because it will be so different.
Will also be lots of fun :D
i usually climb indoors in stockholm, sweden and i pretty much only use the french and the fountain bleu (?) system on a regular bases.
in my gym they dont put up grades so we just have the the color leves from 1-5, and now someone has setted a level one boulder which requires absolutely too much energy and brain work :D it feels like level 3 so quite challenging
I'am a french young climber (16) the french climbing team and y do a 8a+ I was so happy !
Qui sera le prochain grand pâtissier?
Grades vary hugely depending on venue and culture. Also remember that nearly all grades were placed by your average male climber. This means that morphology often becomes a big issue for shorter males or females. In general, for climbers who are not your average male climbers height, grades begin to make less sense. For sure very adept shorter climbers may prevail but this is not a qualification of the grade but more an exception.
Bouldering Grades started prior to Sherman and and there were just 3 grades at that point.
The most sandbagged boulder problem I have ever tried is a problem in Font graded 5 at Bois Rond which more realistically would be around Font 7a+.
I hear what your saying regarding Strawberries at Curbar. I found this harder than Trackside 7a and Early Doors 7a. It certainly warrants 6b+ and not the 5+ it got when I did it many moons ago.
I have to say the most misgraded climb i've ever tried, was when Rustam Gelmanov did some guest comp setting at my local bouldering centre late last year. It was supposedly v4/v5 and only the 12th route out of 20 (ascending difficulty), yet I only saw Rustam top it. After doing it so easily he even attempted, and then suceeded, to climb the whole thing with only back 2 finger open crimps....seriously.
When discussing the UK grading system, what do you mean by "terrible gear"? What "gear" are you referencing?
I understand that a high E-rating can reflect a safe but strenuous climb...just to confuse things that much more! Also, Yosemite grades now reflect the pitch as a whole for the most part, i.e. like the French system. The "hardest move" rating was for slabbier face climbs which most people don't do anymore.
In my gym 6a 6a+ is very easy but the difference between 6a 6a+ and 6b 6b+ is huge all routes are 1/3 of a finger pad and when i look at 7a 7b they are the same just the distance between them is increased. I can not even start the climb on anything higher than 6a+. Recently they removed grades from the boldering area and i love it as all the grades gets in to your head.
there was a 5.10c at a gym in MN I can climb 5.11bs and I got about half way up and just could not get any farther because of a weird dead point onto a small pinch
very true. im a v4-v5 indoor climber, but outside i get killed on v3s.. also might be my gym being light on the grading..
there is a problem at nine corner lake in the Adirondacks (northern New York state) that is a V3. I have done V8 there and that problem punts me every time
I definitely agree with the difference between indoors and outdoors bouldering when you go outdoors you drop about a grade n a half like climbing 6a-c indoor you will climb 4b-5b outdoors, but then crack climbing is totally graded on the person because that comes down to how big your arms actually are.
There is a V4 at the gym that i go to. It was set as a V1 (i still think that it is), but they changed it. They either just put the wrong note card on it, or just mixed it up with another problem.
In my climbing gym they use the UIAA scale, and my bouldering gym has made up their own scale which kind of correlates to the french scale but is its own thing...
The most misgraded climbs are all boulders from the gym from Eric Carlsson bouldering vlog.
Do you consider them too easy for the grade?
Yep. I'm looking at the V7s there and they're V6 tops in my gym.
In Germany I only saw the UIAA system, which is sometimes given in Roman numerals, but sometimes not.
You have to start using your hands at a 3.
Most people can do a 5.
I used to do 7- and a friend sometimes did 7+/8-
I've been told the hardest possible routes would be around a 12, though in my gym they stopped at 9+
Whoops, I just checked. You need your hands already for a 1
Please explain the colours and grades in UK indoor bouldering.
Although I always payed attention to grades, early on in my climbing career a wise friend told me that you can either climb it or you can't. Although perhaps an over or under statement, I have found that to remain the truest measure of difficulty.
Sure, but as a noob. I can see a 5a or lower and be certain that I will manage it.
The most sandbagged route grade I've climbed is a sport route in East Railay Thailand called Short & Savage. As the name suggests it is a short climb that is considerably difficult but only rated 6a. With a pull up on small holds to start and only two bolts to clip on a slightly overhanging rock face this climb should definitely be rated 6b or 6c!
yeah, always very confused with V grades VS font grades.
climbing in Fontainebleau, i experienced the difficulty of 2 to 4 grades.
and i can tell you that when i see a scale comparing V0 to a 4font, I don't understand at all how the scale is so wrong. (sport climbing 6a and some 6b+)
i guess i'll have to go climb in a Vgraded country to make my own experience.
@mattGroom what V grade would you give to the 5c? problem of pierre d'Orthaz? (l'équilibriste)
fellow Chamoniard
there’s a new setter at my gym and he read a grade wrong. it was graded v7 and he read it as v1 and thought he was weak so he made a “v3” that was actually supposed to be a v6/7
4:47 what's that route called
Best grade systems:
For boulder Vsystem
For trad British system
For sport Australian system
I'm european and I use the French system but I think that this and the Yosemite system are the worst
Basically Australia just likes to keep it simple with V grades and Ewbank. It's just counting no letter chucked in
I think the Australian system for sport is the best.
I live in South Africa and we also use the Ewbank- its brilliant because it is numerical, allowing one to add other challenges- eg climb your age, score 100 points in a day etc.
Interestingly there is a growing community here that uses the French system, simply because it is becoming a standard, and using it seems evolutionary- they even find it more motivating, but I disagree on the latter.
Lemurpls I'm french, wich grade do you climb ?
Here in Catalunya and in the rest of Spain we use the French numerical system for every type of climb
Buttlips Chimney, Index, Washington - 5.8 sandbagged flarring chimney on polished fine grained granite
It was very interesting to hear about the Grades system! In Japan we are using unique grade system for bouldering, called "Dan/Kyu" which I think is super problematic. Cz, 1Dan covers two grades in French system. In addison, I felt much harder in Japan compare with Spanish boulder, although those boulders should be around the same grades. I would like to hear other opinions about the Japanese grade system!
So the world hardest route silence (9c) is using french sport system grading?
i would say the most underrated climbs are the ones that are set for children! they seem very straight forward but always have holds that are small and makes it hard to get of the ground!
I think the WhiteRastafarian climb at Joshua Tree National Park is well under graded at v1+ considering some of the moves and the possibility of breaking your back on the rocks below :(
I go off the Australian system because I'm from New Zealand but I feel it is the most simplistic because it just goes from 1 to 36, 1 being something you could only just do no hands and 36 being the World record. It does become a bit too vague at higher levels but it's probably the easiest to get your head around.
It also seems to be the most logical since all these ever are is relative grades of difficulty. There's no scientific basis that i can see that dictates something is an 8b other than it being harder than 8a. Why not just call it a 9? Why go 8c then 9a why not 8d? It's nonsense tbh.
Outdoor bouldering is harder? I have the feeling it is not about difficulty, but style. Generally speaking, overhanging stuff is graded soft outdoors, and slabby/technical stuff is graded hard. Font should be a perfect example for this... As a indoor climber I can do 7a overhang within an hour trying, but a 6a slab might take me the same amount of time...
Same for old sport crags like Céüse or Freyr I think.
I guess grading scales are really variable from one place to another and from one individual to another. I have never seen anyone climbing for a couple of months and being able to climb a 6a (french system). In my area people become able to climb a good number of 6as usually after 6-10 months of climbing. 6b level is reached after a year/year and a half and that's were most people stop improving unless they start doing intense training. I know a only handful of persons that can get past a 7b. Those who climb higher grades (>6c) get inesorably back to a 6a-6b level if they stop training regularly.
I think like you said the outdoor bouldering compared to indoor bouldering grading has a large disconnect. my experiences are only in America but i find that either the peers who grade indoor are trying to boost your moral while outdoor take it more seriously or that there just needs to be a better way to differentiate in the USA. love your channel keep up the great work and climb on :)
We (in Slovakia) use UIAA grades therefore I-XI for route climbing. For the boulders instead, most of the gyms just generalise grades into colours, which is super inaccurate, which sucks. And outside boulders haven't tried any yet, so I wouldn't know :D