Daniel: "A strong----I wouldn't say strong... He's like a technically good climber". Giuliano: *makes v15 look like fookin baby food on his flash attempt*
I swear when Daniel hits the link into the end of Direct Hit you can see the animalistic need to get it done blast through his body. It's like you can feel the effort coming off him in the video. This is what makes climbers like him and everyone in this video truly incredible.
Literally all I want is just a video series of strong climbers going out, fucking around on some boulders, shooting the shit, having laughs and sending shit I couldn’t send in a dream. I love this video so much.
The North Face, Cool Nights Boulders, Stella Artois and "Psychedelic things"? Cameroni and her strange friend..and Woods saying that Cameroni is not a strong climber, rather he is very technical and younger! Hahaha Thug Life! Congratulations M.Hong! Epic Credits video!!
Daniel Woods referring to Giuliano "A strong----I wouldn't say strong... He's like a technically good climber". Tfw Giuliano who climbs v16 is not considered strong by Woods lol ( 7:26 )
You should probz stop using "strong" and "skilled" interchangeably. Ondra was climbing 5.15 and V16 before he could even do a one arm pull up. Climbing (especially outdoors) is just as much a skill as it is a display of strength.
@@cameronlane111 Strictly based on the definition of "strong", he would still be considered strong lol. I get that Daniel is talking about things like power in one arm pullups or front lever kinds of strength related to other climbers (and a more dynamic or flashy style), but Giuliano is still a ridiculously strong climber. Ondra was and still is ridiculously strong. It's like a billionaire calling a millionaire poor or something like that lol--- i.e. it's just funny to me that Woods said that is all
@@pierremilot8117 he could also be saying it in a purely positive way. He's not "strong" but "technical" some climbers just pull through moves, others are still strong in the literal sense but not in a style kind of way.
All star group with varying styles and morale is high. Great to see they’re all so inspired by breaking into new area/country. Direct Hit & Stella: now that’s a wrap. 😎
@@MarkSmith-hq4rr thanks, makes sense but still seems wrong... footage from Brazilians would give this video more credibility and would show that The North Face actually cares about climbers :D
2 hrs a day wouldn't really work but i climb v8/9 after three years of training twice/ three times a week although for the first year i didn't really train much if that helps ur query
@@rickyclimbs1552 2 hours a day is too little ? or just not optimal ? Idk if its the most efficient way to train but my routine since i started 6 months ago has been something like: -2-3 days on, for 2-5 hours: In which I do a mix of complementary weight training and a bit of boulering: (benchpress, wrist curls, singel legsquat,etc)x2-3 sets as part of my warm up. then I do 5xV1, 5xV2, 5xV3. Then I take a long rest ~30+ minutes before climbing toprope/sport until my body can't take it anymore...haha I tend to push myself a bit too hard and have had some severe tendonitis a month ago, so i've been taking it more easy.. -1 day off -repeat This regiment has taken me from climbing 5.8 on my first day to 5.11a, which i just did for the first time yesterday !:D and am extremely proud of hahah. Its hard for me to 'get' bouldering' grades tbh because I focus mainly on toprope/sport routes, but let me know your thoughts ! Whats your training routine? Tom
ok generally i will climb on a monday and friday for three+ hours each time generally having a good fun session and trying hard boulders, if i run out stuff to do generally me and my 2 other mates who climb as hard or harder than me will go to a different section of the wall each, set a hard climb (add a move style) and then we will try each others routes. on wendsdays and saturdays i do max hangs on my fingerboard (try hard is the crucial element here not really protocol) along with pull-ups and press-ups. tuesdays and thursdays are abs and then i might go on one or two 5km+ runs a week depending on time. personally i think of bouldering as training for sport climbing but the lead walls at my gym are a bit meh tbh, but a strong boulderer has potential to be a good sport climber but not necessarily vise versa