How to Structure Rehab Weeks: Load, Remodeling & Safe Progression
How to Structure Rehab Weeks: Load, Remodeling & Safe Progression

A smart rehab week follows predictable loading rules: low-intensity isometrics, controlled eccentrics, and gradual progression with clear criteria. This guide shows climbers exactly how to structure weekly rehab so tendons remodel safely without losing strength.

Load Management for Climbers: The Physics of Stress, Recovery & Injury Risk
Load Management for Climbers: The Physics of Stress, Recovery & Injury Risk

Load management is the most effective way to prevent climbing injuries. Learn how intensity, volume, frequency and recovery interact, and how to structure climbing weeks so tendons adapt instead of breaking down.

Ankle Sprains & Landing Mechanics: Force Absorption, Joint Position & Safe Bouldering Falls
Ankle Sprains & Landing Mechanics: Force Absorption, Joint Position & Safe Bouldering Falls

Ankle sprains in climbers are usually caused by poor landing mechanics and sideways torque during bouldering falls. Learn how ankle injuries develop, what symptoms matter, and how to rehab safely—plus the landing technique that prevents future sprains.

Knee Torque Injuries: MCL Strain, Meniscus Irritation & Rotational Mechanics
Knee Torque Injuries: MCL Strain, Meniscus Irritation & Rotational Mechanics

Knee pain in climbers usually comes from rotational torque during dropknees, high-steps and Egyptian moves. Learn how knee mechanics actually work, what symptoms indicate MCL or meniscus overload, and how to rehab and prevent knee injuries with proper hip rotation and progressive loading.

Biceps Tendon Irritation (Front-of-Shoulder Pain): Overhead Mechanics & Tendon Stability
Biceps Tendon Irritation (Front-of-Shoulder Pain): Overhead Mechanics & Tendon Stability

Front-of-shoulder pain in climbers often comes from irritation of the long head of the biceps tendon. Learn how this tendon is overloaded during climbing, how to identify specific symptoms, and how to rehab safely with scapular control, rotator cuff strengthening, and progressive loading.

Wrist Alignment & Tendon Irritation: Slopers, Shear Load & Force Direction
Wrist Alignment & Tendon Irritation: Slopers, Shear Load & Force Direction

Wrist pain in climbers is usually caused by poor wrist alignment on slopers, sidepulls and dynamic moves. Learn how tendon irritation develops, what symptoms to look for, and how to fix it with proper technique, isometrics, eccentrics, and wrist stability training.

Rotator Cuff Weakness & Instability: The Hidden Shoulder Problem in Climbers
Rotator Cuff Weakness & Instability: The Hidden Shoulder Problem in Climbers

Rotator cuff weakness and shoulder instability cause clicking, weakness and poor control in overhead or sideways pulling. This guide explains how instability develops in climbers, how to identify its symptoms, and how to rebuild stable shoulder mechanics with precise loading.

Shoulder Impingement in Climbers: Scapular Mechanics, Torque & Safe Loading
Shoulder Impingement in Climbers: Scapular Mechanics, Torque & Safe Loading

Shoulder impingement in climbers is caused by poor scapular mechanics, internal rotation during pulling, and unstable overhead positions. Learn how to identify impingement symptoms, fix the technique errors that trigger it, and rehab safely with structured loading.