Warm-Up Principles: Bloodflow, Neurology & Synovial Fluid
Warm-Up Principles: Bloodflow, Neurology & Synovial Fluid

Warming up correctly is one of the most effective ways to prevent climbing injuries. This article explains how bloodflow, neuromuscular priming, and synovial fluid activation improve tendon capacity, joint stability, and movement precision.

Progressive Loading: The 2–5% Rule for Tissue Safety
Progressive Loading: The 2–5% Rule for Tissue Safety

The safest way to strengthen tendons and pulleys is through progressive loading: increasing intensity or volume by only 2–5% weekly. This principle prevents chronic overload, protects against pulley tears, and ensures stable collagen remodeling.

Acute vs Chronic Injury Mechanisms
Acute vs Chronic Injury Mechanisms

Acute and chronic climbing injuries follow the same rule: load exceeds capacity. Acute injuries come from sudden force spikes, while chronic injuries develop slowly through repeated micro-overload. This article explains the mechanical patterns behind pulley tears, elbow tendinopathy, shoulder impingement, and how to prevent both.

Joint Integrity: Stability vs Mobility Demands in Climbers
Joint Integrity: Stability vs Mobility Demands in Climbers

Climbers overload joints when they use mobility joints for stability or force stability joints into extreme mobility ranges. This article explains the mechanical roles of shoulders, elbows, wrists, fingers, hips, and knees, why certain positions increase injury risk, and how to climb in a way that respects joint integrity.

Tendon & Pulley Biology: Adaptation, Degradation & Recovery
Tendon & Pulley Biology: Adaptation, Degradation & Recovery

Tendons and pulleys adapt much slower than muscles, making climbers vulnerable to overload injuries. This article explains how collagen structures strengthen, weaken, and heal, why crimping is high-risk, and how to train and recover in a way that supports long-term tendon health.

Load vs Capacity: The Only Model That Predicts Injury
Load vs Capacity: The Only Model That Predicts Injury

Climbing injuries aren’t random. They happen when the load placed on a tissue exceeds its capacity to absorb stress. This article explains the mechanics of load vs capacity, why pulleys, tendons and shoulders fail, and how climbers can train safely by managing intensity, frequency and progression.