1. Previewing Isn’t Guessing — It’s Prediction
Most climbers “look” at a route:
- spotting holds
- checking distance
- scanning footholds
But elite climbers simulate movement.
Previewing is not visual.
It is mechanical.
Route previewing =
building a movement prediction model before touching the wall.
This reduces:
- cognitive load
- uncertainty
- fear
- mid-move decisions
It turns climbing into execution, not problem-solving.
2. The Three Layers of a Good Preview
Elite previews operate on three layers:
(1) Macro Map — Body Path
- general direction
- wall angle
- overhang transitions
- rest positions
- main body-shifts
- crux zones
This creates the “skeleton” of the climb.
(2) Micro Map — Hold-by-Hold Mechanics
- exact hand positions
- thumb catches
- foot choice
- foot orientation
- sequencing
This defines the “meat” of the movement.
(3) Dynamics Map — Timing & Rhythm
- where to move fast
- where to slow down
- where to commit
- where to breathe
This is the “nervous system pacing.”
Most climbers only look at Micro.
Elite climbers preview all three.
3. Macro Preview: The Most Overlooked Step
Macro preview determines:
- where your center of mass must travel
- when hips open vs close
- when you need tension
- when you can relax
- where the line wants to take you
Failing at macro =
you fight the wall instead of working with it.
Macro preview questions:
- Is this climb compression, tension, or balance?
- Which direction is the movement flow?
- Where will my hips need to be?
- When do angles change?
- Where are rests possible?
Without macro clarity, you’re climbing blind.
4. Micro Preview: The Precision Layer
The micro layer decides:
- grip orientation
- thumb engagement
- foot exactness
- switching feet
- matching decisions
- undercling vs sidepull use
- heel vs toe choice
But it must follow the macro direction.
Micro mistakes equal:
- overgripping
- wrong foot
- forced beta
- lost rhythm
Previewing micro mechanics reduces mid-route corrections.
5. The Dynamics Preview: Elite Climbers’ Secret Weapon
Recreational climbers rarely preview rhythm.
Elite climbers always do.
They preview:
- which sections require flow
- where to slow for precision
- timing of dynamic moves
- breathing beats
- weight-shift cadence
This rhythm map stabilizes:
- cognitive load
- nervous system arousal
- timing
- commitment decisions
Most “flow” you see is built before leaving the ground.
6. The 5 Questions of an Elite Preview
While observing a route, ask:
(1) What is the main movement style?
Compression? Flagging? Deadpointing? Heel hooks? Gastons?
(2) Where does the route want to move me?
Right? Left? Up? In? Out?
(3) Where are the high-tension zones?
Crux sections, angle changes, complex body positions.
(4) Where can I breathe?
Rests, jugs, moments of stability.
(5) What is the beta commitment point?
The moment where hesitation would break timing.
These create a strong predictive model.
7. Why Accurate Previewing Reduces Fear
Fear is triggered by uncertainty.
Good preview:
- reduces unknowns
- clarifies body positions
- identifies risky moments
- improves timing prediction
- reduces cognitive load
The nervous system enters the route with lower threat level,
meaning:
- less tension
- better footwork
- clearer rhythm
Fear is often a preview problem, not a climbing problem.
8. Why Accurate Previewing Improves Efficiency
Previewing reduces:
- mid-move decision-making
- last-second corrections
- unnecessary force
- overgripping
- off-balance positions
- hesitation
The more decisions made on the ground,
the fewer made on the wall.
Climbers often blame pump on physical weakness.
It’s often poor previewing.
9. How to Train Route Previewing (Short Summary)
(1) Preview → Climb → Review
After each climb:
- what did you predict correctly?
- what did you miss?
- which moves felt different than expected?
This trains predictive accuracy.
(2) No-Touch Previews
Preview without touching any hold.
This forces full reliance on prediction.
(3) Limited-Time Previews
Set 15–30 seconds.
Forced clarity increases efficiency.
(4) Group Previewing
Explain your preview to someone else.
Verbal explanation strengthens internal models.
(5) Preview From Multiple Angles
Move your head sideways, squat, step back.
Change perspective → reduce visual noise.
(6) Preview Rhythm
Tap feet or hands to simulate the tempo.
(7) Preview Commit Points
Identify the moment where hesitation would break timing.
This is high-level preview training.
10. Outdoor-Specific Preview Training
Outdoors, preview is harder:
- natural features look chaotic
- holds are less obvious
- terrain hides friction characteristics
- sequences aren’t visually encoded
Training outdoors:
(1) Build a “Hold Taxonomy”
Categorise common rock features:
pockets, crimps, dishes, knobs, rails.
(2) Preview Footwork First
Outdoor footholds matter more than handholds.
(3) Walk the Landing Zone
Reduces fear → improves prediction.
(4) Micro-Texture Scanning
Look for shadow patterns and texture lines.
(5) Practice Reading From Touch Alone
Feel holds with one hand before climbing.
Develop tactile previewing.
11. Key Insight
Route previewing is not visual scanning.
It is mechanical forward-modelling.
Elite previewing builds a predictive map that:
- lowers fear
- stabilises rhythm
- reduces cognitive load
- improves timing
- increases efficiency
- enhances confidence
Climbing becomes execution, not guesswork.