Rock Climbing: Mastering Basic Skills (Mountaineers Outdoor Expert) | Craig Luebben | great for beginners or strong gym climbers moving to real rock
books:
Rock Climbing: Mas...
Rock Climbing: Mastering Basic Skills (Mountaineers Outdoor Expert)
Craig Luebben
Mountaineers Books
, 2004 - 301 pages
average customer review:
based on 9 reviews
view larger image
for more information click here
highly recommended
Rock
Climbing
:
Mastering
Basic
Skills
by Craig Luebben is an instructional guide for beginning to intermediate climbers covering the basics on a myriad of topics including: gear, knots, belaying, top-roping, anchors, sport and trad climbing, bouldering, aid-climbing, rappelling, multi-pitch free climbing, self-rescue and training Features: Specifications:
Best basic book on rock climbing
Guide, author and
climbing
gear inventor Craig Luebben's book won a National
Outdoor
Book award and it's well deserved. For anyone taking up
rock
climbing, or wanting to bring their knowledge up-to-date this is the book to start with.
It's well organized and well-illustrated. Luebben starts the
basic
s of pure climbing - footwork, holds and jams along with special climbing challenges like chimneys and off-widths (he's the Yoda of off-width climbing). Then he covers the gear you'll need like shoes, harness and ropes. He describes basic climber knots and working with ropes and slings. Then he talks about protection, natural and man-made.
He tells you how to build anchors and keep your partner safe with proper belaying technique. He covers top-roping, sport climbing and the basics of traditional climbing including the approach, route-finding, setting pro and the physics and psychology of leading.. Later chapters introduce multi-pitch free climbing, descending and rappelling, bouldering and training for climbing. The concluding chapter explains how to avoid turning your climb into an epic by learning basic self-rescue techniques.
This is by far the best, most up-to-date book on basic rock climbing. After you've read it (more than once) and practiced the
skills
he describes, get Luebben's book on building climbing anchors.
Bill Becher
for more information click here
great for beginners or strong gym climbers moving to real rock
it may not be perfect, but it does everything it needs to (at least for me). as per the title, i'd recommend this book to any beginner or strong gym climber who wants to move to real crags. for advanced climbers who want to improve their
skills
there are probably better books out there.
Heath
Excellent starting place to get into this kind of book, very good reference. I've been
climbing
for the last five years, and I learned a lot from this book.
Rock Climbing- Beginner to Expert
Craig Luebben's book is possibly THE Best Single Book written for
rock
climbing
. It should be THE textbook for all people interested in learning to climb as it begins with
basic
but critical hand and footholds, basic climbing gear, knots, belaying, and rappelling. Later chapters for intermediate or advanced Sport or Trad climbing go into great detail. You will find yourself reading and referring to this book for your entire rock climbing lifetime.
for more information click here
for novice and intermediate climbers
As a relatively new climber (i.e., as of this writing, I've been
climbing
about 7 months), I found that this was a good introductory text to keep around. Granted, climbing is not something you really want to read-then-do; think of the reading as a good supplement to your training and climbing.
I enjoyed how Luebben dives right into the material; he keeps the introduction short and then goes immediately into the science and sport of
rock
climbing. He writes in a colloquial style that is easy to digest and presents the material in a way that makes it seem like a conversation. It's like it's you and him out on the rock, Luebben telling you everything he needs you to know.
While the book's focus is definitely on
outdoor
climbs, Luebben emphasizes techniques that should easily transfer to indoor rock gyms. Especially early in the text, Luebben writes a lot about body and foot position, how to approach routes and problems, and the mental elements of rock climbing. While these techniques are typically discussed in an outdoor context, the lessons all easily transfer to whatever surface you're climbing.
For a new, mostly indoor climber like myself, there seemed to be a lot of material in this book that either didn't apply to me or served merely to whet my appetite for outdoor routes. If you're looking for something specific to indoor climbing, you're probably better off exploring Matt Burbach's Gym Climbing book. Still, even a mostly-indoors beginner climber will find the chapters on body position, footwork and hand-holds, knots, belaying, and bouldering to be useful.
for more information click here
reviews
:
page 1
,
2
products you might be interested in
recommendations
Books about things that I don't know anything about
Some Breathtaking Rock Climbing Books
Most Popular Rock Climbing Books
Getting Started Climbing
search for books
mastering basic
,
climbing
,
expert
,
mastering
,
mountaineers
,
outdoor
toavi.com
web
randomly chosen
VHS:
Plymouth Adventure (1952)