Rock Climbing: Just how many calories does it burn?

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Today, for the first time, I wore a Polar HRM while climbing to accurately track how many calories I burned.

I am a 25 year old 5'7" Male who weighs 188 pounds.

In 70 minutes I burned 652 calories.

I spent that time doing a mixture of bouldering and top-roping. I rested often, just long enough for my muscles to recover between problems and climbs, and I completed a total of 2 and a half ascents as well as 6 or so bouldering problems, and numerous aborted/failed attempts at bouldering problems and two failed ascents.

Also, I had a ton of fun the entire time, it was an excellent strength building exercise, and it's a social activity.

Bottom line: if you combine periods of rest with periods of climbing, I burned almost 10 calories per minute.

That's an excellent calorie burn!
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Replies

  • dawnkitchen
    dawnkitchen Posts: 161
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    That is a great burn! Rock climbing is ridiculous for the body: balance, stamina, strength.

    I'm considering buying a rock climbing gym membership with my boyfriend. He used to climb in a friend's garage (they had a pretty nice set up), but friend has since moved and I'm itching to get back to learning. I've only been on a wall three or four times, but I'm addicted! I think I prefer scrambling and bouldering, but I can't wait to get into a controlled environment to figure it out!

    Thanks for posting! :]
  • Coyla
    Coyla Posts: 444 Member
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    Indeed it is!

    I tried rock-climbing, but I've discovered that having a high body weight doesn't make it easy. And I'm scared of heights, so by the time I'm 10 feet up, I'm ready to climb back down.

    Bouldering sounds pretty interesting, though.

    I want to lose weight FOR these kinds of activities!
  • dawnkitchen
    dawnkitchen Posts: 161
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    I want to lose weight FOR these kinds of activities!

    Definitely! I was 190ish when I tried to learn for the first time.... with almost no upper body strength. Horrible idea, but somehow I managed to love it. Now I'm 174 and can't wait to try again soon!!!

    Good luck to you and hopefully you'll be climbing sooner than later!
  • bbygrl5
    bbygrl5 Posts: 964 Member
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    I'm excited to try rock climbing this spring, once all of the snow melts. It will be an fun, new challenge to try! :)
  • McBody
    McBody Posts: 1,703 Member
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    climbing is where it's at. I was a climbing instructor for a couple of years and I started climbing when I was 4, my dad couldn't keep me off the cliffs. I definitely need to start wearing an HRM to see how many calories I actually burn while I'm out though!
  • ChessRonin
    ChessRonin Posts: 160 Member
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    I'm excited to try rock climbing this spring, once all of the snow melts. It will be an fun, new challenge to try! :)

    You can try it now at an indoor gym!

    Also, for those of you who feel that you need to drop weight first, you may also want to start climbing or keep climbing now instead of after you drop weight. Given just how great a burn it is, and given that its burn to fun ratio is the highest I've found so far (10 parts fun for every 1 part calorie burn), it's definitely my favorite calorie burning exercise, with biking coming in a close second. Also, if you climb relatively easy (sloping etc) beginner routes, and you're sure to use your whole body and not just your arms, you can get all of the benefits without feeling too inadequate to participate.

    It's also a great source of "NSV" (non-scale victory, as I've learned fro this site). For instance, when you 'scend a route with ease that you tried the week before and failed at!

    Aside; I'll be posting a lot about my climbing training and progress in my blog, as well as other fitness and health topics:

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/ChessRonin

    Check it out!
  • bbygrl5
    bbygrl5 Posts: 964 Member
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    I'm excited to try rock climbing this spring, once all of the snow melts. It will be an fun, new challenge to try! :)

    You can try it now at an indoor gym!

    Also, for those of you who feel that you need to drop weight first, you may also want to start climbing or keep climbing now instead of after you drop weight. Given just how great a burn it is, and given that its burn to fun ratio is the highest I've found so far (10 parts fun for every 1 part calorie burn), it's definitely my favorite calorie burning exercise, with biking coming in a close second. Also, if you climb relatively easy (sloping etc) beginner routes, and you're sure to use your whole body and not just your arms, you can get all of the benefits without feeling too inadequate to participate.

    It's also a great source of "NSV" (non-scale victory, as I've learned fro this site). For instance, when you 'scend a route with ease that you tried the week before and failed at!

    Aside; I'll be posting a lot about my climbing training and progress in my blog, as well as other fitness and health topics:

    http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/ChessRonin

    Check it out!

    Yeah, I'm actually planning on doing a few sessions before taking it outdoors, but the excitement of it for me is it being another outdoor adventure/activity.
  • metlr
    metlr Posts: 11 Member
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    Thanks, @ChessRonin for posting this. I go to a bouldering gym regularly and have always wondered how to scale the 'Rock Climbing' calorie burn in MFP to be realistic. I'll use your ~10 cal/min as a sanity check.

    For those of you thinking about climbing/bouldering: go for it! It's a great workout, but more importantly, it's just a fun activity. Everyone can go at their own pace so it's really easy to get started. I recommend finding a good bouldering gym since then you can go by yourself whenever you want, and if you are new to climbing, you don't have to learn about ropes and whatnot. You can just go climb.
  • phjorg1
    phjorg1 Posts: 642 Member
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    Hrms do not work for this sort of activity... They work for pure steady state cardio and that's it. And even then they don't work unless you have a model that allows tested hrmax and vo2max inputs.
  • itsscottwilder
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    Hrms do not work for this sort of activity... They work for pure stay state cardio and that's it. And even then they don't work unless you have a model that allows tested hrmax and vo2max inputs.

    +1

    Rock climbing is a great activity and workout. But a HRM is not gonna give you an accurate measurement.
  • metlr
    metlr Posts: 11 Member
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    Hrms do not work for this sort of activity... They work for pure stay state cardio and that's it. And even then they don't work unless you have a model that allows tested hrmax and vo2max inputs.

    +1

    Rock climbing is a great activity and workout. But a HRM is not gonna give you an accurate measurement.

    Totally understandable. Do you guys have any suggestions for how to make a reasonable (if not accurate) estimate? No doubt it will depend on the person, and how strenuous the workout it is. But there must be a way to bound the problem?
  • Fitfully_me
    Fitfully_me Posts: 647 Member
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    Well, if you're just looking for estimates - its listed in the exercise tab here on MFP under cardio.


    Rock climbing, ascending rock
    Rock climbing, rappelling
    Ski jumping (climb up carrying skis)
    Hiking, climbing hills (carrying 10-20 lb load)
    Hiking, climbing hills (carrying <10 lb load)
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,871 Member
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    Hrms do not work for this sort of activity... They work for pure stay state cardio and that's it. And even then they don't work unless you have a model that allows tested hrmax and vo2max inputs.

    +1

    Rock climbing is a great activity and workout. But a HRM is not gonna give you an accurate measurement.

    Totally understandable. Do you guys have any suggestions for how to make a reasonable (if not accurate) estimate? No doubt it will depend on the person, and how strenuous the workout it is. But there must be a way to bound the problem?

    It is true, the further away you get from a true aerobic event like running, the more off the calorie burn estimate is going to be. For activities like this I use a multiplier of 5-10...with 5 being basically a walk in the park and 10 being a good and consistent 10 minute mile pace.

    It would obviously depend on how much you are resting, etc...but I'd put it right up there with a good weight lifting session with a minute or two rest between sets...that's usually about a multiplier of about 6 (strength) or 7 (hypertrophy) for me. It's not by any means perfect...but I do know that it's pretty difficult to burn more than 10-12 calories per minute with sustained activity...to do so requires working at pretty much capacity and you certainly aren't doing that sustained with climbing.

    That said, it's a very good exercise beyond just the calorie burn...lots of balance, strength, coordination, etc. I love climbing and wish I could do more of it...just hard to fit in with everything else.
  • lithezebra
    lithezebra Posts: 3,670 Member
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    Indeed it is!

    I tried rock-climbing, but I've discovered that having a high body weight doesn't make it easy. And I'm scared of heights, so by the time I'm 10 feet up, I'm ready to climb back down.

    Bouldering sounds pretty interesting, though.

    I want to lose weight FOR these kinds of activities!

    Set up a top rope belay (with a bombproof anchor) on a nice face and go at it! It doesn't matter if it's hard. Doing it will help you lose weight.
  • lithezebra
    lithezebra Posts: 3,670 Member
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    Well, if you're just looking for estimates - its listed in the exercise tab here on MFP under cardio.


    Rock climbing, ascending rock
    Rock climbing, rappelling
    Ski jumping (climb up carrying skis)
    Hiking, climbing hills (carrying 10-20 lb load)
    Hiking, climbing hills (carrying <10 lb load)

    It looks like MFP doesn't give an estimate for ascending a fixed rope, which is pretty darn good exercise, comparable to running.
  • Trechechus
    Trechechus Posts: 2,819 Member
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    One of the MANY reasons I love being a climber! Best sport of life!
  • fitmusiclifeviola
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    Just because HRM isn't accurate doesn't mean the activity doesn't burn ample calories. One can get a sense of how hard you are working with an HRM. If you're resting half the time, I'd turn off the HRM during those times so it doesn't count those the same. My guess is that will reduce the calories burned estimate ~30% give or take. I like to have the HRM think I'm lighter, and with a higher max HR so that it naturally estimates low on everything, but not so much as to be ridiculous.
  • metlr
    metlr Posts: 11 Member
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    It is true, the further away you get from a true aerobic event like running, the more off the calorie burn estimate is going to be. For activities like this I use a multiplier of 5-10...with 5 being basically a walk in the park and 10 being a good and consistent 10 minute mile pace.

    It would obviously depend on how much you are resting, etc...but I'd put it right up there with a good weight lifting session with a minute or two rest between sets...that's usually about a multiplier of about 6 (strength) or 7 (hypertrophy) for me. It's not by any means perfect...but I do know that it's pretty difficult to burn more than 10-12 calories per minute with sustained activity...to do so requires working at pretty much capacity and you certainly aren't doing that sustained with climbing.

    That said, it's a very good exercise beyond just the calorie burn...lots of balance, strength, coordination, etc. I love climbing and wish I could do more of it...just hard to fit in with everything else.

    Thanks cwolfman13 (and everyone else). No matter how good my calorie-burn estimation is, i'm definitely climbing tonight, which is really the whole point, i guess. Any Boulder, CO climbers...drop me a line.
  • Fitfully_me
    Fitfully_me Posts: 647 Member
    Options
    Well, if you're just looking for estimates - its listed in the exercise tab here on MFP under cardio.


    Rock climbing, ascending rock
    Rock climbing, rappelling
    Ski jumping (climb up carrying skis)
    Hiking, climbing hills (carrying 10-20 lb load)
    Hiking, climbing hills (carrying <10 lb load)

    It looks like MFP doesn't give an estimate for ascending a fixed rope, which is pretty darn good exercise, comparable to running.

    Ahhh. That's too bad.
    Just curious. How long do you ascend a fixed rope for a workout? Like, how many times do you go up/down the rope? Is this exercise done as part of a class or exercise session?
  • lithezebra
    lithezebra Posts: 3,670 Member
    Options
    Well, if you're just looking for estimates - its listed in the exercise tab here on MFP under cardio.


    Rock climbing, ascending rock
    Rock climbing, rappelling
    Ski jumping (climb up carrying skis)
    Hiking, climbing hills (carrying 10-20 lb load)
    Hiking, climbing hills (carrying <10 lb load)

    It looks like MFP doesn't give an estimate for ascending a fixed rope, which is pretty darn good exercise, comparable to running.

    Ahhh. That's too bad.
    Just curious. How long do you ascend a fixed rope for a workout? Like, how many times do you go up/down the rope? Is this exercise done as part of a class or exercise session?

    Now that I really think about it, it would depend on what vertical rope climbing system you use. I use a frog system, which is inefficient on a long climb, but versatile in tight situations, and a great full body workout. With the frog, climbing 200 meters is a very good workout. The most fun way to do it is to be somewhere where you have a pit or canyon to play around in. You can set up rope climbs, in a gymnasium for example, where a partner can let you down periodically and you can climb continuously as long as you want to. You could also change over from ascent to rappel, or vice versa to repeat a climb.

    I went on a canyoning trip back in May, and had no idea how to log what I was doing - climbing, stemming, chimneying, swimming, rappelling, and ascending, and lots and lots of hiking in loose sand.