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dquinn wrote:Are you serious?? Are we talking about the same thing? An entry barrier to a sport and training to the Olympic level are unrelated. You suggested it would take a year of apprentice to be able to trad climb safely and competently at an amateur level.
I could rent a pair of skis, receive 30 minutes of instruction, hit the bunny hill and ski safely. Same goes for figure skating. I would suck, but I could be having good, safe fun. Would you feel comfortable giving someone 30 minutes of instruction and sending them out to trad climb on their own? Hence the entry barrier…
Hell, if could go to the Olympics climbing trad in 1 year sign me up!
martha wrote:
I should have said an 'amature level' not 'professional level' because to be 'competent' which is what I was really getting at.. you'd need more than just a 30 min lesson in either skiing or skating.
Anyways, don't cry about an entry barrier to trad climbing being the apprenticeship, your biggest entry barrier is Halifax. You are a boulderer obviously... I am not. I could care less if I ever boulder.
ben smith wrote:thats because figure skating and downhill skiing are for pansies wearing lycra and brightly coloured tights.
ben smith wrote:thats because figure skating and downhill skiing are for pansies wearing lycra and brightly coloured tights.
dquinn wrote:The cost is also prohibitive. But if trad climbing floats your boat, go nuts. Hell, it may be awsome, but because of the entry barrier I'll probablly never know. I don't really care either way, but the purpose of my original post was to sarcastically point this out.
Nothing is 'cheap' except maybe track and field.. cause I suppose you 'could' run barefoot.
dcentral wrote:I don't really know why you are comparing Trad climbing and skating. Apples and oranges really. There really isn't much immentent death unless you don't know what thin ice means.
martha wrote:dcentral wrote:I don't really know why you are comparing Trad climbing and skating. Apples and oranges really. There really isn't much immentent death unless you don't know what thin ice means.
I wasn't comparing their safety factors. I was comparing the cost/time entry barrier.
dquinn wrote:martha wrote:dcentral wrote:I don't really know why you are comparing Trad climbing and skating. Apples and oranges really. There really isn't much immentent death unless you don't know what thin ice means.
I wasn't comparing their safety factors. I was comparing the cost/time entry barrier.
Which we can agree is VASTLY larger for Trad. Like about a million times. rough estimate.
Pierre wrote:I don't think the wife would approve dating a hard core trad chick... I guess that I'm screwed when it comes to learning how to trad.
vpad wrote:ooo... ooo...me me
martha wrote:though you may shoot yourself in the foot and end up with a wife who just wants babies and still doesn't want to climb... hehehe.
martha wrote:might be comfortable climbing with me as women sometimes are more relaxed with other women.
Pierre wrote:She already wants the babies..... That's seems to be her mission in life is to be a mom.
Pierre wrote:If she's not pregnant by the summer I'll try and get her climbing outdoors. If pregnant by the summer maybe she will come up and watch...
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