A film made for parents of students who use the College Climbing Wall. This video shows the different distances that a climber will fall when roped using both top rope and lead climbing. For more information, visit www.southdowns.ac.uk/outdoor/climbing.htm
@hziggles
i used to think the same thing, until i took a pretty good swing out of a chmney and smacked the back of my head against the rock.
wlavs87 1 week ago
@hziggles much less than when on the ground. more rock above you means more rock to hit your head, esp since falling rock bounces away from the face. 5-20 feet from the base is the most dangerous place on a short crag (further out on higher crags). anyone at all, even non climbers, walking around down there with no helmet on are at the greatest danger.
sizone 9 months ago
you forgot to spot the climber
Cheesemax96 1 year ago
haha ellis sounds posh :)
farine69 2 years ago
i meant indoors where there is no falling debris... hopefully
hziggles 2 years ago
Falling rocks from the climber to the belayer on the ground or from persons climbing above the climber to the climber/belayer. Helmets can always be useful when outdoor climbing.
HosteDenis 2 years ago
there is no point at all in wearing a helmet while top roping
hziggles 2 years ago
Damnit, after playing Portal I can't watch disclaimers like the one in the beginning of this video without thinking of GlaDOS... :)
MidgardEagle 2 years ago