This article covers kettlebell exercises for upper body and shoulders, focusing on rock climbers and ACL surgery rehab patients. I’ve ditched all rubber bands and cable machines for shoulders, and instead do these once a week. You can’t argue with a great warmup + shoulder injury prevention + awesome looking shoulders in one swoop. You’ll learn the following exercises:
To give you perspective on weight and progressions in the exercises below, I’m 5’4″, 120lb.
Good for: It’s the best climbing-specific shoulder exercise, where your body is rotating under weighted arms. It also works core and obliques, glutes and hamstrings, and posterior chain loaded stretching.
When you work slowly down (lengthening your hamstring), you’re doing an eccentric motion, which builds strength via hypertrophy and promotes tendons/ligaments to lay down collagen, becoming stronger. Your obliques will get a wake-up call.
Weight: I use 12-14kg/26-31lb. Likely your shoulders will be a limiting weight factor, not your posterior; in that case, lower the weight.
How
Reps/Sets
Good for: shoulder stability, learning to keep core engaged with shoulders.
Weight: I use 8-10kg/16-22lb. Your weight will be decreased from your max strict press weight and will also depend on the diameter of the kettlebell handles; the narrower, the harder it is to balance.
How
Reps/Sets
Good for: shoulder stability, rotator cuff strength, opens tight pectoral muscles. It’s one of my favorites for stability to engage faster-twitch muscles. It quickly identifies imbalances between your left and right sides.
Weight: I use 10-12kg/22-26lb for warm-up. Don’t go too heavy too fast. You’re working on mobility and control.
How
Reps/Sets
Good for: thoracic and shoulder mobility, plus benefits of the squat. Teaches you to keep core and posterior engaged at the same time as your shoulders, preventing lapses in stabilization.
Weight: I use 12-14kg/26-31lb. Weight greatly depends on your thoracic and shoulder mobility.
How
Reps/Sets
Good for: functional movement, shoulder stability, core strength, leg strength, proprioception/balance, coordination, determining power “glitches.”
If your muscles falter even for a fraction of a second, you’ll feel the bell sway immediately; those glitches are magnified under the kettlebell weight. Finding those moments of lost tension in bracing, and then correcting them, will help your climbing. Momentary muscle lapses and then shock loading your muscles again cause climbing injuries, especially in shoulders.
Weight: I use 14-16kg/31-36lb for warm-up. To really feel muscle imbalance and instability, increase weight. Work on smooth movement, up to 1/3 and 1/2 bodyweight with proper form.
How: There’s a lot going on with the getup in all 3 planes. See this excellent article (keep scrolling to read the whole thing), and read Simple & Sinister for the decisive explanation.
Reps/Sets
I prefer to do my shoulder workouts at the end of a climbing session. I typically choose any 2 of the above exercises to do in a session after climbing and superset them for 3 sets.
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