Term type technique

What Is a Gaston in Climbing?

A gaston is a grip where you push outward (sideways, away from your body) on a hold with the thumb pointing down and the elbow out, as if prying open elevator doors. It lets you use vertically oriented holds that face the wrong way for a normal pull, but is shoulder-intensive.

What Is Flagging in Climbing?

Flagging is a balance technique where you extend a free leg to act as a counterweight, keeping your body in balance and stopping it from swinging out (barn-dooring) when holds are off to one side. It lets you reach and stay stable without a foothold for the trailing foot.

What Is Mantling in Climbing?

Mantling is a technique where you press down on a ledge or large hold with your hands — transitioning from pulling to pushing — to lever your body up and over it, much like climbing out of a swimming pool. It's the standard way to top out boulders and gain ledges.

What Is Jamming in Climbing?

Jamming is the core crack-climbing technique of wedging part of the body — fingers, hands, fists, or feet — into a crack and subtly expanding or torquing it to create a secure hold. Unlike face climbing, jamming uses the crack itself rather than holds on the rock surface.

What Is a Sloper in Climbing?

A sloper is a smooth, rounded hold with no positive edge to grab, gripped instead through friction from an open hand and careful body positioning. Climbers maximise skin contact and keep their weight below the hold, making slopers as much about technique and tension as raw strength.

What Is a Crimp in Climbing?

A crimp is a small, narrow hold that offers only enough room for fingertips, and the technique of gripping it. Climbers bend the fingers at the knuckles to load the edge, using an open, half, or full crimp depending on the hold. Crimping is powerful but a leading cause of finger injuries.

What Is Smearing in Climbing?

Smearing is a footwork technique where you press the sole of your climbing shoe flat against the rock to grip through friction, rather than standing on a defined hold. It's essential on slabs and featureless faces, relying on sticky rubber, body position, and trusting your feet on seemingly blank rock.

What Is Edging in Climbing?

Edging is a footwork technique where you stand on a small hold using the stiff edge of your climbing shoe, usually the inside edge near the big toe. It gives precise, powerful purchase on tiny ledges and crystals, and works best on vertical to slightly overhanging rock with defined footholds.

What Is a Heel Hook?

A heel hook is a climbing technique where you place your heel on a hold and pull with your leg, using it almost like a third hand. It lets you take weight off your arms, stay close to the wall on steep terrain, and lock into position on overhangs, aretes, and around bulges.

What Is a Dyno in Climbing?

A dyno, short for dynamic move, is a climbing move in which you spring off the wall to reach a hold too far away to grab statically. At full extension all four limbs may briefly leave the rock before your hands latch the target hold. It trades control for reach and is a signature move of modern bouldering.