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What kinds of terms do climbers use to communicate to each other during a climb?

In climbing, there are many terms used for communication such as "on belay", "belay on", "safe", "off belay", "spot me", "watch me", "take", "slack", "falling" which are important to understand and be aware of when in the gym or outside.
 
Transcript: "There's lots of terms that we use. If we're talking about roped climbing, we're going to go ahead and use the terms on belay and belay on. We're going to use the words. Take were to use the word safe. We're going to use the words off belay. If your bouldering you might say, spot me or watch me, you might say the word. Take, if you run a rope, you might say the word slack, if you're leading a route, You might yell the word falling if you are falling. There's a lot of communication that goes on. So it's very valuable and worth your time to understand it and just pay attention to others when you're in the gym or outside and you will pick it up very quickly."
2 Answers
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Rob Pizem

Climber, trainer, teacher
There's lots of terms that we use. If we're talking about roped climbing, we're going to go ahead and use the terms on belay and belay on. We're going to use the words. Take were to use the word safe. We're going to use the words off belay. If your bouldering you might say, spot me or watch me, you might say the word. Take, if you run a rope, you might say the word slack, if you're leading a route, You might yell the word falling if you are falling. There's a lot of communication that goes on. So it's very valuable and worth your time to understand it and just pay attention to others when you're in the gym or outside and you will pick it up very quickly.
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Expert

Robbie Phillips

Professional Climber
What kinds of terms de clamors used to communicate to each other during a claim. So there are several terms of communication climbers, use to communicate with each other when they're climbing and thinking of it an order. And when I claim it gets to the top of a claim, they will show. Once they are safe, they will shout safe. That means that the B layer can then shout off belay, which then means they're not being belated more, they're not safe. If on the rope and then once the climber at the top, has got them safe and has got the Billy device attached. They can then show it to the person below climb when ready or on belay climb when ready and in the person below can then show climbing and then they climb. And that is how climbers usually communicate with each other on on walls in this very very windy and noisy. Which sometimes it can be in the mountains, occasionally climbers will use rope tugs. As a means to communicate, if they can't hear each other, but this always needs to be ascertained before you start a climb because quite often. If you don't, let anyone know what the tugs are. Then you wouldn't, you wouldn't know what that means, and there can often be tugs. Anyway, on a rope, which is why the Rope tying technique isn't always the best. First, I have in the past once actually used walkie-talkies and that was quite handy, but problem walkie-talkies is either battery. So, if the battery runs out, you don't have the walkie-talkie, that's why it's always good to have backups, not just backup batteries. But then, she also backup means of communication. Such as a rope, tug,