Anabolic steroids don’t enhance climbing performance (and how to use them anyway) – Part 1

So it’s been about 4 years since I started dabbling with PEDs to see if they could help with one glaring, depressing issue: trying to progress as a climber at the age of 50-something is a totally different game, to doing so in your 20s. At my age, recovery is slow, progress is slower, injuries are common, and plateaus hit with depressing frequency. I wanted to see if a few pharmacological tweaks could help me leverage some of that youthful momentum I see in climbers around me.

The phrase “performance-enhancing drug” carries an implicit promise: take this pill, stick this needle, and watch your climbing improve. It’s seductive because it seems so straightforward, so immediate.

Climbing is fundamentally a skill-based sport, and improving skill demands frequent movement on rock (or plastic if it’s raining, which, let’s face it, it always is). Younger climbers can train longer, recover faster, and therefore practice more frequently. The more they climb, the better they become, creating a virtuous cycle of not only skill but also strength. At my age, that cycle breaks down because I simply can’t climb hard enough, or often enough to get the practice in at the rate or intensity I would like. I hoped that taking PEDs might level this playing field, giving me the capacity to climb more like a 20-year-old, and develop skills and strength at a comparable rate.

However, four years of careful experimentation have taught me a clear, sometimes frustrating lesson: steroids don’t make you climb harder. In fact, despite their reputation, steroids can be seen performance impairing drugs in a climbing context. Over the next few weeks, we’re going to examine three reasons why this is.


Problem 1 – weight gain:

Climbing strength isn’t absolute; it’s a ratio of strength to weight.

If a climber can crimp 35kg with each hand, are they strong? The question doesn’t make any sense unless you know how heavy they are, right? If the climber in question weighs 50kg, then 35kg with each hand gives them the finger strength of a V7 climber, at least. However if the climber weighs 80kg, they won’t even be able to hang their own body weight.

Google which is the best anabolic steroid. Go on… I’ll wait. You’re going to get a lot of opinions by a lot of people, but I guarantee that every single one of them will be a bodybuilder.

Bodybuilders care about one thing above all other things: weight gain. How do they know if they’re building muscle? The scale goes up.

We might not exactly want the scale to go down, you can be too light after all, but we certainly don’t want to gain weight, do we? It makes us functionally weaker unless our strength goes up at a greater rate than our weight.

Unfortunately steroids are very, very good at making you gain weight. Better, in fact, than they are at making you gain strength.

There are four ways steroids pile on the kilos, and not just steroids in fact; human growth hormone and its secretagogues, IGF-1, and SARMs all leverage one or more of these mechanisms too. Bodybuilders love all four of these mechanisms, because they all contribute to the “swole” look (if only temporarily in the case of the first two). However, we don’t want to be weak and pretty, we want to climb hard, and in that context, 3 or potentially all 4 of the following can be classed as unwanted side effects:

  • Water Retention: this can be caused by shifts in electrolyte balance, increased estrogen levels, or enhanced capillary permeability. It can be stored both inter and intra muscularly as well as subcutaneous fluid. Regardless, it isn’t functional mass.
  • Nutrient Storage: you’d think this could be useful. PEDs cause the muscle tissue to store glycogen, creatine, nitrogen, and a whole host of other bits and pieces.
    Muscles swell with stored fuel, which is great for enhancing work capacity. However, this extra storage can remarkably increase the mass of muscle tissue in itself, and also cause yet more water retention. You end up using the extra strength to lift the extra weight, and if you’re lucky the result is a zero sum.
  • Non-Training Related Hypertrophy: studies have shown that you don’t need to train to grow muscle on steroids. Anabolics upregulate protein synthesis even without targeted resistance training, and muscles grow in size simply from being present, not from being useful. The higher dose, the more weight you put on, even if you never go to the gym.
  • Amplified Hypertrophic Response to Training: when combined with exercise, PEDs massively upregulate muscle growth. You can train harder, for longer, and the muscles respond better.

From a climbing performance perspective this last mechanism is the only one which can be leveraged, if one is very careful, in a way where the extra kilos are worthwhile. Who wouldn’t want an extra kilo of forearm on each side? Sure you’ll be two kilos heavier but you’ll be able to pull like a beast. The problem is though, that climbing is a compound exercise – one of the compoundest of all compound exercises in fact. When you climb you engage a surprising number of muscles, and when you climb on steroids all of them respond to the stimulus by growing bigger and heavier in unison.

We’ll come back to this point later because understanding how this works, and exerting careful control over the process, is the key to making steroids work in a climbing context


Next week we’ll dive into Part 2: how steroids and related compounds supercharge the forearm pump and sap your grip endurance.

Oops…

So I owe you all an apology.

Three years ago I said I was going to test Anavar, Winstrol, and Halotestin I believe, and report back. I did indeed test those compounds as well as others. I made lots of notes – and even more mistakes, mostly in the form of putting on a LOT of “collateral” lean mass – and I also pushed my grade from V5 to around V8. (Although I think that’s pretty good for a 52-year-old, can you imagine what I’d be climbing if I weren’t carrying 10kg of unnecessary muscle?).

At least my body tension is better than it was

Well, to state the obvious, you might have noticed I never reported back.

I’ve often thought about uploading a little snippet; a pondering perhaps based on some small finding or realisation and every time what’s stopped me was the guilt of not having done the thing I said I was going to do and having to explain.

So, by way of explanation, here we go…

Around the time I was doing my initial Anavar/Winstrol experiments, a few people were managing to get hold of me after reading this blog. I hadn’t put my contact details anywhere but some people still found me via YouTube, Reddit, and Twitter (which I’m definitely no longer using). I ended up in two or three informal coaching relationships; they’d pay for an hour’s consultation now and then, and I’d guide them through the process of adding PEDs into their training programmes.

At first I put off posting here simply because I didn’t have the time. What with navigating a full time job, starting a new relationship, and doing the odd consultation, I didn’t have the headspace. But then, as time went on and some of the coaching relationships became a little more involved, it began to dawn on me that it wouldn’t be fair on my clients to share the knowledge they were paying me for. That sounds awfully capitalist, which isn’t my style, which made me feel double guilty for fuck’s sake. One year turned into two, turned into three, and before I knew it I had a small but lovely group of clients and an albatross around my neck in the form of this blog. The longer it was since I last posted, the guiltier I felt, and the harder it was to sit down and write something

So what changed?

Well firstly my coaching style has become a little more sophisticated as time has gone on. I’m able to offer more nuanced advice so my original concerns about giving away hard-won trade secrets aren’t particularly relevant any more; for instance I’ll tell you outright that Winstrol beats Anavar hands down, but I still use Anavar with clients all the time.

The more significant change is that I have a lot more free time now. I’ve quit full time employment because I’m pretty sure I can make a meagre living through coaching and freelance instructing. Oh, I should probably mention I’ve qualified as a climbing instructor since we last spoke, and I’ve been working in the field for the best part of three years now.

So here we are. I’m in my van, doors open, and butterflies are fluttering around in the sun. After sitting with the quiet and the birdsong, waiting for it to cool off a bit before heading off to crimp the excellent granitic gneiss scattered around the hillsides here, I suddenly thought “now’s the time”.

So I’m going to make an effort to share more knowledge now. And if any of you want a to say hello, I have a new email address to make it easier to get in touch. Whether you’re interested in a chat, or you’re intending to poke me because I just promised I’d start posting again and I haven’t (please do this), mike@dopingforclimbers.com is where you can find me.

In the next post I’m going to discuss why steroids don’t work for climbing performance, and how to achieve excellent results with them anyway.

TTFN – Mike

Testosterone Replacement (updates on testosterone and nandrolone)

So the weather got dryer and bouldering season proper started for me. In the UK, climate change has had a significant effect on humidity levels throughout the year. Whereas when I started climbing, autumn and spring were both great times to climb on rock, now it’s really only spring that’s any good. So any interest in training went out the window while I focused on a frustratingly short window to do the thing I’ve been training to do. I’m in Scotland and I started in earnest: falling off Sandstone in Torridon, gneiss in Strathnairn, and granite in Inchbae. I decided I was going to resume the controlled testing of different substances, as laid out in my previous post, once temperatures and humidity increased and conditions became less ideal.

…and then, just as I was getting into the swing, before I even got round to falling off schist in Laggan, it started raining. It’s been raining ever since and the forecast shows it’s going to be raining for evermore. So unless the expected dry conditions of spring suddenly return and my climbing practice is re-ignited, I’ll return to training and resume the experiments into orally active/strength inducing/short-term use compounds. So while I get on with the first of these, and before I have anything to report, here’s an update on my continuing long-term strategy.

Falling off gneiss in Strathnairn

If you remember from my previous post on the subject, my total testosterone levels were a touch lower than I wanted so I planned to up my total intake slightly by sprinkling in 50mg of nandrolone decanoate to my weekly injections. 50mg really is a pretty low dose and I didn’t expect it to have much effect other than a little lubrication of the joints; I was wrong.

Over the course of about 12 weeks (wow! Has it really been that long?), I’ve put on a considerable amount of mass and people at work are asking me what I’m doing in the gym to progress so quickly. This as I’ve mentioned multiple times is not conducive to being a strong climber. Not only do the extra kilos caused by muscle and water retention weigh me down, but larger muscles can mean less mobility in the shoulders. I want to be strong and slender, not weak and pretty like a bodybuilder.

On the flipside I loved being on nandrolone. Even at such a low dose it really ignited the testosterone (probably by tying up SHBG but that’s a story for another post). My mood was excellent, constantly. My sex drive was through the roof and I was generally in a great place. Any worries regarding depression and anxiety were utterly unfounded although I’m still sure this would be a potential issue at higher doses.

The one side effect that I did notice is that I sensed the beginnings of erectile dysfunction creep in when I tried raising the dose a touch above 50mg. It was transient, only for a couple of days after the injection, and very mild but I felt that this would become an issue if I pushed the ratio between testosterone and nandrolone further in the direction of nandrolone. This by the way is a commonly known side effect referred to as “Deca dick”, and is due to a fascinating mechanism whereby dihydronandrolone has a stronger binding affinity, but weaker action than dihydrotestosterone at the androgen receptors responsible for sexual function – but that too is a story for another post.

Falling off sandstone in Torridon

So seeing as I was already planning to drop the nandrolone experiment and return to taking testosterone only, I decided to get my levels tested and to put it politely I got a fucking shock. My total testosterone came back at “greater than 52nmol/L” (where 52nmol/L is presumably the sensitively cutoff and the test isn’t able to detect levels any higher).

Seeing as I tested 26.6nmol/L total testosterone while I was taking 250mg a week I was expecting something in the region of 32nmol/L combined nandrolone and testosterone on the new protocol which is right where I want to be. However if you remember I also suspected a number of variables leading to significantly lower than expected levels for the given dose.

So now I’m in a situation I knew was possible and I did in fact have the foresight to mention in my previous post on the subject. I’ve changed many variables at the same time so I don’t know where to go from here. I suspect that one of more of the following might be the case:

  1. I was previously purchasing testosterone from a less reputable lab which was probably under-dosed. Now I’m administering correctly dosed gear from a more trustworthy source, I’m taking quite a bit more each week and my levels have shot up accordingly.
  2. Previously my administration protocol wasn’t optimal for absorption of the weekly doses and now I’ve standardised it my levels have gone up. Although I do think it’s unlikely that this could make such a dramatic difference to my levels.
  3. Based on knowing that the ECLIA test I’m getting can’t differentiate between nandrolone and testosterone, I made the assumption that my results would reflect the cumulate level of both compounds in my system. Maybe instead of that the nandrolone just skews the readings resulting in unreliable nonsense.

So. Taking these factors into account I need to ask, is it really the 50mg of nandrolone a week causing all that unwanted hypertrophy? Or is it that my levels of total androgens were a lot higher than I was planning for? I suspect it’s both and I also suspect that all three of the points above contribute to receiving such unexpected test results.

Back to training

Based on this conclusion, I’m planning on the following course of action:

  1. Take out the nandrolone until I’ve got a better insight into what testosterone dose I require to reach levels of 32-35nmol/L.
  2. Drop my testosterone dose to 200mg per week and try to lose some of the mass I’ve put on in the past months.
  3. Get my levels tested 8 weeks after I’ve made the changes and then again at 15 weeks.
  4. Based on these results I can calibrate the appropriate dose of testosterone I need to reach the levels I want, given the fact that I’ll continue to use the same testosterone product from the same supplier.
  5. In the future, once my levels are dialled in, I can replace 50mg of the testosterone I’m taking with nandrolone and see if I can avoid the mass gain I’ve been experiencing so far.

About Me

My name is Mike. I’ll be 50 this year and I’ve been climbing since 2014. Bouldering is my thing.

When I started this journey it was all about being outdoors. I was going out to the national parks every weekend and walking up hills; climbing was a natural progression from that. Like many other climbers I got seriously into training during the first lockdown as I wasn’t allowed out to climb. Since then I’ve began to enjoy the training process for its own sake as well as the appreciating the obvious effect it’s had on my climbing progression.

Now I live in the Peak District and regularly climb at the Hangar in Sheffield, and Substation in Macclesfield while I wait for the rain to stop.

For years I’ve watched other climbers and noted that I’m progressing though the grades at a far slower rate than all of them. In hindsight this sounds like an obvious oversight but it was a revelation when it occurred to me – I was comparing myself to people who were half my age. So in an attempt to “level the playing field”, I decided to put myself in a similar hormonal environment to them.

I’m not at all the competitive sort and I’m not trying to beat anyone or be better. To me climbing isn’t about winning and losing in the slightest, it’s about the joy I get from it. I’m simply trying to maximise what I personally derive from climbing, by allowing myself a second chance at youth. While I’m at it I can document my journey as there seems to be very little information out there on performance enhancing drugs for climbers.

It was with this mindset that I got over my fear of needles and set about giving myself the first of my weekly testosterone injections.