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YogaROCKS

 

It all began with Camarillo yoga students and their kids.  
We found out that yoga and rock climbing are soul mates when we were expertly guided by Earthworks Rock Climbing school owners Matthew & Marissa Fineup, up and down the amazing climbing crags behind San Ysidro Ranch in Montecito.  What better way to use and practice our breath awareness, flexibility, strength and focus, than connecting with the earth (rock!), and natural wonders so close to home!   What a great way to strengthen family ties, communication and support!   We were all tired out and elated at day’s end, and ready for more!    Now, families and individuals from all over southern California, many who have never practiced yoga or climbed more than a set of stairs, have experienced our YogaROCKS day trips, and the response has been overwhelmingly enthusiastic!!    No previous experience necessary, just....

Join us!

Upcoming Trips

Please call or email Audrey to find out dates of upcoming trips.  
Call or email Audrey to register, or pick up a form after class.

YogaROCKS Joshua Tree


Check back soon for details of our upcoming October 2007 Joshua Tree trip!
View the video of our awesome September, 2006 trip! Click here.



Trip Description

Meet Audrey, Director of Camarillo Yoga, and Matthew & Marissa Fineup, owners of Earthworks, at various beautiful climbing spots in Southern California in the early am.  After filling out paperwork and trying on climbing shoes, we will hike into the climbing site, with our guides touching upon the unique geological, natural and human history of the area.   At the site, all necessary gear, including climbing shoes, is provided.    Before we begin climbing,  Audrey will lead a stretching, breathing and focusing warm up under beautiful trees and blue sky.    Next, thorough instruction in basic climbing skills:  safety, moving over rock, belaying and rappelling.  You can expect to climb 4 to 7 different routes, up to 100 ft. in height, including a wide range of climbing types and difficulties.   Lunch will be provided at the site.   We will finish with a cool-down stretch and meditation to assimilate and savor our empowering day, sometimes while sitting in the middle of a stream!   We will arrive back at our vehicles around 4:30 or 5 pm.  

Important Suggestions

Please bring drinking water (1 liter minimum per person.)  Long pants are strongly suggested—climbers often scrape their knees.  Dress in layers; the temperature at the cliff varies—it will likely be warm in the morning and cool in the afternoon. A small day pack is also very useful for carrying your harness, climbing shoes, and personal items (sun block, bag for trash, camera.)   To help make final preparations, please fill out the registration form right away with your shoe size, and any special dietary needs (vegetarian, food allergies, etc.)   Thank you!

Fees

$105 per person.  Families of 3 or more $95 per person.  Fees include yoga, all climbing gear, AMGA-certified instruction and lunch.  Fees will also cover liability insurance, and you will need to complete an Acknowledgement of Risk and Release of Risk liability form.  FYI, Earthworks has had no serious injuries or close calls in its five-year history.  Please make checks payable to “Earthworks.”  Visa/Mastercard also accepted.  Directions and final info will be forwarded to you.  Your space will be reserved upon full pre-payment.  Full refund if cancelled within 10 full days of the trip.

YogaROCKS! in the Santa Barbara Independent

Yoga on the Rocks
Rock Climbing Breath by Breath
YR5

By Felicia M. Tomasko

Thursday, May 17, 2007

"I bet you just did things you never thought you’d be able to do,” Earthworks climbing guide Matthew Fineup called up to me. That was an understatement — I was clinging onto a rock face 40 feet above solid ground, leaning off to the side, staring at tree branches, looking for my next hand-hold, and trying to gauge how long my fingers could maintain their grip. Fortunately, I was equipped with a harness, my rope anchored to the top of the rock and held by Matthew on the ground.

He shouted these words of encouragement amid the repeated refrains of “awesome,” “good job,” and “look at your feet.” These phrases were all part of Matthew’s instructional dialogue leading climbers of various ability levels as we ascended rock walls by negotiating a series of hand- and footholds.
YR1

Photo by Paul Wellman

Ascending the rock was part of a full day of YogaRocks, the collaborative effort between Earthworks and the Camarillo Yoga Center that combines outdoor rock climbing and yoga instruction. Yoga and rock climbing are naturally complementary, according to Camarillo Yoga Center owner Audrey Walzer, and the eight other participants on my excursion — all of them repeat yoga-climbers — wholeheartedly concurred. They recounted such benefits as increased flexibility and an enhanced ability to focus and relax on the rock by drawing attention to their breath.

To prepare us for the climb, Audrey guided us through a yoga session that blended relaxing breathing techniques with postures that stretched the soon-to-be-taxed muscles of our arms, legs, and back. With this preparation, we would be able to scramble more nimbly up the rock. Then we geared up with harness, helmet, and very tight, rubber-soled shoes.

YR2

Photo by Paul Wellman

My first ascent was harrowing. I’m afraid of heights, a fact that became more apparent each time I hoisted myself up to another level of holds. I’m certain my heart was beating three times as fast as my normal resting rate. It took all of my attention to simultaneously negotiate the rock and remember to breathe. But somehow, the imprinting of the initial yoga session stuck, and I did continue to breathe. I even made it to the top of the rope.
YR3

Photo by Paul Wellman

Valerie Beattie scales the face of a rock in the Sespe wilderness while author Felicia Tomasko (below) makes it to the top.

Then the fun began, as I had to let go of the rock and rappel down it. Even though I was fully secured, letting go of the rope and leaning back while perched 60 feet in the air seemed counterintuitive to survival. “Breathe, breathe, breathe,” I kept reminding myself, realizing that the yoga of rock climbing is continual breaths.

Each ascent became progressively easier, as I remembered to breathe and felt more comfortable shifting my weight from quarter-sized toeholds to tiny cracks on the cliff. With each ascent, I felt the chattering of muscles seldom-used becoming more fatigued as the day continued.

As if scaling rock walls wasn’t challenging enough, Matthew dared the group to don a blindfold to ascend one of the routes. He promised it would provide an entirely different climbing experience. It did.

Phil, who is studying to become a guide himself, was the first to put on the blindfold. His swaying dance up the cliff would have put Spider-Man to shame. Inspired, I tried the blindfold, but untied it and flung it off halfway up the rock, since it left me a bit too disoriented. Indy photographer Paul Wellman, though, set down his camera, tied on the designated bandana, and reached the top of the rock, blindfold and body fortunately intact.
YR4

Photo by Paul Wellman

Framing the day with yoga practice at the beginning and end of the climb provided a physical warm-up and cool down for the strenuous excursion on the rock. It also added a contemplative element. Toward the end of the day in the quiet Sespe wilderness outside Ojai — blue skies overhead with hillsides and ridges rimming the horizon — taking the time to pause and breathe was a reminder that we were here not only to challenge our physical and mental limits, but to enhance our relationship with nature.

4•1•1

Earthworks Rock Climbing School and Camarillo Yoga Center cosponsor YogaRocks at various locations throughout Santa Barbara, Ojai, Ventura, and the surrounding rocky regions. For more information, visit earthworksclimbing.com or call 320-2739.

Click here to see the original article.

 

Yoga for Climbers Workshops


With Audrey Walzer and Matthew Fineup

Audrey Walzer & Matthew Fineup will discuss the integration of body and mind to address the unique needs of climbers.  Learn pre & post climb yoga practices to balance and cross-train the muscular demands of climbing, increase range of motion and prevent injury. Check back for dates and locations of next workshop, or call us to schedule a date at your facility. 

 

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