As the other person has said one is without a harness and belay.
To clarify as there seems to be some controversy.
I call rock climbing anything with a harness, so indoor climbing wall or actual rocks. Bouldering is climbing boulder problems that are not that high and don’t require a harness. Again can be indoor or outdoor.
Also, not sure why the controversy as my climbing gym is quite clear in this distinction. Like mine I think is the highest climbing wall in the UK and says we also have boulders. There other one is just bouldering and advertised as such.
Is this a UK thing? Rock climbing here in the US refers to all of it. And usually a gym with rope climbing will usually have a bouldering area. I don’t think I’ve been to a rope gym that didn’t have bouldering… hmmm maybe one small gym in Taiwan, but everywhere else either only had bouldering or had both.
And then where do you draw the line with highballs and non-rope soloing?
I guess it’s a height thing as to where you drank the line. Boulders are typically not that high and a fall from the top in a gym isn’t really going to hurt.
Whereas even free soloing a belay route you’re going to be in trouble when falling off.
My gym Depot Climbing has two in Manchester. One is purely bouldering walls and the other is roped climbing with a bouldering section.
I generally use both terms when talking to people that probably don’t know about climbing as it’s a clear distinction between them both. Some people only do one or the other.
Highball boulders are pretty unsafe if you fall near the top. This is why climbers will top rope to figure out all the moves first. This might be true of short outdoor boulders as well just to save effort.
Then there are multi story bouldering walls where you fall onto a ramp. This type of wall will be taller than some rope walls.
One of the most common climbing questions we are asked
Bouldering is a style of climbing free from the use of ropes. Taking place above our state-of-the-art matting, climbers are free to express themselves on hundreds of climbs (called problems) for all abilities.
Feel free to check out their website to see if you notice any regional differences.
As the other person has said one is without a harness and belay.
To clarify as there seems to be some controversy.
I call rock climbing anything with a harness, so indoor climbing wall or actual rocks. Bouldering is climbing boulder problems that are not that high and don’t require a harness. Again can be indoor or outdoor.
Also, not sure why the controversy as my climbing gym is quite clear in this distinction. Like mine I think is the highest climbing wall in the UK and says we also have boulders. There other one is just bouldering and advertised as such.
Is this a UK thing? Rock climbing here in the US refers to all of it. And usually a gym with rope climbing will usually have a bouldering area. I don’t think I’ve been to a rope gym that didn’t have bouldering… hmmm maybe one small gym in Taiwan, but everywhere else either only had bouldering or had both.
And then where do you draw the line with highballs and non-rope soloing?
I guess it’s a height thing as to where you drank the line. Boulders are typically not that high and a fall from the top in a gym isn’t really going to hurt.
Whereas even free soloing a belay route you’re going to be in trouble when falling off.
My gym Depot Climbing has two in Manchester. One is purely bouldering walls and the other is roped climbing with a bouldering section.
I generally use both terms when talking to people that probably don’t know about climbing as it’s a clear distinction between them both. Some people only do one or the other.
Highball boulders are pretty unsafe if you fall near the top. This is why climbers will top rope to figure out all the moves first. This might be true of short outdoor boulders as well just to save effort.
Then there are multi story bouldering walls where you fall onto a ramp. This type of wall will be taller than some rope walls.
Interesting. It seems definitions are never static and evolve, particularly as a sport becomes more mainstream.
Yeah that’s why I wonder if there are regional differences. E.g sport vs lead climbing.
This is how my gym describes bouldering
What is bouldering?
One of the most common climbing questions we are asked
Bouldering is a style of climbing free from the use of ropes. Taking place above our state-of-the-art matting, climbers are free to express themselves on hundreds of climbs (called problems) for all abilities.
Feel free to check out their website to see if you notice any regional differences.
Depot Climbing