Ever wondered why every chalk bag you’ve ever bought comes with an adjustable webbing belt? That’s because chalk bags are designed to be used with that belt.
Yet, despite this functional and included component, many climbers toss the belt directly after purchase. And what inevitably replaces that sweet, adjustable belt is a shiny carabiner.
Fact is, climbers just love to use biners. We get it. They’re techy, cool, and Sly Stallone had a few during that sick jumping scene in “Cliff Hanger.” Place a biner in the hands of a climber and rest assured they’ll find something to clip it to. Backpacks will soon have shoes, helmets, keys, and water bottles swinging from a previously unnoticed and unused loop of fabric sewn to the outside of the pack. As for chalk bags? They’ll get HotWired to a harness faster than Stallone can shoot a bolt into solid rock with his trusty bolt gun.
A quick trip to the local climbing gym will easily confirm this claim. See the plethora of chalk bags hanging suspiciously low? That’s because they’re probably attached to each harness with a carabiner. Our Climbing Category Director and gear guru Kolin Powick often returns from his morning training sessions with a rejuvenated sense of empathy for climbers in the gym making things harder than necessary by rocking the low-rider chalkbag and not using the webbing belt.
“It seems to be more common with newer climbers,” says Powick. “I usually see several climbers every Tuesday and Thursday morning with their chalk bag clipped to their harnesses in every scenario possible: single biner, double biners, double biners to gear loops, quicklinks, elaborate webbing belt macramé and quickdraws … really the full deal.”
Truth is, most of us can relate. Even the crustiest veteran climbers can move link by link across the iron chains of memory, and when they reach the beginning they’ll likely find a shiny biner. Attached to that? You guessed it. Their first chalk bag.
That’s why in this Gear Myths, we’re going to swan-dive into the world of wearing chalk bags, the different methods many climbers use, and the pros and cons of each.
First up?