In reply to climbercool:
There's a school of training called "greasing the groove" which involves a higher frequency of training but doing less in a session and avoiding working to failure. It seems to work well for skill based (like olympic weight lifting or learning to play a piano) and also strength based goals as strength is in part a neuromuscular skill. It supposedly helps getting the motor units to fire more intensely and in better patterns to contract more fibres for peak effort.. getting more strength out of the same sized muscles. That's the sales pitch the greasing the groove enthusiasts give.
The proof of the pudding is in the eating. It seems to produce good results for strength and skills, but no benefits for other things like max muscle hypertrophy for bodybuilding.
In theory it'd be a good way to hang board, but like I said about puddings.. if it works for you...? then it's working for you 😂.
Keep going while it gives results and you enjoy it