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It was a bummer, as climbing had me in my best overall shape between flexibility, stamina and strength. And my fellow climbers were a very pleasant and vibrant group to be around. But guitar is more important to me.
If you continue to climb, I would say no more than 2x a week, and spend plenty of time warming up, cooling down, stretching, and do a good amount of old fashioned pushups with your palms on the ground and fingers out.
I got by by focusing more on big roped rock and mountain routes and did not chase too many high E grades. I did a lot of a climbing wall stuff to practice rope work but that and bouldering has become quite its own sport thing.
Ultimately though, climbing and bouldering will make your fingers stronger, but less flexible. If this impacts your playing to a point that bothers you, you'll have a choice to make.
I did start to get problems with my left wrist when I was about 26 years old as I was still climbing pretty regularly but was also playing guitar a lot more (teaching all week and gigging at weekends). It turned out that the muscles in my forearms were clumping together and were pulling/grinding against small bones in my wrist joint and causing a lot of pain when I played guitar. So I started stretching regularly and also 'flossing' my forearms (google it, really good for helping with tight forearms and wrist pain!) which really helped, and I've had no problems since.
I don't climb as much any more but would feel pretty comfortable getting back into it and not having it affect my guitar playing, as long as I kept on top of the stretching/flossing routine.
As a side note, I was having some back/neck pain in my early twenties and when I went to an ostiopath she said I was completely lop sided and more built on one side of my back, which she believed was due to me playing classical guitar and sitting in classical position from a young age. So i guess classical guitar is more dangerous than rock climbing!