![]() ![]() But even worse is the fact that I don’t have many pictures of the great memories and new friends from the meet. This is a great shame as the opportunity missed to get some photos for the forthcoming south coast climbing guidebook is sad. In my rush to leave the house before the meet I forgot my camera. I got to climb with three great people over the week: Alice Thompson from New Zealand Diego Dellai from Italy and Michal Czech from Poland. My shoulders, three days after getting home, are still sore. ![]() More climbing, hard climbing in an awful lot cases, gets done on these days than most people are used to. The weather on two days, Monday and Tuesday, was less than perfect. Thanks to Daisy, Tom, Iain, and their many helpers for looking after us. Plus of course it gives over thirty UK hosts a chance to show these special climbs off to the world, share some traditional climbing skills with people who may have never climbed with leader placed protection before, and have a right good knees up! The meet is fully catered – so the seventy odd climbers on the meet don’t have to lift a finger to look after themselves, we just go climbing … a lot! The catering is managed by the very able Peters family, this year led by the seemingly perpetually happy Daisy. ![]() These meets are an amazing opportunity for over thirty climbers from all over the world to come to the UK to sample some of what makes our world class traditional climbing so special. I just attended my fifth BMC International Meet, and my third in Cornwall based at the Climbers’ Club Count House hut. ![]()
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