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Gravity 1 - 0 Smith

Graham Smith | 21:03 UK time, Sunday, 8 August 2010

coasteeringIt's probably not unheard of for teenagers to tell their parents to go and take a running jump - but in my house they really mean it. And so it was that I come to have made my first attempt at coasteering - or "jumping off a cliff into the Atlantic Ocean," to give a more detailed title to the most extreme part of what the sport involves.

Actually I'm not sure that "sport" is really the right word, but then that has been said through the generations: what once was said about skateboarding is said now about coasteering. But regardless of whether it's a sport or just a "craze," coasteering is fast becoming a regular money-spinning venture in Cornwall, particularly on the north coast.

Both my daughters seem to have grown up in wetsuits, never far from their surfboards; the beach has been a huge part of their lives. And against my better judgement, defying the wisdom of my years etc etc, I submitted to the kids' encouragement, took myself off to Port Gaverne and pondered the chances of beating gravity.

I could have just said "no." I could have protested about the difference between necessary risk and unnecessary risk; about the needless burden on medical and emergency rescue services; I could have said I am far too old; I could have just been honest about my cowardice.

And you know what? It's great fun. Hauling yourself out of the water and climbing 30 feet up the cliff is the hard part. Jumping back in is relatively easy (if you don't think about it.) Gravity completes its mission far too quickly. Either that, or I need a bigger cliff. David Cameron, who is about to start a fortnight's holiday in north Cornwall, should try it.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    When kids do this off cliffs in Cornwall it's called 'tomb stoning' isn't it? It seems to me that the only difference here is that you've paid someone to do it. Isn't local enterprise fab!

  • Comment number 2.

    I would certainly recommend an experienced guide to this sort of venture. The risks of serious injury are very real, and need to be properly considered.

  • Comment number 3.


    Better still the whole of the 10 person inner cabinet at Cornwall Council sshould try it when the tide is out !!

  • Comment number 4.

    What you describe is not coasteering. The sport of coasteering goes back many years to the pursuit of traversing above sea level, i.e. horizontal climbing along the coast and trying to avoid having to enter the sea. Major traverses exist in North Devon, West Penwith and in South Devon. A good review of coasteering may be found in the Introduction chapter of "A Climber in the West Country" by Edward Pyatt, published in 1968. I have personally bivouaced while traversing from Bolt Head to Bolt Tail, it can indeed become a serious undertaking as mentioned above.

  • Comment number 5.

    Many thanks for this comment, very interesting (did you really post at 3.40am?) A few people have questioned my use of the word "sport." I welcome a discussion on this point - remembering many debates over what is and what is not a sport. Fox hunting, for example: perhaps change ends at half-time and let the fox do the chasing for a while? Chess? Clay pigeon shooting? Do the clay pigeons ever get to shoot back? I shall consult ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio Cornwall's sports producer, Ross Ellis.

  • Comment number 6.

    I'm in Canada, 3.40am. was only 9.40 pm for me! To me climbing is a sport, coasteering is an offshoot of climbing but tomb stoning is just like bungee jumping!

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