It will have gone is Mr Bradbury reckons so, he knows the coast well.
Does make you wonder what else would have been lost. I've been mulling over what may have gone throughout the storms and to be honest Terrier's Tooth would have come pretty much bottom of the list, as I think it would have done in many people's mind.
I well remember my first aquaintance with TT, I was climbing with a girl who had followed me up things as hard as E2 and wanted to try a first lead. I suggested TT having never done it before 'but it's only V Diff, you'll walk it' She teetered her way up pitch one, gripped as anything, when I seconded the pitch and got to the belay, she slapped my face 'You bastard, that was not a good first lead'
I had a somewhat similar experience Al, but unfortunately with a 6ft+ SAS guy I was instructing who informed me on how many different ways there were of killing someone.
I've often wondered how stable that whole face is above the roof of Diocese.
> I've often wondered how stable that whole face is above the roof of Diocese.
That's the one that's been on my mind, all that hydraulic pressure being pumped into the Diocese roof crack. If it went, it'd be a disaster, losing two of Penwith's best routes at least.
I was talking to Stu about this yesterday. He reckons that it should still be possible to climb a different first pitch, but he was unable to get down to look at it properly as the sea was too rough.
"Chair Ladder:
The Classic Rock route Terriers Tooth has lost it's first pitch, meaning the belay ledge at the top of the first pitch has dissapeared and the first pitch has changed considerably to a smooth slab of rock, leaving what looks to be harder and more run out climbing."
Happy memories of the route (even getting sandblasted by hail near the summit) - that first pitch was something, fortunately it was someone else's lead. I expect we will hear of more changes to Pembroke and Cornwall as the weather improves and folk get on to the rock.
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