
LONDON, UK (Team Geared Up) - Via mountaintraining.ie we’ve been alerted to the man who fell from 6m and somersaulted mid-air out of the fall to land on all-fours rather than his head! It was said his training as a ballet dancer helped him avoid serious head injuries!
Coastguards said the man had been on a 100ft (30m) climb of the ‘Arrow’ on Sunday when his gear came loose and he fell. He injured his shoulder and aggravated an old foot injury after landing on the ledge below on all fours.
He was subsequently assisted by a Coast Guard cliff rescue team who lowered in from the top, and then evac carried out by RAF helicopter winch.


The casualty was a 33-year-old experienced climber from London, and the climb was The Arrow at St Govans Head, near Castlemartin described as fantastic seacliff climbing from mostly non-tidal stances. The Arrow is described as being an E1 5b Classic and the area. It’s interesting that the gear is described as excellent, and this is what caused the accident.
Probably the most popular route in Pembroke follows cracks and flakes up the right-hand side of the buttress. The climbing is never too difficult, the gear is excellent and it’s even got some flowstone! It is becoming a bit polished. Start just to the right of the flake of ‘Cupid’s Bow’. Climb up to gain a rightwards trending line of cracks. Climb this, past the flowstone, to a tricky move right into a groove. Most people finish rightwards to a ledge and easy grooveabove, but it is better to pull straight through the roof with no increase in grade. © ROCKFAX
It makes a good headline anyway. Mind you, I have never seen a ballet dancer somersault ever, have you?
-Robin-
(Image Credit: Howth Coast Guard ‘Cliff Rescue Unit’ on training exercise, by Author.)

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Latest Comments (1):
New York City Ballet, June 7, 2002
Jerome Robbins’s ”Suite of Dances” was created for Mikhail Baryshnikov in 1994. But the solo, set to Bach music for an unaccompanied cello, can serve as an understated tour de force for any charismatic classicist. Nikolaj Hübbe, who danced it on Thursday, is certainly such a performer, and his gift for subtle dramatic inflection made ”Suite” an unalloyed pleasure.
Mr. Hübbe, who looked like a young blond prince out for a ramble in the meadow, gave each muted nonliteral gesture just enough color to make it quietly come alive. His precise but flowing shifts between styles made each ballet step, somersault and folk-tinged lunge clear and lively.
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